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International Studies Undergraduate Program

Student Handbook I.S. (General) Program

Office of Academic Services, Thomson Hall 111, 206-543-6001

THE MAJOR IN INTERNATIONAL STUDIES STUDENT HANDBOOK TABLE OF CONTENTS

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS ...... 3 GOOD STANDING ...... 5 STUDY ABROAD ...... 5 INTERNSHIPS ...... 5 HONORS PROGRAM ...... 6 INTERNATIONAL STUDIES CORE COURSE LIST ...... 8 B.A. CHECKLIST ...... 9 CANADA TRACK ...... 10 CHINA TRACK ...... 11 DEVELOPMENT TRACK ...... 12 EAST ASIA (GENERAL) TRACK ...... 13 TRACK...... 14 ETHNICITY IDENTITY AND MIGRATION TRACK ...... 15 FOREIGN POLICY, DIPLOMACY, PEACE AND SECURITY TRACK ...... 16 GLOBAL HEALTH TRACK ...... 17 INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATIONS TRACK ...... 18 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS TRACK ...... 19 INTERNATIONAL TRACK ...... 20 JAPAN TRACK ...... 21 JEWISH STUDIES TRACK ...... 22 LATIN AMERICA TRACK ...... 23 MIDDLE EAST TRACK ...... 24 RUSSIA, EASTERN EUROPE & CENTRAL ASIA TRACK ...... 25 SOUTH ASIA TRACK ...... 26 SOUTHEAST ASIA TRACK ...... 27 WESTERN EUROPE TRACK ...... 28 INTERNATIONAL STUDIES PROGRAM FACULTY ...... 29

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PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS The major in International Studies requires approximately two years (6 quarters) to complete, depending on language capability and the number of program courses taken prior to admittance. The coursework consists of approximately 70 credit hours within a general four-year B.A. course of study (180 credits).

The requirements for the major are as follows:

I. Foreign language competency in a modern foreign language through the end of the second year college level in a language other than English. Students who have no previous foreign language background need 30 credits in a modern foreign language; students with some background need fewer credits. In all cases, continued language study beyond this requirement is strongly advised. The 30 language hours do not count in the core 70 credit hours for the program, but second-year courses can satisfy General requirements. Students may elect to take a 2nd year proficiency test or take a placement test into 3rd year of a language in order to verify 2nd year proficiency. Native speakers of languages other than English may see the JSIS adviser about possibly waiving the requirement.

II. ECON 200 Introduction to (5), and one of the following. ECON 201 Introduction to (5) OR JSIS 123 Introduction to Globalization (5), OR JSIS 222 Global Markets (5).

III. The introductory series in international studies JSIS 200, 201 and 202 investigates the origins and nature of contemporary global economic, political, and cultural interdependence.

JSIS 200 States and Capitalism: The Origins of the Modern Global System (5) JSIS 201 The Making of the Twenty-first Century (5) JSIS 202 Cultural Interactions in an Interdependent World (5)

IV. JSIS B 330 An upper-level course on International Political Economy (5), (See page 9 for list of alternative classes.) V. Approved Track: Three courses in an approved track, in which students specialize in a region or country of the world, or in a particular topic of international studies. Approved tracks and their constituent courses are listed on pages 10-28. NOTE: Some courses are listed on both 'track' and 'core' lists but cannot be double-counted. VI. Advanced Topic Core Courses: Three courses from the list of trans-disciplinary core courses in international studies. (See pg. 8.) CAPSTONE COURSES

VII. JSIS 495 Task Force, (5), SIS majors seniors only (normally taken winter quarter in final year) Students conclude their studies in the major in Task Force. Prerequisites: JSIS 200, JSIS 201, JSIS 202, Task Force Policy Memo Workshop-offered in Autumn Quarter before Task Force (JSIS 478J or comparable experience in a course on policy. Jackson School Task Forces consist of small groups of students, numbering between 12 and 18, who are tasked with investigating a real-world policy issue and producing a final report, which includes a research brief and policy recommendations. These recommendations are then evaluated by a visiting outside expert – typically a serving or retired high-ranking U.S. diplomat, policymaker, NGO leader, or prominent think tank

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member. Task Force students prepare and present a 2-hour oral briefing for their expert evaluator. The evaluator arrives for the briefing having read the final report. After the briefing the evaluator engages students in discussion and debate and provides feedback on content and presentation. All Task Forces are evaluated on the same day (the last day of teaching for Winter Quarter) and, later that same day, all Task Force students, instructors and evaluators gather for a formal dinner which offers more opportunities for professional conversations and connections. The Task Force course includes 10 weeks of intense effort, including: background readings prior to the start of winter quarter, scoping a policy challenge, defining and delegating the required research, writing 2-3 drafts of research briefs for your team, and formulating policy recommendations that also include assessments of their political, social, economic costs, benefits, and risks. Task Force teams include 1-2 editors, 1 coordinator, and researchers. All of your research and writing takes place over 8 weeks. Task Force activities can include independent research, interviews of key informants, collaborative writing and decision making, oral presentations, and lots of writing and re-writing on short deadlines. Past generations of International Studies majors have greatly valued the opportunities and the challenges of working together in small groups with clear goals and tight deadlines – an environment intended to mimic the real-world activities and workplace experiences that our students will encounter upon graduation. Task Force quarter has been a unique, memorable and valuable experience for our majors for more than thirty years. Task Force Website

