Courses

  • GRS HI 975: Directed Research: Middle Eastern History
    Directed research on a topic in Middle Eastern history.
  • GRS HI 979: Directed Research: East Asian History
    Directed research on a topic in East Asian history.
  • GRS HI 980: Directed Research: History of Science
    Directed research on a topic in the history of science.
  • GRS IR 621: Global Governance, Economic Development, and Human Rights
    Examines the roles of international "governing" institutions (the UN, NGOs, etc.) in the development of lower-income countries and the integration of human rights policies into such activities. Includes guest speakers from global organizations such as the WHO and the UN.
  • GRS IR 699: Teaching College International Relations I
    The goals, contents, and methods of instruction in international relations. General teaching-learning issues. Required of all teaching fellows.
  • GRS IR 701: Introduction to International Relations
    Offers a rigorous introduction to the basic concepts of international relations, including analytical approaches, state system and non-state actors, international legal principles, diplomatic practice, and international ethics. Emphasizes history, case study, and practical application.
  • GRS IR 702: Research Methods for International Relations Practitioners
    Provides tools for designing and implementing rigorous research and policy papers. Reviews formulation of research questions and choice of research methods. Introduces methodologies including case study, archival research, and basic quantitative analysis.
  • GRS IR 703: International Security
    Introduces core concepts of international security, including deterrence, balance of power theory, alliance politics, arms races, asymmetric warfare, and non-traditional security concerns such as terrorism. Topics are considered from both a theoretical basis and in historical and contemporary context.
  • GRS IR 704: Global Economic and Development Policy
    Intermediate level survey of the contemporary politics, economics and policy questions in the international economy: theories of international political economy and international economics; politics of international economic institutions; analyses of industrial development, foreign investment, global and regional trade, and poverty alleviation.
  • GRS IR 707: Political Reform in the Middle East
    Seminar analyzes and rethinks Middle East politics. Authoritarian governments rule most of the Middle East, but internal and external pressures for change are mounting. Given the tenuousness of the status quo, political reform will be hard to avoid.
  • GRS IR 722: U.S. Foreign Policy since the End of the Cold War
    This graduate seminar exmines the formulation and conduct of U.S. foreign policy since 1989. It identifies the objectives and essential elements of American grand strategy and evaluates the extent to which U.S. policy is realistic, effective and democratic.
  • GRS IR 723: Seminar: The Political Economy of Advanced Industrialized Societies
    Meets with CAS PO 621. Surveys forces contributing to national differences in social and economic policy; identifies current challenges to state sovereignty, such as globalization and immigration; and examines how nations from different welfare state regimes are coping with these threats to the nation state.
  • GRS IR 737: Analyzing Foreign Policy in a Multipolar World
    Investigates and applies major IR theories of state behavior and foreign policy. Case studies focus on the rising powers of India and China, while also drawing on experiences of the U.S., Brazil, South Africa, and other states.
  • GRS IR 757: Transnational Shi?ism
    Begins with the original split in Islam that generated Twelver Shi?ism, discusses key features of the religion such as Muharram rituals and the existence of a quasi-clergy, and ends with a discussion of individual Shi?ite countries and relations between them.
  • GRS IR 758: Comparative Political Economy of China and India
    (Meets with GRS PO 785.) Compares China and India's economic reform, focusing on their reform policies and government-business relationships. Examines their political development (or lack thereof) during their economic reform. Discusses China and India's rise and implications for the global system.
  • GRS IR 759: International Institutions for Finance, Development, and Trade
    Intensive examination of the roles the IMF, World Bank, and WTO play in the postwar international economic order---addressing less the decision-making within these institutions and more the issues in which they are involved, including their policies and programs.
  • GRS IR 764: Seminar on China in the Contemporary World
    (Meets with GRS PO 764.) Examines the various dimensions of China's rise-- economic, military, and in reputation-- and its implications for Asia and the world. Special attention to the links between domestic and foreign policy and to the dynamic of Sino-U.S. relations.
  • GRS IR 766: Contemporary Issues in Latin America
    Meets with GRS PO 768. Review and analysis of contemporary developments in Latin America from major print and on-line news sources and journals. Focuses on breaking issues and develops capacity for critical analysis. Required for LASMA students.
  • GRS IR 767: Latin American Comparative Politics
    Review of comparative politics literature, combined with country case studies, to assess to what degree Latin America is "the graveyard of development theories." Particular attention on recent patterns of redemocratization and economic liberalization and their multiple challenges.
  • GRS IR 772: Classics of International Relations
    A reading of major international relations classics of the twentieth century in the original texts, assessed both in their historical context, and from a contemporary point of view.

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