POLS-POLITICAL
SCIENCE -- 2003-05 Catalog
Political Science Department
POLS
111 California Constitution and
Government (1)
Basic
aspects of California state government. Satisfies California state and local
government requirement for students who have AP credit for American Government
or have taken American Government without coverage of California government. 1
lecture.
POLS
112 American and California Government
(4) GE D1
Study
of governmental institutions, politics, issues and political behavior in the
United States and California in constitutional, historical, social and cultural
perspectives. Meets the U.S. government and California state/local government
requirement. 4 lectures.
POLS
180 Political Inquiry (4)
Introduction
to the scope, language, concepts and approaches employed in political science
and the social sciences. Includes emphasis on basic methodological and research
strategies for assessing political issues, events, the dynamics of political
change and philosophy of science. 4 lectures.
POLS
200 Special Problems for Undergraduates
(1–4)
Individual
investigation, research, study, or survey of selected problems under faculty
supervision. Total credit limited to 4 units. Prerequisite: Consent of
department head.
POLS
225 Introduction to International
Relations (4)
Introduction
to the basic concepts, issues, and theories surrounding the study of
international politics. Changes in the nature of conflict, power, and national
interests in the post-Cold War era. Role of states, non-governmental actors,
and international organizations in the global arena. 4 lectures.
POLS
229 Introduction to Comparative
Politics (4)
Comparative
study of the governments of selected Western and non-Western countries. Case
studies. 4 lectures.
POLS
230 Basic Concepts of Political Thought
(4)
Introduction
to such concepts as: law, justice, community, right, citizen, and constitution,
which are fundamental to political discourse, as developed in the works of
Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Machiavelli, and other illustrious
thinkers from classic to modern times. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
285 Model United Nations (4)
Introduction
to the United Nations and major issues that confront it. Preparation for
participation in collegiate Model United Nations conferences. Rules of
procedure and debate, preparation of country position papers, and resolution
writing. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: One course in POLS or consent of instructor.
POLS
308 Collective Violence and Conflict
Resolution (4)
Causes,
methods, and consequences of non-state groups that use violent means to pursue
revolutionary, separatist, or ideological goals both domestically and
internationally. Dynamics of ethnic conflict, terrorist movements, paramilitary
groups, insurgencies, and narco-trafficking. Processes of conflict resolution
in divided societies through military responses, negotiated settlements,
democracy, and peacekeeping missions. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
310 Politics of Ethnicity and Gender
(4) USCP
Analysis
of factors that affect the changing role of women and major ethnic groups in
American politics. Involvement, organization and role of minority groups in the
political process. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
315 The American Presidency (4)
Nature
and problems of contemporary presidential leadership emphasizing the impact of
bureaucracy, Congress, public opinion, the courts, interest groups, and the
party system upon the presidency and national policy making. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
316 Political Parties and Interest
Groups (4)
Make-up
and major functions of political parties. Role of political parties and
interest groups in a democracy. Degree of consensus and conflict between
present day political parties and interest groups in their attempts to
influence public policy. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
317 Campaigns and Elections (4)
Origins
and dimensions of public opinion. Focus on contemporary political campaigns and
elections in the U.S. Impact of political ideology, mass media, high
technology, pressure groups on electoral outcomes. Voting behavior and other
forms of political participation in the U.S. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS
112.
POLS
318 Political Behavior (4)
Political
behavior of individuals and groups examined in light of biological, economic,
psychological and social-psychological theories and research, including
emphasis on the relationship between attitudes and behavior. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
319 United States Congress (4)
Theory
and practice of representative government in the United States. Organization,
procedures and consequences of the legislative process in Congress and state
legislatures. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
320 Politics of Global Survival (4)
Consideration
of global survival from east-west, north-south and global perspectives. Arms race,
development, and the political dimensions of energy, environment, food and
population. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 225 or junior standing.
POLS
324 International Relations Theory (4)
Survey
of theoretical approaches to the study of international political processes and
problems. Foreign policies and politics in relations between states. Conflicts
and adjustments. Analyses of selected problems to elucidate differences between
realist, liberal, socialist, constructivist, and other theories. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: POLS 225.
