Summer College Courses at Boston University (BU) Summer Term 2008
Summer Study Internship at Boston University Summer Term

Boston University Summer Study Internship Program

Politics and Public Policy

The late Tip O’Neill, Boston congressman and speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, was fond of saying that all politics is local—and there is no more interesting mix of local, state, and national politics than in Boston. As the urban hub of the metropolitan region and as the state capital of Massachusetts, Boston plays a major role in local and state politics. It is also the center of federal government for New England, home to numerous federal agencies, the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, and the First District of the Federal Reserve.

Students in the Politics and Public Policy track choose from courses in criminal justice, economics, political science, public policy, and urban affairs. Students also gain first-hand experience working with local, state, and federal government agencies; international agencies and organizations; law firms, clinics, or commercial legal departments, public policy think tanks; and political parties, public relations, or pressure groups.

Fun Facts:

  • Adopted in 1780, the constitution for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts is the oldest written constitution in effect in the world today and was a model for the United States Constitution and its Bill of Rights.
  • The democratic concept of the American town meeting began in Boston in 1633, when citizens of Dorchester approved an order requiring a regular weekly meeting.
  • Henry David Thoreau's writings on civil disobedience led to the development of the concept of passive resistance advocated by Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.

Summer 1 Courses (May 20-June 27)
You’ll spend your first six weeks of the Summer Study Internship Program taking two courses of your choice from the list below.

Internship (July 7-August 15)
For the second six weeks of the program, you’ll be placed as an intern in a Boston area organization or business that matches your interests and experience. You should expect to work a minimum of 35 hours a week, for five days a week.

Summer Study Internship Course (May 23-August 15)
The Summer Study Internship Course begins in Summer 1 with an orientation on Friday, May 23. The remaining five sessions continue through August 15. 2 cr.

Politics and Public Policy Summer 1 Courses (pick two):

CAS AN 319 Anthropology of Muslim Cultures and Politics
Muslim societies are today being buffeted by a struggle over the forms and meanings of Muslim culture and politics. This course examines this struggle, and its implications for religious authority, gender ideals, and new notions of citizenship, civil society, and democracy. 4 cr.
Mon./Wed. 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Mentor Mustafa

CAS EC 356 Economics of the Labor Market
Prereq: CAS EC 201 or CAS EC 211 or CAS EC 303. Application of current theories of labor supply and demand, wages, education and experience, immigration, labor efficiency, discrimination, and unemployment. Appraisal of the effects of government policies on labor markets. 4 cr.
Mon./Tues./Wed./Thurs. 1-3 p.m. Josefina Posadas

CAS IR 271 Introduction to International Relations
Undergraduate required principal course. Study of basic factors in international relations, Western state systems, the concept of balance of power, nationalism, and imperialism. Primarily for concentrators. 4 cr.
Mon./Wed. 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Chandler Rosenberger

CAS PH 251 Medical Ethics
Prereq: one philosophy course or sophomore standing. Examination of a number of value problems arising within the context of medicine and health care. Particular ethical problems of euthanasia, abortion, human experimentation, reproduction, and allocation of scarce resources; critiques of contemporary medicine as an institution. 4 cr.
Mon./Tues./Thurs. 6-8:30 p.m. Kenneth Richman

CAS PO 241 Introduction to Public Policy
Undergraduate core course. Analysis of several issue areas: civil rights, school desegregation, welfare and social policy, education and urban housing, energy and the environment. Characteristics of policy systems in each issue area are analyzed to identify factors which may affect the content and implementation of public policies. 4 cr.
Tues./Thurs. 2-5:30 p.m. Christine Rossell

CAS PO 317 Presidential Leadership
Presidential power and functions; relations with Congress, political party, and the public; personality and leadership; and comparative study of selected presidents. 4 cr.
Mon./Wed. 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Douglas Kriner

CAS PO 324 Media and Politics in the United States
Examines changes over time in the American polity's assumptions about what the press ought to do. In particular, relates our understanding of the press's role to contemporary media developments including technological changes, corporate media ownership, and the re-amateurization of journalism. 4 cr.
Tues./Thurs. 6-9:30 p.m. Alex Whalen

CAS PO 548 The Politics of Education
Overview of the origins of public schooling, the purpose of public education, and controversial educational policies and research. 4 cr.
Mon./Wed. 5:30-9 p.m. Christine Rossell

CAS SO 215 Patients, Professionals, and Health Care
Social factors in health and illness, experience of illness, medicalization; socialization of professionals; organization of delivery and financing of healthcare; pharmaceutical and insurance markets; hospitals, nursing homes and hospices; problems and reforms of U.S. healthcare system. 4 cr.
Tues./Thurs. 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Alya Guseva

CAS WS 305 Critical Issues in Women's Studies: Hillary Clinton and Women's Political Leadership
Emphasizes the Presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton. Readings, discussion, and field research on issues of women's relationship to the processes of political leadership, change, and environment. Analysis of public policy related to women and children. 4 cr.
Mon./Wed. 5-8:30 p.m. Diane Balser

COM CM 507 Social Activism and PR in the 21st Century
Prereq: COM CM 301 or CM 701. Today's communication-savvy, global social action groups are turning the PR table on the establishment. Fueled by broad mistrust of corporations and governments, the Internet, and the 24/7 media hunger for confrontation, new age "Davids" are aiming their PR slingshots at modern "Goliaths." Through case studies, readings, and guest speakers, we examine the public relations strategies, tactics, ethics, successes, and challenges of social activism in the twenty-first century. 4 cr.
Mon./Wed. 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Stephen Quigley

MET CJ 101 Principles of Criminal Justice
An overview of the criminal justice system and explanations of criminal behavior. How the system relates to the individual, from the time of arrest through conviction and sentencing. Emphasis is on the conflict between social order and individual justice. 4 cr.
Tues./Thurs. 6-9:30 p.m. Mary Ellen Mastrorilli




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