|
Political Science Graduate Courses
401 Data Analysis I
3 OR 4 hours. Statistical inference for the social sciences.
Emphasis on univariate and bivariate statistics. Same as PPA 401. 3
undergraduate hours. 4 graduate hours. Prerequisite(s): POLS 200
and POLS 201; or graduate standing.
405 The Problem of Justice
3 OR 4 hours. Premodern and modern views of justice and their
practical utility in analyzing legislative, executive, and judicial
programs for enhancing or restricting justice. Same as CRJ 405. 3
undergraduate hours. 4 graduate hours. Prerequisite(s): CRJ 101,
plus two 200-level courses in criminal justice or two 200-level courses
in political science.
435 Special Topics in Bureaucracy
3 OR 4 hours. Consideration of timely or enduring issues in
policy formation and bureaucracy not available in regularly offered
courses. 3 undergraduate hours. 4 graduate hours. May be repeated to a
maximum of 12 hours. Prerequisite(s): POLS 460 or consent of the
instructor.
451 Law and Public Policy
3 OR 4 hours. The role of law and legal institutions in the
development and implementation of public policies. 3 undergraduate
hours. 4 graduate hours. Prerequisite(s): Graduate standing or
consent of the instructor.
465 Topics in Sociology of Politics
3 OR 4 hours. Intensive examination of a specialized topic
announced when the class is scheduled. Same as SOC 465. 3 undergraduate
hours. 4 graduate hours. May be repeated to a maximum of 12 hours.
Students may register in more than one section per term.
Prerequisite(s): 6 hours of upper-division sociology or consent of
the instructor.
467 Public Opinion and Political Communication
3 OR 4 hours. Nature of public opinion and political
communication systems. Patterns of opinion distribution and its
measurement. Forces shaping public opinion and its impact on public
policy. Same as COMM 467. 3 undergraduate hours. 4 graduate hours.
Prerequisite(s): POLS 200 or the equivalent or consent of the
instructor.
482 Democratic Theory
3 OR 4 hours. Democracy as a procedure of government and value
commitments associated with this form of government. Special attention
paid to classical and modern democracies. 3 undergraduate hours. 4
graduate hours. Prerequisite(s): POLS 290 or POLS 291 or consent
of the instructor.
485 Gender and Politics
3 OR 4 hours. Impact of gender on basic categories of western
political thought. Distinctions between reason and emotion, public and
private, among others, examined from feminist perspective. Same as GWS
485. 3 undergraduate hours. 4 graduate hours. Prerequisite(s):
POLS 190 and one 200-level course in political theory; or consent of the
instructor.
497 Directed Readings in Political Science
4 hours. Intensive readings on a topic not covered in regular
curriculum. May be repeated with approval. Approval of the graduate
director required to repeat course. Prerequisite(s): Graduate
standing and consent of the instructor.
498 Independent Research in Political Science
2 TO 6 hours. Research on special problems not included in course
offerings. May not duplicate work done in POLS 598 or POLS 599. May be
repeated with approval. Approval of the graduate director required to
repeat course. Prerequisite(s): Graduate standing and consent of
the instructor.
500 Introduction to Policy and Governance
4 hours. Introduces the intellectual traditions and debates that
have characterized the study of public policy and the social order.
Society-centered and state-centered explanations for policy will be
explored. Same as PPA 500. Prerequisite(s): Consent of the
department required for nondegree graduate students.
501 Data Analysis II
4 hours. Interpretation and application of multivariate methods
of analysis in the social sciences. Regression specification and
diagnostics, limited dependent variable models, measurement issues. Same
as PPA 501. Prerequisite(s): POLS 401 or PPA 401.
502 Time Series Analysis for Political Science
4 hours. Single series (ARIMA) models, event history analysis,
Vector autoregression (VAR), panel and pooled models. Prerequisite(s):
POLS 402 or consent of the instructor.
504 Theoretical Approaches to Policy and Governance
4 hours. Different theoretical approaches to the relationship
between policy and governance and the philosophical foundations on which
those approaches are based. Same as PHIL 504.
505 Research Design and Methods
4 hours. Overview of the methods and conduct of research in
political science. Issues of inference, measurements, data collection,
hypothesis testing and ethics.
506 The Profession of Political Science
2 hours. Introduces graduate students to the range of teaching,
research and service possibilities in the political science profession.
Students are encouraged to take this course during their first year of
graduate study.
510 Seminar on Teaching Political Science
2 hours. Seminar on ethics and responsibilities of teaching
political science in various academic settings. Teaching methods and
technology applicable to community colleges and four-year colleges.
Complements the Preparing Future Faculty Program. The format will
include guest speakers from area community and four-year colleges.
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grading only.
541 Policy Formation, Implementation and Evaluation
4 hours. Introduction to political science theories of how
elections, interest groups and state structure affect the formulation of
public solutions to societal problems. Same as PPA 541.
Prerequisite(s): Consent of the department required for nondegree
graduate students.
542 Distributive/Redistributive Public Policy
4 hours. Seminar on the politics of enacting and maintaining
distributive policies. Focus is on the parochial and community-wide
efficiency of such policies.
544 Regulatory Public Policies
4 hours. Exploring the nature and determinants of public
policymaking with respect to the regulation of the economy.