POLS
325 Global Political Issues (4) GE D5
Concepts,
theories and contemporary global issues combined so as to better understand the
complexities of our modern world. Application of principles of international
relations to subjects which affect our lives. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Completion of GE Area A, and one course from two of the three subfields of Area
D1, Area D2, and/or Area D3. Political Sciences majors will not receive GE Area
D5 credit.
POLS
328 Politics of Developing Areas (4)
Process
of political development in the Third World with appropriate examples taken
from particular areas and countries. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 225.
POLS
330 Modern Political Thought (4)
Theories
of political participation and the relationship between the individual and the
state as developed in the works of influential thinkers such as Locke,
Rousseau, Mill and Marx. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 230.
POLS
333 World Food Systems (4) GE Area F
Integrated,
interdisciplinary study of the technologies of global food production,
environmental and social issues related to the application of those
technologies, and moral and ethical issues associated with global food
production and distribution. Emphasis on the politics of change. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: Junior standing and completion of GE Area B. Political Science
majors will not receive GE Area F credit.
POLS
334 Jurisprudence (4)
Normative
and analytical problems concerning law. Nature of law and legal systems.
Justification of law and the obligation to conform. Analysis of liberty and
justice and their relevance to issues such as affirmative action,
discrimination, and free speech. 3 lectures, 1 activity. Prerequisite: POLS 112
and POLS 230.
POLS
337 American Political Thought (4)
The
central political ideas of America's leading thinkers from the Puritans to the
present. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112, POLS 230.
POLS
338 Critical Issues in American
Politics (4) GE D5
Examination
of significant social, legal, economic and political issues that face the
country and how the basic institutions of government–national, state, local–are
responding to them; assessment of policies to correct these problems. 4
lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, one course from Area D1, and
one course from either Area D2 or D3. Political Sciences majors will not
receive GE Area D5 credit.
POLS
339 Comparative Political Systems (4) GE D5
Use
of different methodologies to help understand western and non-western settings.
Particular attention paid to the political, economic and social institutions
which create distinctive politics. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE
Area A and one course from two of the three subfields of Area D1, D2, and/or
D3. Political Sciences majors will not receive GE Area D5 credit.
POLS
341 American Constitutional Law (4)
United
States Constitution as interpreted by the Supreme Court. Decisions in the areas
of taxation, separation of powers, nature of congressional presidential powers.
Emphasis on social, economic and political factors. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
POLS 112.
POLS
343 Civil Rights in America (4) USCP
Case-based
examination of race, ethnic and gender discrimination in the United States. The
course emphasizes the response of the Supreme Court to issues of equality
including affirmative action and abortion. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
344 Civil Liberties (4)
Role
of Supreme Court as interpreter of Constitutional rights and liberties, freedom
of expression, religion and the press, search and seizure, due process of law.
4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
345 Judicial Process (4)
Examines
legal processes, emphasizing political influences on law. Topics may include:
types of law, legal culture, state and federal courts, criminal trials, the
role of police, judges, attorneys in the legal system. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
346 Politics in Literature (4)
Political
concepts and values examined, based on literary sources. Recent topics include:
power, justice, violence and social responsibility. Authors whose works have
been examined include: Brecht, Camus, Dostoevesky, Miller, Vonnegut, and
Dorfman. Both plays and novels are used. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112 or
consent of instructor.
POLS
347 Politics and Popular Culture (4)
Intersection
of politics and mass media. How political actors use popular culture to
establish issue agendas, convey political concepts, symbolism, rhetoric and
values. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112 or consent of instructor.
POLS
351 Public Administration (4)
Development
of the management functions in government. Survey of administrative concepts
and cases. Attention given to national, state and local administrative systems.
Case studies and simulations. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
360 Political Analysis (5)
Introduction
to methodology research design and quantitative methods used in survey research
and political analysis. Multiple regression analysis, non-linear techniques,
and diagnostics used to analyze political phenomena. SPSS statistical computer programs used to work on statistical
application. 4 lectures, 1 activity. Prerequisite: POLS 180 and STAT 221 or
STAT 217 or equivalent with minimum grade of C-.
POLS
375 California Politics (4)
Political
culture, processes, behavior, institutions, public policy and distribution of
power in California state and substate governments. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
POLS 112.