VIII. JSIS 498 Readings in International Studies (5), SIS majors seniors only (taken in final year – usually in Spring quarter) A capstone, senior seminar for undergraduate majors in the International Studies program. These are enrollment capped courses (15-20 students) that are managed/run like a graduate seminar. The goal of the course is to give students a sense of an intellectual lineage or scholarly conversation around a topic or conceptual notion. Faculty select 9-10 books (or the equivalent of a body of work) that reflects the evolution of ideas or debates around concepts or emerging frameworks/explanations. For example, Cabeiri Robinson has taught a course like this on the idea of Political Islam and the emergence of the concept and debates about its meaningfulness and instantiations across disciplines and sectors. Students are asked to read, write, and facilitate discussions as if they are contributing in a graduate seminar. JSIS 498 is the capstone counterpart to the other capstone required in our major, JSIS 495- Task Force -- while Task Force simulates policy research and briefing experiences, like a US Presidential Commission, JSIS 498 simulates the experience of graduate school and scholarly debates.

Sequence of Courses The introductory courses, JSIS 200, 201, and 202, may be taken in any order. The core courses and track courses may be taken at any time in the student's program, but students should plan their programs well ahead so they are able to take the necessary courses in the quarters in which they are offered. (This is particularly critical since not all courses are offered every year.) Some Track courses are offered through other departments, so it is especially important to check with those departments about scheduling for required courses and/or courses of particular interest. JSIS 498, Readings in International Studies, is usually offered fall, winter and spring quarters and is open to all International Studies seniors. JSIS 495 Task Force is to be taken winter quarter of the senior year. Students must have completed JSIS 200, 201, 202 before taking Task Force.

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 All courses required for the major, including ECON 200, 201, and the two-year  language sequence, must be taken for graded credit. A minimum 2.0 grade is required in all Jackson School-prefix courses.

Good Standing Majors in International Studies will be expected to maintain a GPA of at least 2.5, both overall and in the program. A student whose GPA falls below this minimum will be placed on academic probation. A student on academic probation must attain a minimum GPA of 2.75 each subsequent quarter, until the cumulative GPA is raised to 2.5. A student who fails to attain the minimum probation GPA will be dropped from the program. Appeals will be considered in exceptional circumstances.

STUDY ABROAD AND INTERNSHIPS Study Abroad and internships are optional parts of the program.

Study Abroad Study abroad can be an important part of the curriculum through which students gain first-hand experience of another culture and further develop their language skills. Information on many study- abroad programs is available in the Office of International Programs and Exchanges, 453 Schmitz Hall (543-9272). You may also visit the UW Foreign Study website at http://studyabroad.washington.edu/. After receiving preliminary information on UW-affiliated programs, interested students should discuss study abroad with their academic adviser in Thomson 111. All programs should be pre-approved before a student goes abroad in order for credit to apply to the International Studies major. This requires that syllabi and other relevant materials be reviewed by the academic adviser. In cases in which such materials are not available before going abroad, students must collect these materials during their stay and submit them to the adviser upon return. In all cases approval of credit for the major is contingent upon review of completed academic work abroad upon the student's return. Course credit will not be given in place of JSIS 200, 201, 202, Advanced Topic Core, 495 (Task Force), or 498 (Readings) in International Studies. Normally, credit is given toward completion of track and language requirements.

Internships Internships are an optional part of the International Studies major and provide a means of learning about the application of international affairs knowledge outside of the classroom. Listings of internships are available locally, nationally, and internationally with government agencies, businesses, and non-profit groups. Credit for internships can be obtained only by registering for the credit/no credit internship course, JSIS 497. JSIS 497 credit cannot be used to satisfy major requirements; student who want to apply their internship experience to their major requirements must write a 5-credit independent study

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research paper (JSIS 499) with a faculty sponsor on a topic related to their internship. All requests for internship credit must be approved in advance by filling out a JSIS 497 internship application form, available in Thomson 111. We strongly encourage students to consider internships for the practical knowledge and skills they impart. The internship in and of itself can be extremely valuable whether or not credit is obtained. For details on internships and careers, see the JSIS website and arrange to meet with our director of career services John Charlton in 124 Thomson ([email protected])

HONORS PROGRAM The Honors Program is intended for students with the capability and commitment required to pursue an in-depth research project. The heart of the program is the Honors thesis, to be completed during the senior year. IS majors should be aware that it can be difficult to incorporate the Honors Program into your course of study and still graduate in four years, especially if you intend to study abroad. If you are seriously considering the Honors Program, it is best to consult Honors adviser Wolf Latsch as soon as possible ([email protected])

Honors Admission Requirements An overall UW GPA of 3.30 and a major GPA of 3.50 is recommended.