549 Topics in Public Policy Analysis
4 hours. A research seminar on some aspects of public policy
analysis not otherwise covered in the regular curriculum.
551 Introduction to Urban Politics
4 hours. Explores relationships between private economy and
public policies in American cities; causes of urban decline and uneven
development; and urban redevelopment and human capital policies.
553 Urban Public Policy
4 hours. Explores the problems of poverty, race, education,
transportation policy, and housing in America's cities, with a special
emphasis on Chicago.
558 Graduate Student Field Experience in Political Science
1 TO 8 hours. Graduate student intern experience. Placement with
government agencies, community organizations, or civic organizations, in
conjunction with a seminar class and directed readings. May be repeated
up to 8 time(s). Students may register in more than one section per
term. Field work required. Prerequisite(s): POLS 402 and POLS
500.
559 Topics in State and Local Government
4 hours. Case analysis and research in selected problems dealing
with structure, functions and administrative processes of American state
and local governments. Prerequisite(s): POLS 500 and POLS 541.
560 Proseminar in American Politics
4 hours. Introduction to research literature on American
policy-making institutions and processes. Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the instructor.
562 Seminar on Legislation and Public Policy
4 hours. Review of recent theories and research on structure and
policy formation in Americal legislatures. Emphasis on theoretical
development in this field. Prerequisite(s): POLS 541.
563 Executive Process
4 hours. Presidential elections; presidential decision-making;
the powers of the president; presidential leadership; the distributive
state; policy implementation; federalism and administration; the
politics of budgeting. Prerequisite(s): Admission to the M.A. or
P.P.A. programs or consent of the instructor.
564 Seminar in Judicial Process
4 hours. The judicial process, as part of political and policy
processes. Demands made by, and policy impacts on, individual and
organizational litigants and other political actors. Prerequisite(s):
POLS 460.
566 Interest Groups
4 hours. Pluralism: the distributive state; radical group theory,
public-interest groups; collective actions; corporatism; statism;
structural Marxism; social movements and interest groups.
567 Topics in Political Communication
4 hours. Intensive study of selected aspects; organizational
communication in public institutions, urban political communication
patterns, communication elites. Independent research using a variety of
community research techniques. Same as COMM 567 and PA 567.
Prerequisite(s): Consent of the instructor.
569 Topics in American Political Processes
4 hours. A research seminar on some aspect of American political
process. Topics vary. Prerequisite(s): POLS 402 and POLS 500.
570 Comparative Politics and Public Policy
4 hours. Comparative analysis of how different political systems
deal with a variety of public policy issues such as environmental
protection, social welfare and crime control.
571 Seminar in International Relations
4 hours. State-building and challenges to state authority,
democratization and regime change, political economy, environment, war,
regionalism and globalization, social movements and international
governance.
572 International Political Economy
4 hours. Exploration of competing perspectives on nation states
and economic systems. Previously listed as POLS 472.
573 Transitions to Democracy
4 hours. Game-theoretic view of democracy. Process and outcomes
of transitions to democracy in capitalist and in communist countries.
Civil-military relations in the process of transition. Case studies.
579 Topics in Comparative Politics
4 hours. Advanced seminar on selected topics in comparative
politics. Topic(s) will vary from semester to semester.
Prerequisite(s): POLS 500 and POLS 541.
582 The Philosophy of the Social Sciences
4 hours. The ontological and epistemological foundations of
alternative approaches to the study of human beings. Naturalistic,
hermeneutic, and critical approaches are addressed and assessed.
589 Topics in Political Theory
4 hours. Detailed analysis of a political theorist or type of
political theory, especially designed to meet programmatic and graduate
needs
590 Advanced Public Policy Workshop
4 hours. Interdisciplinary workshop on preparing a dissertation
proposal for public policy analysis students. Same as PPA 590.
Prerequisite(s): Advanced standing in the Ph.D. in P.P.A. program
and completion of P.P.A. core courses.
593 Independent Research for Master's Degree
2 hours. Under the supervision of two faculty members, students
will complete a major research paper that combines a review of relevant
literature of a political science topic with analysis of original data
or research materials. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grading only.
Prerequisite(s): POLS 401 and POLS 505 and POLS 506; and POLS 541 or
POLS 504 or POLS 551 or POLS 570 or POLS 571. Open only to Master's
degree students and; approval of the department.
596 Advanced Readings in Political Science
1 TO 4 hours. Intensive readings on an advanced topic not covered
in the regular curriculum. May be repeated with approval. Students may
register in more than one section per term. Approval to repeat course
granted by the graduate director. Prerequisite(s): POLS 401 and
POLS 404 and consent of the instructor.
598 Thesis Research
0 TO 16 hours. Individual study required of all students pursuing
advanced degree in political science under thesis option.
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grading only. Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the instructor. Open only to degree candidates.
599 Dissertation Research
0 TO 16 hours. Individual study required of all students pursuing
Ph.D. degree with specialization in political science.
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grading only. Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the instructor. Open only to degree candidates.
Information provided by the Office of Academic Affairs, Academic
Programs.
This listing is for informational purposes only and does not
constitute a contract. Every attempt is made to provide the most current
and correct information. Courses listed here are subject to change
without advance notice. Courses are not necessarily offered every term
or year. Individual departments or units should be consulted for
information regarding frequency of course offerings. |