POLS
384 Citizenship, Society and Self (4) GE D5
Development
of the skills and competencies that form the basis for an informed,
responsible, and active citizenry. The meaning of democracy, community, and
civic responsibility, and self-identification and examination as active
participants in the community. Fieldwork and field research based on service
involvement in the community. 3 lectures, 1 activity. Prerequisite: Completion
of GE Area A, one course in Area D1, and one course in Area D3. Political
Sciences majors will not receive GE Area D5 credit.
POLS
385 Advanced Model United Nations (2)
(CR/NC)
Preparation
for participation in collegiate Model United Nations conferences. Rules of
procedure and debate, preparation of country position papers, and resolution
writing. Discussion of current issues of concern to the United Nations.
Credit/No Credit grading only. Total credit limited to 6 units. 2 lectures.
Prerequisite: POLS 285 or consent of instructor.
POLS
386 Government Internship (2–12) (CR/NC)
Supervised
work experience in a government or related public agency. Intern will function
as an employee subject to all the duties and responsibilities of employees
engaged in comparable work. 30 hours of work experience per unit of credit.
Credit/No Credit grading. Recommended preparation: Junior standing with a
minimum 2.5 GPA.
POLS
388 Field Study (1) (CR/NC)
Field
study experience visiting government facilities, museums, and cultural places
as part of the London Study Program or other off-site Cal Poly programs. May
include films, discussions, and lecture by Cal Poly faculty. Credit/No Credit
grading only. Total credit limited to 6 units. 1 activity. Prerequisite: POLS
112 or equivalent.
POLS
400 Special Problems for Advanced
Undergraduates (1–4)
Individual
investigation, research, study, or survey of selected problems. Total credit limited
to 4 units. Prerequisite: Consent of department head.
POLS
419 Social Movements and Political
Protest (4)
Selected
U.S. social movements, including abolitionism, feminism, civil rights, gay
rights, the Christian right, and environmentalism. Political opportunities and
constraints that impact collective political action, and effects of grassroots
struggles for justice in U.S. politics and society. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
POLS 112 and junior standing.
POLS
420 Contemporary U.S. Foreign Policy (4)
Formulation
and conduct of U.S. foreign policy. Analysis of the theory and elements of U.S.
strategy; diplomacy, propaganda, economic operations, psychological warfare,
and military strategies. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 225.
POLS
426 International Organizations and Law
(4)
Transnational
politics and strategies supporting and opposing different dimensions of
globalization. Topics include international law and the use of force,
challenges to the primacy of the nation-state, and movement toward a global
culture as expressed in the development of human rights law. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: POLS 225 or POLS 324.
POLS
427 Politics of the Global Economy (4)
Political
conflicts surrounding the trading, financial, and security structures of the
international economy. Motivations, resources, and responses of states,
international organizations, multinational corporations and other nonstate
actors as they address economic, political, environmental, and security issues
within these structures. Desirability and inevitability of globalization. 3
lectures and a research paper. Prerequisite: POLS 225, completion of GE D2, or
consent of instructor.
POLS
451 Technology and Public Policy (4)
Techniques
for performing technical assessment and impact analysis in communication,
transportation, health technologies, aerospace, electronics and other new
technologies. Case studies on contemporary problems stemming from the
relationship of technology and politics. 3 lectures and a research paper.
Prerequisite: POLS 112.
POLS
456 Politics and Economic Policy (4)
Goals
of economic policy, based on efficiency, equity, and other values. Theories of
market failure and government regulation. Influence of electoral calculations,
bureaucracy, and interest group pressures on government approaches to address
market failures. Government intervention in the marketplace, and intervention
by economic interests into politics, and how this challenges democracy 3
lectures and a research paper. Prerequisite: POLS 112, completion of GE D2; or
consent of instructor .
POLS
457 The Politics of Reproductive Policy
(4)
History,
development, implementation and the relative success of various reproductive
policies. Critical evaluation of these policies using a feminist theoretical
framework and political science perspective. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS
112, completion of GE Area D, and junior standing; or consent of instructor.
POLS
460 Intermediate Political Analysis (4)
Intermediate
social science methodology focusing on stochastic model specification and
estimation. Enhancements and generalizations of the basic approaches with
applications to multivariate, nonlinear and large sample settings. Increased
use of computer packages and data analysis. 3 lectures, 1 activity.