Honors Admission Procedure Students should apply in the autumn of their junior year. Submit the application form, a writing sample, essay, and transcripts from all colleges you have attended, to the Student Services Office in Thomson 111, all in one packet.

DEADLINE: the third Friday of Autumn Quarter of junior year

(The honors program strongly recommends that JSIS honors students complete JSIS 495 - Task Force in winter quarter of junior year to facilitate writing an honors thesis during winter and spring of the senior year.)

Honors Graduation Requirements 1. Junior Honors Seminar (JSIS 385) taken Spring quarter to choose a faculty adviser and develop a prospectus. Students who complete JSIS 385 and graduate with honors are exempted from taking JSIS 498, Readings in International Studies. 2. Two-quarter Senior thesis writing seminar (JSIS 491-492) Autumn and Winter quarter. (Winter quarter seminar is optional). 3. The thesis is a research project completed under the supervision of one or more professors. It should be a 50-60 page paper, based upon primary sources. Theses are due in the middle of Spring quarter

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and are read by a committee of faculty members. If yours is recommended for honors, an oral defense will be scheduled for the end of May or early June. 4. Graduation "with Honors in International Studies" (Departmental Honors) or “with College Honors” will be contingent upon the acceptance of the thesis, a successful thesis defense, and a UW GPA of 3.30 and a GPA of 3.50 in all courses required for the major.

JACKSON SCHOOL STUDENT ASSOCIATION The Jackson School Student Association is a student organization for all students in the Jackson School. Students are automatically a member in the organization by virtue of declaring a Jackson School major. The organization arranges both academic and social gatherings on a regular basis, including brown-bag lunch lectures and more recently a symposium. This is a great way to get to get to know your JSIS faculty and peers. Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/uwjssa/. We strongly encourage participation in this organization.

JACKSON SCHOOL JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES The Jackson School Journal is an online and print publication dedicated to profiling the outstanding research and policy writing generated by UW students. http://globalstudies.washington.edu/jackson- school-journal/

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INTERNATIONAL STUDIES COURSES

Required International Studies Curriculum JSIS 200 States & Capitalism: Origins of the Modern Global System JSIS 201 The Making of the 21st Century JSIS 202 Cultural Interactions in an Interdependent World JSIS B 330 International Political Economy (SEE LIST OF APPROVED ALTERNATIVE COURSES ON PG.10) JSIS 495 Task Force (Open only to IS majors) JSIS 498 Readings in International Studies (Open only to IS majors)

Advanced Topics in International Studies ("core list")

