GLBL 296

Fall 2022 All Classes

All Classes

Credit: 1 hours.

Examination of current controversies and larger ethical issues in today's global society. Topics could include: immigration, global environmental debates, and population issues.

May be repeated in the same or separate terms to a maximum of 3 hours if topics vary.

Section Status updates every 10 minutes.
GLBL 296 class schedule data for fall 2022
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
66693
Lecture-Discussion
AW
6:00PM -6:50PM
MW
1051 Lincoln Hall
Williams, A
Part of Term:
A
Date Range:
08/22/22-10/14/22
Section Title:
Post Genocide Transnat Justice
Section Info:
This course will examine the role of transitional justice in post-genocide societies. Transitional Justice refers to the measures countries use to address past human rights violations. Topics covered include: truth commissions, local trials, international tribunals, remedies, and memory studies. This class will explore contemporary challenges in human rights law and the impact of globalization on international justice.
70589
Lecture-Discussion
CF
3:00PM -4:50PM
R
325 David Kinley Hall
Fogelman, C
Part of Term:
A
Date Range:
08/22/22-10/14/22
Section Title:
Frontier, Heartland & Empire
Section Info:
This seminar is an examination of the interlinked ideas of American frontier, heartland, and empire. How have these symbolic ideas mutually reinforced and altered one another, and what material outcomes have they created throughout the last five-plus centuries? Using readings from across the social sciences and humanities, the first part of this seminar will explore the development of The Frontier and The Heartland as ideas. We will then examine the ways those symbolic ideas have led to material outcomes, in the U.S. and far beyond.
58754
Lecture-Discussion
D
3:00PM -4:50PM
W
143 Armory
Schrag, D
Part of Term:
A
Date Range:
08/22/22-10/14/22
Section Title:
Pol of Belong: Nat/Pop in Euro
Section Info:
This course investigates what is at stake in various processes of European inclusion and exclusion (e.g. the EU, Euroscepticism, citizenship, normative understandings of “European-ness,” etc.). A theme throughout this course will be the ideological construction of a European other (an imaged “not-Europe”) and internal and external othering processes. Special emphasis will be given to studying nationalist populism in Europe (in comparison to the United States) and its relation to neoliberal capitalism, religion, nativism, immigration, and globalization.
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