Prerequisite: POLS 360.
POLS
461, 462 Senior Project (2) (2)
Selection
and completion of a project under faculty supervision. Project results
presented in a formal paper. Prerequisite: Senior standing (completion of 135
quarter hours), completion of required core courses and concentration. May not
be taken CR/NC.
POLS
470 Selected Advanced Topics (1–4)
Directed
courses on timely issues and topics for advanced students. Open to
undergraduate and graduate students. Class
Schedule will list topic selected. 1–4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 112,
junior standing.
POLS
471 Urban Politics (4)
Theoretical
approaches, concepts, and politics associated with urban governments. Urban
power structures, the relationship between urban society and politics, and
inter-governmental relations. 3 lectures and a research paper. Prerequisite:
POLS 112.
POLS
481 Senior Project Seminar (4)
Selection,
preparation and completion of senior project, focusing on current developments
in the field of political science, with primary attention to American politics,
public policy, international relations, or public administration. Project
results presented in a formal paper. 3 seminars and a research paper.
Prerequisite: POLS 112 and POLS 360.
POLS
484 Community Research Seminar (2)
Participation
in small groups performing action research requested by one or more community
agencies. May include surveys, interviewing, on-site evaluations and computer
data analysis. Total credit limited to 6 units. 1 seminar, 1 activity.
Prerequisite: Junior or senior standing.
POLS
495 Cooperative Education Experience
(12) (CR/NC)
Full-time
work experience in business, industry, government, and other areas of student
career interest. Positions are paid and usually require relocation and
registration in course for two consecutive quarters. Formal report and
evaluation by work supervisor required. Total credit limited to 16 units.
Credit/No Credit grading only. Prerequisite: Sophomore standing and consent of
instructor.
POLS
500 Independent Study (1–4)
Individual
research, studies, or surveys under the supervision of the faculty. Total
credit limited to 4 units. Prerequisite: Graduate standing with minimum of 12
core units.
POLS
515 Public Policy (4)
Public
policy making and contemporary policy issues, including markets; regulation;
criminal justice; housing; environment; poverty; health care and education. 4
lectures. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and POLS 112 or equivalent.
POLS
516 Public Finance (4)
Economic
and political factors affecting federal, state and local governments.
Intergovernmental relations and policy considerations in finance, debt
management and tax administration. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 515.
POLS
517 Administrative Theory and Behavior
(4)
Theories,
concepts and case studies related to organizations and to the individuals and
groups that work in them. Case studies and applications of concepts to public
and non-profit organizations. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS 515.
POLS
518 Public Policy Analysis (4) (Also
listed as CRP 518)
Analysis
of the social, economic, environmental, political contexts of public policy
decisions. Public policy issues and use of concepts and tools related to
monitoring and assessment. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: CRP 501, POLS 360 or
consent of instructor.
POLS
519 Public Personnel Policy (4)
Concepts,
techniques, and issues related to human resource administration. Techniques and
concepts for public and nonprofit organizations. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: POLS
515.
POLS
550 Development Administration (4)
Administration
in developing areas of the world. Tools for sustainable development. 4
lectures. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
POLS
560 Quantitative Methods (5)
Social
science methodology focusing on research design and quantitative methods used
in policy and political research: multi-regression, non-linear techniques,
diagnostics and time series. Advanced computer packages used to analyze
challenging data sets. 4 lectures, 1 activity. Prerequisite: POLS 360, STAT
322, or STAT 512.
POLS
586 Policy Internship (4–8) (CR/NC)
Supervised
work experience in a government or related public agency. Intern will function
as an employee engaged in comparable work. Credit/No Credit grading only. Total
credit limited to 8 units. Prerequisite: Completion of 12 units of core courses
in the Master of Public Policy Program.
POLS
590 Graduate Seminar (4)
Seminar
designed as a culminating component to the Master of Public Policy Program.
Individual research under the supervision of the faculty within a small
discussion environment, leading to a graduate project or paper. Total credit
limited to 8 units. 4 seminars. Prerequisite: POLS 560, advancement to
candidacy, consent of academic program chair.