|
PS 101S Introduction
To Political Science (4-0) 4
An introduction to the
study of politics; an examination of the relationship of society
and government; and a study of the nature of the state, of the forms
of rule evolved from the past, and of contemporary political systems.
Fall and winter terms.
PS 110S U.S. National
Government (4-0) 4
A study of the policies,
procedures, politics, and problems of the U.S. national government.
Fall and winter terms.
PS 120S State And
Local Government (4-0) 4
A study of the history,
nature, organization, and operation of state and local government
in the United States. Fall and winter terms.
PS 140 Introduction
To Law And Legal Systems (4-0) 4
An introduction to legal
systems' treatment of disputes between citizens, citizens and business,
and citizens and government, with special emphasis on disputing
in the legal system of the United States. Consideration given to
the influence of legal systems on competition for a society's benefits.
Fall terms, even years.
PS 205N Environmental
Politics (3-0) 3
An introduction to a
wide range of global environmental issues. Global warming, overpopulation,
natural resource depletion, deforestation in Latin America, Africa,
and Asia, potable water crises in Asia and desertification in Africa
are all indicators of ongoing major environmental changes. Global
environmental change raises profound moral, political, and economic
questions with which society has only begun to grapple. This course
addresses regional and international environmental problems and
proposes solutions. Summer terms.
PS 241 Introduction
To Criminal Justice Systems (4-0) 4
The nature of crime,
the role of police, attorneys, courts and corrections in our criminal
justice system. Fall, winter, summer terms.
PS 250W Introduction
To Political Analysis (4-0) 4
Analysis of contemporary
behavioral theories and research methods of politics and preparation
for critical reading of professional literature. Writing intensive
course. Fall terms.
Prerequisites:
PS 101, Comp 150, Lib 150.
PS 251W Advanced Research
Methods (4-0) 4
An advanced course in
the methods and tools of research including both qualitative and
quantitative approaches. Emphasis is on the design of political
research, data collection techniques, statistical analysis and interpretation.
Writing intensive course. Winter terms.
Prerequisites:
PS 250W.
PS 264 Social and
Political Philosophy (4-0) 4
This course offers an
introductory, selective review of major theories and empirical studies,
from classical to contemporary, of social relations and human interactions
while exploring the political contexts in which social philosophies
emerge. It also provides an overview of how organization of governments
has been conceptualized and practiced, how law and policy originate
and evolve, and how social and political ideals are formulated,
transformed, and institutionalized. Alternate Fall terms. This course
is the same as Phil 264; credit will be given for only one of these
courses.
PS 280S Introduction
To Comparative Politics (4-0) 4
A comparative study of
the political systems of selected modern states. An emphasis is
placed on the historical, cultural, social, and economic environments
as well as on political structures, participation, policymaking
and evaluating the effectiveness of political action. Winter terms,
even years.
PS 297RS Tibetan Buddhism:
Philosophy and Situation (0-15) 6
This course is designed
to investigate the history, cosmology, and politics of Tibetan Buddhism-as
well as some of the challenges it faces in the contemporary world-through
readings, discussions, and the experience of visiting sites of significance
to these issues. It presents Tibetan Buddhism as a metaphysical
system through which a cultural/ethnic group sees and lives the
world and the ways in which that metaphysics has come in conflict
or has been adopted and adapted. The course looks at the ways Tibetan
Buddhism (based on a metaphysics of "emptiness") comes in conflict
with the political ideology and philosophy of materialism championed
by Marxism and Capitalism, as well as the ways it has had to adapt
to the contemporary world, and the ways in which it has been mystified
and romanticized. This course is the same as Phil 297 and RS 297.
Credit will be given for only one of these courses.
PS 300 Religion And
Politics (4-0) 4
A comparative exploration
of dominant and minority political interactions in social and cultural
settings. This course examines how, and with what consequences,
religion and politics interact as frameworks for freedom and oppression
in Central America, Asia, and the United States. Winter terms, odd
years.