ARCTIC 400 Integrating Policy and Science in Arctic Studies JSIS B 380 Immigration & Cultural Memory in the Pacific NW JSIS B 385 Industry and the State JSIS 300 Claims & Evidence JSIS B 386 & Politics of International JSIS 478 Advanced Topics in International Studies JSIS B 388 Political Economy of Industrialized Nations JSIS B 391 Climate Change - An International Perspective JSIS A 301 Europe Today JSIS B 393 LGBTI Rights in International Affairs JSIS A 324 Human Rights in Latin America (with LSJ 322) JSIS B 406 Political Islam & Islamic Fund. (w/ POL S 432) JSIS A 346 Alternative Routes to Modernity (w/ HSTAS 348) JSIS B 407 Political Islam & Contemp. Islamist Movements JSIS A 405 Social Transformation of Mod. E. Asia (w/ ANTH 449) JSIS B 416 Putting the World on the Couch: Psychoanalysis JSIS A 416 North Atlantic Treaty Organization & International Studies JSIS A 429 Eco-Capitalism JSIS B 420 Failed States JSIS A 430 The Soviet Empire JSIS B 422 International Trade & Security JSIS A 431 Demographic Issues in Asia (/SOC 434) JSIS B 423 Practicing American Foreign Policy JSIS A 459 United States-China Relations (w/POL S 419) JSIS B 424 The Politics of International Nuclear Security JSIS A 465 International Humanitarian Law JSIS B 425 Crafting and Influencing U.S. Foreign Policy JSIS A 468 Russia in the International System JSIS B 426 World Politics (w/ POL S) JSIS B 427 Weapons of Mass Destruction: Development, JSIS B 301 War (w/ SOC) Deployment, & Detection JSIS B 307 Digital Storytelling and Global Citizenship JSIS B 428 The Media & Peace JSIS B 310 State-Soc. Relat. in the 3rd World (w/ POL S 320) JSIS B 429 Nuclear Nonproliferation & Int’l Safeguards JSIS B 311 The Myth of War JSIS B 430 Late Industrialization and Social Change JSIS B 312 Money, Love & Marriage in Europe & America JSIS B 431 International Negotiation Simulation JSIS B 315 Law, State and Society JSIS B 433 Envir. Degradation in the Tropics (ENVIR) JSIS B 321 United States National Security JSIS B 436 Ethnic Politics and Nationalism (w/ POL S) JSIS B 324 Immigration JSIS B 437 Global Diasporas JSIS B 330 International Political Economy JSIS B 439 Law & Political Power JSIS B 331 Political Economy of Development JSIS B 440 The Communist Experience Around the World JSIS B 332 Political Economy of International Trade & Finance JSIS B 441 Forced Migrations JSIS B 333 Gender and Globalization (w/ GWSS) JSIS B 446 , Memory and Justice JSIS B 334 Place of Law in Multicultural Conflicts (w/LSJ 336) JSIS B 455 International Environmental Policy JSIS B 335 of the Developing World (GEOG) JSIS B 467 Nations & States in the Mod. World (w/ HSTCMP) JSIS B 337 Collective Violence and the State (w/ POL S) JSIS B 468 Theatre as a Site of History & Memory JSIS B 338 Biosecurity JSIS B 469 Law & Rights in Authoritarian Regimes (w/POL S) JSIS B 344 Migration in the Global Economy (w/ GEOG) JSIS B 472 Electoral Systems (w/POL S) JSIS B 345 Gender & Int’l Econ. Dev. (w/ ANTH/GWSS) JSIS B 476 Comparative International Political Economy JSIS B 346 Disability in Global & Comparative Perspective JSIS B 350 Environmental Norms in Int’l Politics (w/ SCAND , JSIS C 307 Religion and World Politics (w/POL S) & ENVIR360) JSIS C 368 Modern European Jewish History (w/HSTEU) JSIS B 351 The Global Environment JSIS C 403 Modern European-Islamic Migration, Integration, & JSIS B 352 Sustainability and Global Business Citizenship (w/GEOG JSIS B 355 Cybersecurity and International Studies JSIS C 404 Political Economy of Religious Institutions JSIS B 357 The Geopolitics of Energy JSIS B 360 U.S. in the World JSIS D 429 International Population JSIS B 361 The Geopolitics of Language JSIS D 435 Population and Modernization (w/ SOC 432) JSIS B 362 Law & Justice: An Intro. to Social Theory (w/LSJ) JSIS D 450 Pol. Econ. of Women & Fam. in 3rd World (SOC) JSIS B 365 World Cities JSIS D 468 Deeply Divided Societies JSIS B 366 Comparative Law and Legal Cultures (w/LSJ) JSIS B 370 Privacy JSIS B 371 Global Crime and Corruption (w/POL S) JSIS B 375 Geopolitics (w/ GEOG)

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INTERNATIONAL STUDIES B.A. CHECKLIST Introductory courses: (25 credits) JSIS 200 ______JSIS 201 ______JSIS 202 ______ECON 200 ______ECON 201/ ______or JSIS 123 or JSIS 222 Foreign language coursework or proficiency through the 2nd year college level: First year ______Second year ______

Upper division required courses: (15 credits) Task Force JSIS 495 Senior year Winter Quarter ______Advanced Readings JSIS 498 Senior year (Autumn or Spring) ______Int’l Political Economy Course: JSIS B 330 (or one of the following below) ______

JSIS 300 Claims & Evidence JSIS 478 Advanced Topics in International Studies (min. 5 cr. - with adviser approval) JSIS A 362 Political Economy of Africa JSIS A 417 Political Economy of India JSIS A 429 Eco-Capitalism JSIS A 430 Security Affairs in Russia and Eurasia JSIS A 459 United States-China Relations (w/POL S 419) JSIS A 465 International Humanitarian Law JSIS A 473 Political Economy of Postwar Japan JSIS B 331 Political Economy of Development JSIS B 422 The U.S. and the Contemporary International System JSIS B 426 World Politics (with POL S 426) JSIS B 436 Ethnic Politics and Nationalism (with POL S 436) JSIS B 467 Nations and States in the Modern World (with HSTCMP 467) JSIS B 371 Global Crime and Corruption 3 Advanced Topic Core Courses: (see list on pg. 8 above) (15 credits) ______

3 Track Courses: (see tracks, pgs 9-29) (15 credits) ______

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CANADA TRACK

Take three of the following: ARCTIC 400 Integrating Policy and Science in Arctic Studies

JSIS A 321/ Government and Politics of Canada POL S 341 JSIS A 356 Canadian Society

JSIS A 375/ The History of Canada HSTAA 377

JSIS A 400 Canadian Values

JSIS A 422 First Nations Filmmaking in Canada /AIS 465

JSIS A 426 First Nations Government and Politics in Canada /AIS 461

JSIS A 441 Quebecois Literature /FRENCH 441

JSIS A 498 Seminar in Canadian Problems

JSIS 482 Special Topics: Canada

GEOG 370 Environmental Conservation: Geographic Perspectives

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CHINA TRACK

One of the following: JSIS A /HSTAS 254 China in the Twentieth Century JSIS A /HSTAS 454 History of Modern China

