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" \n",
" 0 | \n",
" 0 | \n",
" SOC100 | \n",
" Introduction to Sociology | \n",
" Sociology offers a unique lens through which we can examine the world around us. In this course you will develop a perspective that will allow you to analyze the social world in a way that reveals the hidden and/or overlooked social forces that shape our lives. This approach, the sociological imagination, will enable you to explore how social forces influence the ways we view and navigate our social world. We will discuss how sociologists use theory and research to better understand important social issues such as inequalities of race, class, gender, sexualities and how social order and social change are possible. We will discuss how society affects individuals and in turn how individuals can affect society. Class Schedule Information: Students must register for one discussion and one lecture section. | \n",
"
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" \n",
" 1 | \n",
" 1 | \n",
" MACS345 | \n",
" Digital & Gender Cultures | \n",
" This interdisciplinary course uses the lens of gender critique and pairs it with social activism to provide students analytical tools to engage with, reshape, and create digital cultures. Examines recent research and public policies related to the gendered, raced, and classes dimensions of digital cultures and inequality; the broad range of labor issues embedded in the growing income disparity related to digital cultures; the various ways that digital inequality has been defined by public policy, sociologists, and activists, and real examples of collective activism and social change related to emerging technologies. Course Information: Same as GWS 345, INFO 345, and SOC 345. | \n",
"
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" \n",
" 2 | \n",
" 2 | \n",
" ANTH350 | \n",
" Cultures of Law | \n",
" Covers major concepts and debates in the study of legal anthropology: the way in which different societies understand justice, practice law, engage or violate human rights, adjudicate responsibility. We examine the foundations of different legal systems, the cultural categories that different societies use to determine the meaning of justice, guilt, innocence, and the variations in systems for both preventing and punishing crime. In addition, we will consider the cultures of law as a profession. How do lawyers learn to read and see the world differently? How do Courts create their own cultural norms and social contexts in ways that impact how all of us receive due process? Finally we explore the relationship between state power, rule of law and democracy. Is there and should there be a role for politics in the law? | \n",
"
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" \n",
" 3 | \n",
" 3 | \n",
" ANTH387 | \n",
" Anthropology of Crime | \n",
" This course takes an anthropological perspective to challenge \"common-sense\" notions about crime. We will compare ideas about and representations of lawbreaking, criminality, danger, policing, and violence in different parts of the world, considering how they diverge from, and yet also overlap with, each other. Our goal is to find new ways to understand both how something becomes \"crime\" and also how it then quickly becomes sensationalized, stereotyped and simplified as it enters public debate. | \n",
"
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" \n",
" 4 | \n",
" 4 | \n",
" SOCW300 | \n",
" Diversity: Identities & Issues | \n",
" This introductory course explores multiple dimensions of diversity in a pluralistic and increasingly globalized society. Using a social work strengths perspective as well as historical, constructivist, and critical conceptual frameworks; the course examines issues of identity, culture, privilege stigma, prejudice, and discrimination. The social construction and implications of race, class, gender, sexual orientation, and other dimensions of difference is examined at individual, interpersonal, and systems levels. Students are expected to use the course material to explore their personal values, biases, family backgrounds, culture, and formative experiences in order to deepen their self-awareness and develop interpersonal skills in bridging differences. Finally, students apply learning from the course to identify characteristics of effective social work and other health and human service provision among people culturally different themselves; and to identify opportunities for change cont | \n",
"
\n",
" \n",
" 5 | \n",
" 5 | \n",
" EPOL517 | \n",
" Race, Gender & Sexuality Issu | \n",
" Examines contemporary theories of race, gender, class, and sexuality, as well as analyzing how their dynamics play out in U.S. public schooling and history. In an attempt to discuss a range of disciplinary and theoretical approaches to diversity, we will shift among historical, sociological, political, theoretical and pedagogical issues. Traces the place of diversity in forming notions of citizenship, community, identity, and political affiliation/alliance. While two extended examples will focus on the interplay of race, class, and gender in the school-based issues of drop out rates and gendered interactions in the classroom and playground, we will also consider contemporary theories of diversity in local and global contexts. Course Information: 4 graduate hours. No professional credit. | \n",
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" \n",
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