PS 301 Local Government
Internship 8-16
Practical half-time
or full-time work at the regional, county, or municipal government
level. Requires a detailed journal and completion of a research
paper on a local government topic. May be repeated once for a total
of 16 credits provided that the internship is taken with different
agencies. Fall, winter, and summer terms, on demand.
Prerequisites:
Three courses selected from PS 101S, 110S, 120S, 241, 310, 330,
and consent of instructor.
PS 310 American Political
Behavior (4-0) 4
An empirical inquiry
into the dynamics of political activity in the United States, with
emphasis on the electorate and the roles of political parties, the
news media, public opinion, and political interest groups. Fall
terms, even years.
PS 320 International
Politics (4-0) 4
An examination of the
international struggle for power, with special emphasis on nationalism,
economic objectives, armaments, multinational corporations, and
North-South issues. Fall terms.
Prerequisites:
PS 101S.
PS 322 International
Political Economy (4-0) 4
A study of the interplay
of economics and politics in the world arena. The course covers
a wide range of political and economic issues and concepts, and
introduces students to the many players at the international level
(financial institutions, multinational organizations, nation-states,
etc.). The course also provides a theoretical background to issues
of political and economic interaction at the international level.
PS 320 recommended. Winter terms, even years.
PS 325 Middle East
Politics (4-0) 4
An examination of the
forces shaping the governments and politics of modern Arab states
in North Africa and Southwest Asia, with emphasis on Islam, Islamist
politics, regional geopolitics and current economic, natural resource,
and social issues affecting the Arab world. Fall terms, odd years.
PS 330 Public Administration
(4-0) 4
Role of administration
in government policymaking and implementation. Course uses case
study method from a variety of policy areas. Winter terms, odd years.
PS 337 U.S. Foreign
Policy (4-0) 4
A study of the United
States' foreign policy from the American Revolution to the present
day, with emphasis on current policy and how it is made. Fall terms,
odd years.
PS 340 Constitutional
Law: Bill Of Rights (4-0) 4
Rights of citizens as
elaborated through the Bill of Rights and Fourteenth Amendment to
include freedom of speech and press, freedom of religion, privacy,
discrimination, and criminal rights. Recommended for political science
majors and advanced general students. Fall terms.
PS 341 Constitutional
Law: Federalism And The Separation Of Powers (4-0) 4
Powers and limitations
of the national judiciary, Congress and the presidency. Course also
addresses the relationship between the national government and state
governments. Winter terms, odd years.
PS 350 State Legislative
Internship 16
Practical, full-time
work in the Colorado General Assembly as a legislative intern. Each
student works for a lawmaker in either the State Senate or the State
House of Representatives. Requires the keeping of a detailed journal
and the completion of a research paper. Winter terms.
Prerequisites:
PS 101S, 110S, 120S, 310, and consent of instructor.
PS 360 Revolution
And The Modern World (3-0) 3
Analyzes the origins,
tactics, ideologies, and results of leftist, bourgeois, and rightist
revolutionary movements, stressing a comparative and historical
approach. Summer terms.
PS 365 Women And Development
(3-0) 3
An overview of the central
role women play in the development process in non-Western societies,
and of their struggle to gain access to the most basic levels of
power and governance around the world. The focus will be on women
in developing countries, but reference to women in developed countries
will also be made. PS 280 recommended. Summer terms. This course
is the same as WS 365; credit will be given for only one of these
courses.
PS 370 Latin-American
Politics (4-0) 4
An inquiry into specific
political problems shared by many nations in contemporary Latin
America. Emphasis will be placed on such issues as forms of government,
i.e., populism, military dictatorships, bureaucratic-authoritarianism,
economic development and social movements. On demand.
PS 372 African Politics
And Development (4-0) 4
A general survey of the
forces shaping the governments and politics of African nations.
While the emphasis will be on sub-Saharan Africa, Northern Africa
will also be included in the course. Recent attempts at democratization,
regional military conflicts, environmental challenges, and the AIDS
epidemic will all be covered in the course. PS 280S is recommended.
Winter terms, odd years.
