2016-2017 Catalog

Major Requirements

In total, majors must complete at least 11 courses (44 units). ECON 101 is strongly recommended. No course will count toward the Politics major that the student takes CR/NC.

Fundamental Courses

POLS 101American Politics and Public Policy

4

POLS 300Research Methods in Politics and Public Policy

4

POLS 495Comprehensive Seminar

4

Subfields

Students must select one course in each of the following subfields: International Relations, Comparative Politics, American Politics, Political Theory, and Public Law.

For the subfield courses, DWA courses may count towards International Relations or Comparative Politics with department approval, and UEP courses may count for American Politics with department approval, but 

Political Theory and Public Law must be taken within the Politics Department.

International Relations

POLS 130Introduction to International Relations

4

POLS 232International Political Economy

4

POLS 233International Security

4

POLS 235United States Foreign Relations

4

Comparative Politics

POLS 120Introduction to Comparative Politics

4

POLS 218Russian Relations with the World

4

POLS 221Latin American Politics

4

POLS 223Dilemmas of Democracy

4

POLS 226Contemporary Chinese Politics

4

POLS 227East Asian Politics: China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan

4

POLS 320Advanced Theories of Comparative Politics

4

POLS 321Gender and Politics in the Developing World

4

POLS 325Politics and Security in New Europe

4

Public Law

POLS 140Law and Society

4

POLS 243Juvenile Justice: Children in Conflict with the Law

4

POLS 244Constitutional Law

4

POLS 247Supreme Court Politics

2

POLS 340Rebellious Lawyering

4

POLS 342Human Rights in the United States

4

POLS 345The Fourth Amendment

4

POLS 346Civil Rights and Civil Liberties

4

POLS 347Race and Law

4

American Politics

POLS 201Work and Labor in America

4

POLS 202Leadership in the Public and Private Sphere

4

POLS 204Campaigns and Elections

4

POLS 205Latino/a Politics

4

POLS 206Race and American Politics

4

POLS 207Los Angeles Politics

4

POLS 208Movements for Social Justice

4

POLS 250American Intelligence and National Security

4

POLS 262California Politics

4

POLS 264Disaster Politics: New Orleans in the Wake of Hurricane Katrina

2

POLS 301Urban Policy and Politics

4

POLS 302The American Presidency

4

POLS 303Gender and American Politics

4

POLS 336National Security in Practice: How Washington Works

4

Political Theory

POLS 150Introduction to Political Theory

4

POLS 251European Political Thought: From Plato to Machiavelli

4

POLS 252European Political Thought: From Hobbes to Marx

4

POLS 253European Political Thought: From Nietzsche to the Present

4

POLS 254American Political Thought

4

POLS 256Ethics and Politics

4

POLS 257Conservative and Libertarian Political Philosophy

4

POLS 258Theoretical Accounts of Racism

4

POLS 350HobbesPlato, Machiavelli, and Hobbes

2

POLS 351Tocqueville, Marx, and Nietzsche

4

POLS 352Black Political Thought

4

POLS 353Seminar: Advanced Study in Political Theory

2

POLS 354Seminar on How Tyrannies Work

4

Additional Electives

Three required electives must be taken within the Politics Department.

WRITING REQUIREMENT

The Junior Writing Seminar is Politics 272 or any 300-level Politics, DWA, or UEP course (except Politics 300) that focuses on research and oral presentation skills.

COMPREHENSIVE REQUIREMENT

All politics majors must complete a Comprehensive Seminar in the spring of their senior year. Students will read and discuss political science journal articles that raise interesting questions for the field, combine theory with empirical data, and serve as models for their own senior thesis. Simultaneously, each student is asked to develop a senior thesis on a topic in one of the sub-fields of the major, demonstrating theoretical sophistication, an ability to find and evaluate sources of data, to develop and test hypotheses, and to argue a thesis. Papers are subjected to peer review and to a rigorous drafting process. All seniors are required to submit a proposal for their thesis by the end of September in their senior year. These proposals should state the research problem, demonstrate a significant command of the relevant bibliography, and include a tentative outline of major components in the study.

HONORS

We encourage highly motivated students to pursue Department Honors. They qualify for this program by achieving a 3.25 grade point average overall and a 3.5 grade point average in courses counting toward the Politics major. Only under extraordinary circumstances will the Politics faculty members approve a petition to have this 3.5 grade point average waived. Students interested in pursuing Honors should complete the courses required for the Politics major by the end of Fall Semester. They will be required to meet all of the obligations of the Comprehensive Seminar in the spring semester and complete a major research paper as a part of that experience.