Plus two of the following:

JSIS A/GEOG 236 Development and Challenge in Greater China JSIS A/ANTH 328 Gender and Sexuality in China JSIS A 357 Peoples and Cultures of Central and Inner Asia JSIS A/ANTH 370 Han Chinese Society and Culture JSIS A 403/ Politics of Representation in Modern China ANTH 444 JSIS A 404 Religion of China JSIS A/ 406 China's Environment ANTH JSIS A 408/ Government and Politics of China POL S 442 JSIS A 453 China’s Economic Reforms-Integration into World Economy ECON 468 JSIS A/ HSTAS 456 Topics in Chinese JSIS A 459/ U.S. China Relations POL S 419 JSIS A/HSTAS 460 Cities in China: Past and Present JSIS A/ SOC 464 Contemporary Society in the People's Republic of China JSIS A 467 China’s Rise and Its Global Implication JSIS A/ANTH 470 Minority Peoples of China JSIS B 455 International Environmental Policy JSIS B 469 Law & Rights in Authoritarian Regimes JSIS D 467 Postwar Economic Development in Taiwan ANTH 447 of Chinese Religion ECON 466 of China: 1840-1949 ECON 493 Economy of Modern China GEOG 435 Industrialization and Urbanization in China GWSS/ HSTAS 459 Gender of Modern China, 18th -20th Centuries

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DEVELOPMENT TRACK Required: JSIS B 331 Political Economy of Development Two of the following: ANTH/ENVIR 371 Anthropology of Development ECON 448 Population and Development GEOG 230 of Global Inequality GEOG 330 Latin America: Landscapes of Change GEOG 331 Global Poverty and Care GEOG 336 Development and Challenge in China GEOG 370 Environmental Conservation: Geographic Perspectives GEOG 371 World Hunger and Agricultural Development GEOG 430 Contemporary Development Issues in Latin America GEOG 431 Geography and Gender GEOG 438 Cities of East Asia: Geography and Development JSIS A/GEOG 236 Development and Challenge in Greater China JSIS A 339 Social Movements in Contemporary India JSIS A 346 Alternative Routes to Modernity (w/ HSTAS 348) JSIS A/SOC 355 Social Change in Latin America JSIS A 362 Political Economy of Africa JSIS A 363 Africa and the Modern World JSIS A/POL S 417 Political Economy of India JSIS A 431 Demographic Issues in Asia (w/ SOC 434) JSIS A 438 Political Geographies of South Asia (w/GEOG 436) JSIS B 307 Digital Storytelling JSIS B310/ POL S 320 State-Society Relations in the Third World JSIS B 315 Law, State and Society JSIS B 324 Immigration JSIS B/GEOG 335 Geography of the Developing World JSIS B/ GEOG 344 Migration in the Global Economy JSIS B 345 Gender and International Economic Development (w/ANTH/ GWSS) JSIS B 361 The Geopolitics of Language JSIS B 365 World Cities JSIS B 385 Industry and the State JSIS B 420 Failed States JSIS B/ENVIR 433 Environmental Degradation in the Tropics JSIS B 441 Forced Migration JSIS B 455 International Environmental Policy JSIS D/GEOG 372 Asian Sustainable Development JSIS D 429 International Population JSIS D 435 Population and Modernization (w/SOC 432) JSIS D/SOC 450 Political Economy of Women and Family in the Third World POL S 449 Politics of Developing Areas POL S 477 African Political Development

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EAST ASIA (GENERAL) TRACK

Three of the following, or from the Japan or China Tracks:

GEOG 438 Cities of East Asia: Geography and Development HSTAS 482 History of Modern Korea JSIS A 401 Asia and the World JSIS A/ 405 Social Change in East Asia (w ANTH 449) JSIS A/ ANTH 407 Global Futures in East Asia JSIS A 431/ Demographic Issues in Asia (w SOC 434) JSIS A/ POL S 439 Politics of Divided Korea JSIS A/ ANTH 448 Modern Korean Society JSIS A 452 Global Asia (w/ GWSS 446 & ANTH 442) JSIS A/ 466 and Korea Studies (w/ POL S 480) JSIS A 469 North Korean Society JSIS A 471 New Orders in East Asia JSIS A 472 Science, Technology, and Innovation Policies in East Asia I BUS 461 JSIS A 476 Energy Security in East Asia JSIS A 478 Japanese Business and Technology I BUS 462 JSIS B 385 Industry and the State JSIS B 430 Late Industrialization and Social Change JSIS B 455 International Environmental Policy JSIS B/ POL S/ LSJ 469 Law & Rights in Authoritarian Regimes JSIS D/HSTCMP 330 The U.S. in Eastern Asia 1784-1945 JSIS D/GEOG 372 Asian Sustainable Development JSIS D 443/ANTH 446 Class and Culture in East Asia JSIS D 446 Political Development in East Asia

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ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES TRACK

