|
Course Number and Title |
Description |
|
202
American Government |
Study of the theory and practice of
the American political system at the
national, state, and local levels.
Some emphasis is given to the recent trends
in government. Questions of national
security, foreign policy, and civil
liberties will be examined. This
course satisfies state requirements concerning
the United States and Georgia
Constitutions. (Offered Fall and Spring
semesters).
3 Hours |
|
203
International Politics |
Components and characteristics of the
international political system; conflict
and cooperation in international
relations; and the changing nature of
international political behavior.
Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
204
Comparative Politics |
Comparative analysis of existing
structures, processes, and problems of
political systems from a global
perspective. Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours
|
|
205
Western Political Thought |
A survey of the development of
Western political ideas,
including the contributions of
Ancient Greece, Rome, the Church Fathers,
Renaissance and Reformation writers,
liberalism, and contemporary political
thinkers. (Offered Fall semester,
odd years).
3 Hours |
|
301
The American Presidency |
The historical development and
constitutional basis of the U.S. Presidency, its
contemporary roles and
responsibilities, and its relationships with other
political institutions.
Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
302
Congress and the Legislative Process |
An examination of the United States
Congress, with emphasis on recruitment
and composition, styles of
representation, leadership, the role of interest
groups and the executive in the
legislative process, organization, and
functions. Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
303
Campaigns and Elections |
An examination of the pluralistic
nature of American politics, with emphasis
on group behavior and lobbying;
development, organization, and functions
of political parties; elections,
electoral behavior, and campaigning; and public
opinion. Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
304
Statistics for the Social and Behavioral
Sciences |
Material covered includes frequency
distributions and graphs, descriptive
measures, probability, probability
distributions and introductions to correlation
coefficients and simple regression,
chi-square, t-tests, and analysis variance.
Does not require knowledge of
calculus. Prerequisites: POL 202 and
MTH 101 or MTH 102 and MTH 104.
(Offered Fall and Spring semesters).
3 Hours |
|
309
State and Local Government |
Organization and functions of state
and local government in the United States,
intergovernmental relations,
administration, adjudication, and the
organization and function of
political parties on state and local levels.
Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
345
Ancient and Medieval Political Thought |
Political philosophers from Plato to
Thomas Aquinas;
their ideas examined and related to
current issues. Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
346
Modern Political Thought |
Political philosophers from
Machiavelli to Mill to contemporary political
thinkers; ideas providing the basis
of modern political understanding and
controversy will be examined.
Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
347
American Political Thought |
Survey of the American political mind
from the Early Republic to
contemporary controversies. Emphasis
on the problems of popular rule,
federalism, and representation.
Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours
|
|
350
Constitutional Law I: National and State
Powers |
The Constitution as it has evolved as
a basic law by means of interpretation
through Supreme Court decisions.
Special emphasis is placed on major cases
affecting the scope of state and
federal powers, and individual rights.
Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
351
Constitutional Law II: Civil Rights and
Liberties |
Reviews development of the Bill of
Rights and political and civil liberties in
the American constitutional system.
Limitations on governmental powers
with emphasis on freedom of speech,
press, religion, and the rights of accused.
Modern theories of constitutional
interpretation surveyed.
Prerequisite: POL 202
3 Hours |
|
352
Business Law |
The law of business with an emphasis
on contracts in personal and real
property, sales, business
organizations, commercial paper, employment, and
insurance, and ethics(Fall semester).
3 Hours |
|
390
American Foreign Policy |
The institutions and procedures
involved in formation and implementation of
American foreign policy, with some
consideration of important elements and
strategies of American foreign policy
from World War II to the present.
Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
420
Public Administration |
Factors that shape and condition
administrative
institutions; formal organizational
theory; regulatory activities and
administrative responsibility in a
democratic society. Prerequisite: POL 202.
3 Hours |
|
421
Political and Organizational Leadership |
Studies of the concepts and processes
of organizational leadership as related
to academics, business, political,
and human resource settings.
Prerequisites: CHR 101 or CHR 102 or
COM 101, or EDU 101, or HS 201,
or PE 206, or POL 210, or PSY 201 or
SOC 201.
3 Hours |
|
470
Internship
|
Supervised practical experience
designed to give the student the opportunity
to apply theoretical knowledge to the
actual functioning of the government
and/or political process.
Prerequisite: Sophomore standing and completion
of nine hours in Political Science.
(Offered on demand).
1-6 Hours
|
|
480
Topics in Political Science |
A study of selected topics. The topic
and number of hours of credit will vary.
Prerequisite: Permission of the
instructor and POL 202.
1-3 Hours
|
|
490
Senior Seminar |
A course that seeks to provide
students the opportunity to integrate the
concepts and theories of political
science with Christian theology.
Students will be challenged to
confront and resolve key issues they will face
as they seek to live out their
biblical faith in their profession and in their civic
and personal lives. Prerequisite:
Instructor’s approval and completion of the
Political Science Assessment
Examination. (Offered Spring Semester).
# Hours
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