You are in the official 1978-79 General Catalog for California State University, Fresno.


COURSES

 

Political Science (Pl Si)

1. Modern Politics (3)
An introduction to modern politics through the study of subjects such as political interests, parties, and movements; democracy, communism, and nationalism; the individual and the state; power and government.

2. American Government and Institutions (3)
Meets the United States Constitution requirement and the federal, California state, and local government requirement. Not open to students with credit in Pl Si 101. The development and operation of government in the United States; study of how ideas, institutions, laws, and people have constructed and maintained a political order in America. Not available for CR/NC grading.

3. Political Analysis (3)
For Political Science and Public Administration majors. Classical and contemporary political analysis of the structures, functions, and processes of macro- and micro-political systems; fields of political science; research techniques.

4. The Purposes of Government (3)
A general introduction to the enduring questions of politics which have helped shape Western political cultures. The centuries-old quest for justice, power, freedom, order, peace, and meaning in history examined in its past and present forms.

5. Government and Society (3)
An ethical and descriptive examination of the scope, role, and direction of government activity; of government as an agent of stability and change; of government as an influence on the realization of personal and social needs and values.

6. Global Politics (3)
Fundamental political problems in a changing international context. Contemporary issues raised by the interdependence of nations and peoples. Includes such subjects as national liberation, energy and resource problems, population problems, the superpowers, and the politics of violence and threat.

10T. Contemporary Issues in Politics
(1-3; max total 9 if no topic repeated)

Significant contemporary uses in political theory, world politics, comparative government, American government, local government, public administration, or public opinion.

90. Methods of Quantitative Political Analysis (3)
A quantitative approach to hypothesis testing and problems of evidence and inference in political science, Methods of acquisition of quantitative political data, including aggregate data analysis, content analysis, elite studies, and survey research. Basic statistical analysis.

101. American Constitution, Institutions, and Ideals (3)
Meets the United States Constitution requirement. Not open to students below second semester sophomore or with credit in Pl Si 2. Executive, legislative, and judicial functions of our government under the constitution; federal, California state, and local governmental relationships.

102. California Government and Institutions (1)
Not open to students with credit in Pl Si 2, 101. Open only to students who have satisfied United States Constitution requirement but have not satisfied California state and local government requirement. Examination of legislative, executive, judicial, and local government problems in California.





Political Theory (Pl Si)

110. Seminar in History of Political Thought to Machiavelli (3)
Development of political thought from Plato to Machiavelli: law, justice, the state, authority, forms of government, and church-state relations in light of the philosophy of history.

111. Seminar in History of Political Thought Since Machiavelli (3)
Freedom and individual rights, democracy, majority rule, equality, law and authority, power, constitutionalism, property, social class and structure, and revolution traced through the writings of Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Hume, Burke, Bentham, Hegel, Tocqueville, and Mill.

114. Seminar in American Political Thought (3)
Analysis of democracy, majority rule and minority rights, constitutionalism, federalism, representation, pluralism, property, separation of powers, and judicial review based on the perspectives of representative early and contemporary American thinkers.

115. Approaches to Political Science (3)
Historical development of political science as a discipline; emphasis on theories of classical analysis compared with contemporary political and administrative sciences.

118T. Topics in Political Theory (1-4; max total 8)
Possible topics include democratic political thought, Soviet political thought, pluralism, socialism, classical liberalism, and conservatism.

119T. Topics in Political Theory (1-4; max total 8)
Peace and War in Political Theory; Graeco-Roman Legal Theories; Political Theology; Science and Society; Analysis of Marxism; Politics and the Sociology of Knowledge.




International Relations (Pl Si)

120. International Politics (3)
Dynamics of political interactions of nations; nationalism, imperialism and interdependence; national power and diplomacy; types of conflict, including war; peaceful settlement of disputes; current issues involving competing foreign policies, national development, energy, and national liberation movements.

121. American Foreign Affairs (3)
Prerequisite: Pl Si 2. Formulation and execution of American foreign policy; constitutional frame work; role of the president and the executive branch, Congress, pressure groups and public opinion; contemporary problems and policies.

122. Contemporary World Politics (3)
World affairs from 1914 to the present; present foreign policies at the major powers from historical, political, and economic viewpoints; events leading to World War II and United Nations organizations.

125. Soviet Foreign Policy (3)
Sources of Soviet foreign policy, historical and ideological; continuity and change in methods, strategy and tactics; policy formulation and application in specific geographic and subject matter areas.

126. International Law and Organization (3)
The sources and subjects of international law; state jurisdiction and responsibility; international agreements; the regulation of force and the peaceful settlement of disputes through international law and organization, including the League of Nations, the United Nations, and regional organizations.

128T. Topics in International Relations (1-4; max total 8 if no topic repeated)
Nationalism, imperialism, communism, balance of power concepts, the superpowers (United States and USSR).

129T. Seminar in International Politics (1-4; max total 8 if no topic repeated)
Neutralism and nonalignment, regionalism, foreign policies of underdeveloped countries and of communist states (excluding USSR).





Comparative Government (Pl Si)

140. Approaches to Comparative Politics (3)
Prerequisite: Pl Si 1. Exploration of theories, models, and conceptual frameworks for the comparative study of political systems and subsystems; methodological rather than an area emphasis.

142T. Area Studies in Western Europe
(1-4; max total 8 if no topic repeated)

Government and politics of Western Europe (Britain, France, Germany, and Italy), Northern European Countries (Finland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden); or government and politics, of selected countries.

143T. Area Studies in Eastern Europe
(1-4; max total 8 if no topic repeated)

Government and politics of Eastern Europe; or government, politics, and institutions of selected countries.