Take one from the following: JSIS B/SCAND/ENVIR 350 Environmental Norms in International Politics JSIS B 351 The Global Environment JSIS B 357 The Geopolitics of Energy JSIS B/ENVIR/SMA 433 Environmental Degradation in the Tropics JSIS B 455 International Environmental Policy ENVIR/POL S 384 Global Environmental Politics

Take two additional from the following list or the list above: ANTH/AAS 314 Ethnography, Transnationalism, & Community in Island SE Asia/Asian America ANTH 362 Anthropology of Tourism ANTH/ENVIR 371 Anthropology of Development ANTH/ENVIR/ESRM 410 Growing Stuff: Ecology, Economy, and Culture of Resource-Production Ecosystems ANTH 452 Explorations in Biopower ANTH 457 Ecological Anthropology ANTH 458 Ethnobiology ANTH/ENVIR 459 Culture, Ecology and Politics ANTH/AES 487 Cultures and Politics of Environmental Justice ANTH 488 Agroecology ARCTIC 400 Integrating Policy and Science in Arctic Studies BIO A 475 Environmental Impacts of Small-Scale Societies

ECON 435 Natural Resource . (prereq. ECON 300) ECON 436 Economics of the Environment. (prereq. ECON 300)

ENVIR/ ECON 235 Introduction to Environmental Economics ENVIR/POL S 385 of the World Food System ENVIR / M E 415 Sustainability and Design for Environment ENV H 311 Introduction to Environmental Health ENV H 472 Environmental Risk and Society ESRM 423 International Trade, Marketing, and the Environment

GEOG 270 Geographies of International Development and Environmental Change GEOG 280 Introduction to the Geography of Health and Health Care GEOG 371 World Hunger and Resource Development GEOG 480 Environmental Geography, Climate, and Health

JSIS A/HSTAS 303 Divided Lands/Divided Lives: An Environmental History of S. Asia JSIS A /ANTH 406 China's Environment JSIS A/SCAND 429 Eco-Capitalism JSIS A 431/SOC 434 Demographic Issues in Asia JSIS A 476 Energy Security in East Asia JSIS B/ARCTIC 391 Climate Change-An International Perspective: Science, Art, Activism JSIS D / GEOG 372 Asian Environment and Development JSIS D 429 International Population JSIS D 435/ SOC 432 Population and Modernization POL S 422 International Environmental Politics Seminar

*Special topics courses in Jackson School can count when the topic has something to do with Environmental Issues.

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ETHNICITY IDENTITY AND MIGRATION TRACK

Students are required to take three of the following: *At least one of these courses is required *JSIS B/POL S 337 Collective Violence and the State *ANTH 428 Anthropological Perspectives on Ethnicity *JSIS B/POL S 436 Ethnic Politics and Nationalism *SOC 456 Political (Ethnicity and Nationalism) *SOC/AES 461 Comparative Ethnic Race Relations in the Americas *JSIS B 525 Special Topics in Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism ANTH/LING 464 Language Politics and Cultural Identity JSIS A/POL S 314 Israel: Dynamic Society and Global Flashpoint (w/NEAR E 315) JSIS A/ANTH 370 Han Chinese Society and Culture JSIS A 427 Anthropology of Post-Soviet States (w/ ANTH 425) JSIS A/ANTH 470 Minority Peoples of China JSIS B 307 Digital Storytelling JSIS B 324 Immigration JSIS B 337 Collective Violence and the State JSIS B/GEOG 344 Migration in the Global Economy JSIS B 361 The Geopolitics of Language JSIS B 407 Political Islam & Contemporary Islamist Movements JSIS B 441 Forced Migrations JSIS B 446 History, Memory and Justice JSIS B/HSTCMP 467 Nations and States in the Modern World JSIS C 329/ANTH 330 Religion, Identity, and Cultural Pluralism JSIS C/GEOG 403 Modern European-Islamic Migration, Integration, and Citizenship JSIS C/HSTEU 465 The Jews of Eastern Europe. JSIS D 468 Deeply Divided Societies HSTCMP 260 Slavery in History: A Comparative Study (formerly 361) SOC/AES 362 Race Relations SOC 467 Immigration and Ethnicity To help you choose among the courses of the Ethnicity and Nationalities Track, some additional information about the courses is presented below. You should also feel free to contact the faculty members who offer these courses to discuss their fit with your interests. Courses dealing with race relations and racism: HSTAFM 36l, SOC/AES 362, SOC/AES 461 Courses dealing with ethnic identity: ANTH 428, ANTH 464/LING 464, JSIS B/POL S 436, JSIS A/ANTH 470 Courses dealing with language: JSIS B 361; ANTH 464/LING 464 Courses focused on particular areas/peoples:SOC/AES 362 (Americas), JSIS D 468 (Near East),JSIS A/ANTH 370, 470 (China), JSIS D/HSTEU 465 (Jews/Eastern Europe) Courses dealing with current policy issues: SOC/AES 362, JSIS D 468, ANTH 464/LING 464