PS 374 Pacific Rim
Politics And Issues (4-0) 4
An exploration of the
concept of a "Pacific Rim" region. The course explores the intersection
of economic, political, cultural, and environmental issues that
affect the region. Historical and current relationships between
areas as diverse as Seattle, Singapore, and Santiago are addressed.
PS 280S recommended. On demand.
PS 380 Comparative
Communist Systems (4-0) 4
A comparative study of
the dynamics of communist systems focuses on the Soviet Union and
People's Republic of China, including dimensions of continuity and
change in pre-and post-communist environments. Similarities and
differences are analyzed, along with an examination of factors working
for and against decentralization. Fall terms, odd years.
PS 385 Twentieth-Century
Socialisms (3-0) 3
An inquiry into the place
of modern socialist thought in the western intellectual tradition.
Intellectual and historical influences on Marxism are clarified,
along with the ambiguities in the legacy left by Marx and Engels.
The stillbirth of Marxism is traced from these ambiguities through
the major discrepancies in the thought of Lenin, Bernstein, Kautsky,
and Mao. Summer terms.
PS 386 Ancient Politcal
Thought (4-0) 4
A study of western political
thought from pre-Socratic Athens to the 16th century. Readings in
the works of philosophers including Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli,
Luther, and others. Fall terms.
Prerequisites:
PS 101S.
PS 387 Modern Political
Thought (4-0) 4
An examination of the
main currents of western political thought from the 17th century
to the present. Readings in the works of philosophers including
Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Marx, and others. Winter terms.
Prerequisites:
PS 386.
PS 400 Native American
Law And Politics (4-0) 4
A study of political
and legal issues that involve American Indians, both from a historical
and contemporary perspective. On demand.
PS 421 The American
Presidency (4-0) 4
Study of the American
presidency, including historical development and current structure,
organization, behavior, processes and policy implications; examination
of executive bureaucracy. Winter terms, odd years.
PS 422 Legislative
Process (4-0) 4
Study of American legislatures
at the federal and state level including structural, behavioral,
and policy implications of the legislative process in contemporary
American government. Winter terms. even years.
PS 423 Law And The
Judicial Process (4-0) 4
Explores the debate about
the role of the courts, the nature and limits of law and the meaning
of concepts such as justice, liberty, morality, and responsibility
in a constitutional republic. The impact of judicial processes on
this debate is analyzed. Winter terms, even years.
PS 425 Prisons And
Prisoners (4-0) 4
An inquiry into imprisonment
as a punishment for criminals. Historical perspectives on crime
and punishment and contemporary issues facing prisons and prisoners
are clarified and analyzed. Fall terms.
Prerequisites:
PS 241.
PS 450 National Government
Internship 16
Practical, full-time
intern work in Washington, D.C., in the national government. Requires
the keeping of a detailed journal and the completion of a research
paper. Fall, winter, and summer terms, on demand.
Prerequisites:
PS 101S, 110S, 422, and consent of instructor.
PS 480W Contemporary
Political Thought (4-0) 4
An examination of the
philosophical and political origins of the political formation of
the self, interactions between dominant and minority cultures, and
legitimization and consensus in a post-Marxist, post-Capitalist,
and post-Colonial world. Focuses on 20th century thinkers such as
Foucault, Deleuze and Guattari, Said, Lyotard, Braidotti, and others.
PS 287 recommended. This course is the same as Phil 480; credit
will be given for only one of these courses. Winter terms.
PS 495 Proseminar
In Political Science (2-0) 2
This course provides
an opportunity to engage in a critical examination of the discipline
of political science and its relationship to career opportunities.
It encourages students to think seriously about political science
as a component of liberal arts education as well as a vocation.
It devotes time to preparing an assessment portfolio and identifying
a research topic for the senior seminar. Fall terms.
Prerequisites:
PS 251W.
PS 496 Senior Seminar
(2-0) 2
Advanced study and research
in selected topics. Winter terms.
Prerequisites:
PS 251W, senior standing, and PS 495.
PS 499 Independent
Study 1-6
Individual research is
conducted under the supervision of a faculty member. Offered on
demand.
Prerequisites:
Approval of the instructor and the department.
|