144T. Area Studies in Africa and Middle East
(1-4; max total 8 if no topic is repeated)

Government and politics of Sub-Sahara Africa, Middle East; or government, politics, and institutions of selected countries.

146T. Area Studies in Latin America
(1-4; max total 8 if no topic repeated)

Possible topics include politics of South America; politics of Central America and Caribbean countries; roles of selected groups in Latin American politics.

149T. Seminar in Comparative Government
(1-4; max total 8 if no topic repeated)

Parliamentary systems, problems and goals of developing nations, federal systems, comparative local government, parties and pressure groups, and multi-party systems.




American Government (Pl Si)

150. Politics: Public Policy Making (3)
The relationship of persons, groups, and institutions I0 the making and implementing of public policy in the United States; consideration of the participants and the modes of analysis and thought influencing public policy.

151. Politics: Political Participation and Political Parties (3)
Political parties; nature and extent of citizen political activity; election of public officials; political organization of government.

156T. Topics in Political Behavior
(1-4; max total 8 if no topic repeated)

Voting behavior, political alienation, leadership, political perceptions and knowledge, environmental effects on political participation, group processes, and political socialization.

159T. Seminar in American Government and Politics
(1-4; max total 8 if no topic repeated)

Congressional committee operations, policy making by the courts, political implications of civil service, executive initiation of legislation, minority groups and politics, political implications of news reporting; jurisprudence and legal philosophy; legal institutions; conflict resolution.




Local Government (Pl Si)

160. State and Local Governments (3)
The organization, structure, powers, and functions of state and local governments.

163. Municipal Government (3)
Organization, powers, and functions of city government; types of city charters, relationship between city and state government; police and fire protection, education, water supply, health and sanitation, city planning, debts and taxation, public utilities.

169T. Seminar in Metropolitan Government and Politics
(1-4; max total 8 if no topic repeated)

Regional and area intergovernmental relations, urban renewal, human relations agencies, and taxation methodologies.




Public Law (Pl Si)

170. Constitutional Law, the Federal Structure (3)
Judicial Review, powers of the president, powers of Congress, federalism, and the contract clause and due process -- economic rights through case studies of leading Supreme Court decisions.

179T. Seminar in Public Law (1-4; max total 8)
Administrative law, international law, judicial administration, jurisprudence, legal institutions.




Public Administration (Pl Si)

181. Public Administration (3)
General analysis of the field of public administration; administrative theories; policy and administration; behavioralism; budgeting, planning, and legal framework.

182. Administrative Analysis:
Management and Organization (3)

Administrative organization; methods; systems and procedures; problem solving; systems analysis; reports and records; resources management.

183. Comparative Administration (3)
Theories of comparative public administration; cross-national comparisons of administrative processes; institutions, policy formation, and behavior with consideration of cultural, social, and economic environments.

186. Public Administration Internship Seminar (2)
Prerequisite: Pl Si 181. Corequisite: P1 Si 187. Advanced analysis of public administration theory and administrative practices from a theoretical perspective.

187. Internship in Public Administration (2-6; max total 6)
Prerequisite: Pl Si 186 (may be waived if student has completed one or more upper-division courses in public administration or is concurrently enrolled in Pl Si 181), permission of instructor. Maximum credit toward public administration major, 3 units. Supervised work experience in public agencies to provide the student with an opportunity to fuse theory and practice.

188T. Topics in Public Administration
(1-4; max total 9 if no topic repeated)

Treatment of current topics and problems in fiscal administration, public personnel administration, and planning.

189T. Seminar in Public Administration
(3; max total 6 if no topic repeated)

The values and philosophy of administration; management and dynamics of change; public relations and communication problems in public administration; planning problems and techniques; systems approach to resource management.

190. Independent Study (1-3; max see reference)
See Academic Placement -- Independent Study.

191. Directed Readings (1)
Directed readings and supplemental and original source material for enrichment of regular offerings in the subdiscipline.


Core Program for Master of Arts Degree
in Political Science, (Pl Si)

200. Seminar: Introduction to Graduate Studies (3)
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Concepts and problems in political philosophy and political science; major theoretical systems or analysis of comparative politics, political systems, and developmental change; cross-cultural problems.

210. Seminar in Political Theory
(3; max total 6 if topics not repeated)

Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Advanced research and analysis of problems of sovereignty; relationships between the individual and the state; limitations of governmental authority; effect of crisis and challenge in international relations.

220. Seminar in International Relations (3; max total 6)
Prerequisite: Pl Si 120, permission of instructor. Research and analysis in an area of international politics; theory, law, organization, conflict resolution, foreign policy formulation.

249. Seminar in Comparative Government (3; max total 6)
Prerequisite: Pl Si 120, 140, and permission of instructor. Advanced level synthesis of basic concepts, issues, and problems of comparative government.

250. Seminar in American Government (3; max total 6)
Prerequisite: Pl Si 2, permission of instructor. Research and analysis of issues, concepts, and problems in the field of American Government; federalism, political parties, pressure groups, electoral behavior, legislative process, constitutional law.

270. Seminar in Public Law (3; max total 6 if topic not repeated)
Prerequisite: P1 Si 114, 170, and permission of instructor. Role and function of the judiciary and judicial systems in the formulation of governmental policy; problems in constitutional law, administrative law, international law, judicial process, and judicial administration.

280. Seminar in Public Administration (3; max total 6 if topic not repeated)
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Problems in administrative analysis and organization, tools and techniques of administrative research, interpretation and application of research findings.

290. Independent Study (3)
See Academic Placement -- Independent Study.

299. Thesis or Project (6)
Prerequisite: see Criteria for Thesis and Project. Preparation, completion, and submission of an acceptable thesis for the master's degree.

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