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FOREIGN POLICY, DIPLOMACY, PEACE AND SECURITY TRACK Take 3 of the following: ARCTIC 400 Integrating Policy and Science in Arctic Studies HSTCMP 345 War and Society HSTAA 461 Diplomatic History of the United States, 1776-1901 HSTAA 462 Diplomatic History of the United States, 1901-Present JSIS A/POL S 314 Israel: Dynamic Society and Global Flashpoint (w/NEAR E 315) JSIS A 323 U.S.-Latin America Relations JSIS A 350 U.S.-Europe Relations JSIS A 416 NATO JSIS A 420 Post-Soviet Security JSIS A 430 The Soviet Empire JSIS A 434 of South Asia (w/POL S) JSIS A 437 International Relations of Japan (w/ POL S 424) JSIS A/POL S 439 Politics of Divided Korea JSIS A 440 Russia in the International System JSIS A 459 United States-China Relations (w/ POL S 419) JSIS A 468 Russia in the International System JSIS A 471 New Orders in East Asia JSIS A 476 Energy Security in East Asia JSIS A 493 Water & Security in the Middle East JSIS B 301 War JSIS B 311 The Myth of War JSIS B 315 Law, State and Society JSIS B 321 U.S. National Security JSIS B 338 Biosecurity JSIS B 350 Environmental Norms in International Politics w/SCAND JSIS B 357 The Geopolitics of Energy JSIS B 360 U.S. in the World JSIS B 407 Political Islam & Contemporary Islamist Movements JSIS B 420 Failed States JSIS B 422 International Trade & Security JSIS B 423 Practicing American Foreign Policy JSIS B 424 and Arms Control JSIS B 425 Crafting & Influencing U.S. Foreign Policy JSIS B 427 Weapons of Mass Destruction JSIS B 428 The Media & Peace JSIS B 429 Nuclear Nonproliferation and International Safeguards JSIS B 431 International Negotiation Simulation JSIS B 467 Nations and States in the Modern World (w/ HSTCMP) JSIS B 469 Law & Rights in Authoritarian Regimes POL S 321 American Foreign Policy POL S 325 Arab Israeli Conflict POL S 407 International Conflict POL S 420 Soviet and Russian Foreign Policy POL S 425 Political and War POL S 428 Military Intervention POL S 431 International Relations in the Middle East POL S 433 International Relations in Southeast Asia

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GLOBAL HEALTH AND POPULATION TRACK

Students must take one of the following: ANTH 215 Introduction to Medical Anthropology and Global Health JSIS B / GEOG 180 Introduction to Global Health (w/ G H 101)

And two additional course from below: ANTH 308 Anthropology of Women’s Health & Reproduction ANTH 374 Narrative, Literature, and Medical Anthropology ANTH 375 Comparative Systems of Healing ANTH 376 Anthropology of Disability ANTH 377 Anthropology and International Health ANTH 474 Social Difference and Medical Knowledge ANTH 475 Perspectives in Medical Anthropology GEOG 371 World Hunger and Agricultural Development GEOG 380 Geographical Patterns of Health and Disease ENV H 451 Ecology of Environmentally Transmitted Microbiological Hazards ENV H 452 Detection and Control of Environmentally Transmitted Microbiological Hazards JSIS A 324/ LSJ 322 Human Rights in Latin America JSIS A 431/SOC 434 Demographic Issues in Asia JSIS B 441 Forced Migrations JSIS C 320/ ANTH 322 Comparative Study of Death JSIS D 429 International Population MICROM 101 Microbes and Society SOC 331 Population and Society

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INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATIONS TRACK

Students must take three of the following: COM 321/ POL S 330 Communications in International Relations COM 322/ POL S 329 Global Communications AAS 220 Asian American Stereotypes in the Media COM 407/POL S 451 Communication Technology & Politics COM 423 Communications & Social Change COM 426 International Media Images COM/JSIS B 428 The Media and Peace COM 450 International Communication Law and Policy COM 458 Reporting Global Issues (Prereq. COM 360) COM 478 Intercultural Communications COM 483 Communication Approaches to the Study of War JSIS A/COM 425 European Media Systems JSIS B 307 Digital Storytelling JSIS B 419 Comparative Media Systems JSIS B 361 The Geopolitics of Language JSIS B 423 Practicing American Foreign Policy JSIS B 431 International Negotiation Simulation JSIS B 419/COM 420 Comparative Media Systems POL S/COM 305 Politics of Mass Communication in America

NOTE: any relevant Special Topics (e.g. JSIS 478-490) course offered by a program within the Jackson School may be counted as a track course for International Communications if the topic is relevant and the student obtains prior approval from the JSIS adviser.

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INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS TRACK

Students must take 3 of the following: ANTH 323 Human Rights Law in Culture and Practice (w/LSJ 321) ANTH 416 Comparative Social Movements: Mexico and the United States ANTH 470 Minority Peoples of China ANTH 498 Women's Rights and Politics in Islamic Society (w/LSJ 421) ARCTIC 200 Indigenous Diplomacies and International Relations in the Arctic GEOG 331 Global Poverty and Care GWSS 305 Feminism in an International Context JSIS A/HSTAS 245 Human Rights in Asia JSIS A 324 Human Rights in Latin America (w/LSJ 322) JSIS A 408 Government & Politics of China (w/ POL S 442) JSIS A/SOC 464 Contemporary Society in the Peoples Republic of China JSIS A 465 International Humanitarian Law JSIS A 488 Labor and Popular Movements in Latin America JSIS B 310 State-Society Relations in the Third World (w/POL S 320) JSIS B 315 Law, State and Society JSIS B 334 The Place of Law in Multicultural Contexts (joint w/ LSJ 336) JSIS B 337 Collective Violence and the State JSIS B/LSJ 362 Law and Justice: An Introduction to Social Theory JSIS B/LSJ 366 Comparative Law & Legal Cultures JSIS B 436 Ethnic Politics and Nationalism JSIS B 441 Forced Migrations JSIS B 469 Law & Rights in Authoritarian Regimes (w/ LSJ & POL S) JSIS D 468 Deeply Divided Societies PHIL 338 Philosophy of Human Rights POL S 363 Law in Society POL S 368/LSJ 320 The Politics & Law of International Human Rights POL S 430 Civil-Military Relations in Democracies SOC/AES 462 Comparative Race and Ethnic Relations SOC 466 Economic Sociology

Additional special topic electives may be approved with permission of International Studies adviser.

WIN 2018 19

INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY TRACK

Take three of the following (one of which must be JSIS B 331 or 332):

ECON/ POL S 409 Undergraduate Seminar in Political Economy ECON 448 Population and Development ECON 471 International Trade ECON 473 Topics in International Trade ECON 475 Economics of the European Union GEOG 349 Geography of International Trade JSIS A 322/POL S 322 International Political Economy of Latin America JSIS A 362 Political Economy of Africa JSIS A 417 Political Economy of India JSIS A 418 Eastern Europe: The Political Economy of the Region JSIS A 429 Eco-Capitalism JSIS A 453/ECON 468 China’s Economic Reforms-Integration into the World Economy JSIS A 472/ I BUS 461 Science, Technology, and Innovation Policies in East Asia JSIS A 473 Political Economy of Japan JSIS A 477 Readings on Political Economy of Japan and Northeast Asia JSIS A 478/I BUS 462 Japanese Business and Technology JSIS A 487/POL S 418 Japanese Trade Politics JSIS B 331 Political Economy of Development JSIS B 332 Political Economy of International Trade & Finance JSIS B 333 Gender and Globalization JSIS B 365 World Cities JSIS B 385 Industry and the State JSIS B 386 Law and Politics of International Trade JSIS B 388 Political Economy of Industrialized Nations JSIS B 430 Late Industrialization and Social Change JSIS B 476 Comparative International Political Economy POL S 335 Political Economy Topics POL S 427 International Political Economy POL S 460 Political Economy of the European Union POL S 477 African Political Development SOC 466 Economic Sociology For special permission to register for I BUS courses, contact JSIS adviser in THO 111 one of the following is allowed. I BUS 330 Business Environment in Developing Countries I BUS 340 Business Environment in Industrial Countries I BUS 440 Business in Asia

WIN 2018 20

JAPAN TRACK

One of the following: JSIS A/ 241 Japanese Civilization HSTAS JSIS A 242 Introduction to Contemporary Japan

Plus two of the following: ECON 494 Economic Growth of Japan Since 1850 JAPAN 323 Japan in Literature and Film: Modern Period JSIS A/HSTAS 423 History of Modern Japan JSIS A/HSTAS 424 Emergence of Postwar Japan JSIS A/POL S 435 Japanese Government and Politics JSIS A 436/POL S 429 Political Parties in Japan JSIA A 437 International Relations of Japan JSIS A 449/ Anthropology of Modern Japan ANTH 443 JSIS A 472 Science, Technology, & Innovation Policies in East Asia JSIS A 473 Political Economy of Postwar Japan JSIS A 474 Civil Society in Japan and East Asia JSIS A 475 Japanese Society JSIS A 477 Readings on Political Economy of Japan and Northeast Asia JSIS A 478 Japanese Business and Technology JSIS A 487 /POL S 418 Japanese Trade Politics JSIS B 430 Late Industrialization and Social Change JSIS E 478 Readings in Japanese on Japan Social Sciences JSIS 484 Special Topics: when topic is on Japan

WIN 2018 21

JEWISH STUDIES TRACK

Required:

JSIS C/HSTCMP 250 Introduction to Jewish

Plus two of the following:

JSIS A/POL S 314 Israel: Dynamic Society and Global Flashpoint /NEAR E 315

JSIS A 458 Israel: Politics and Society

JSIS C/HSTCMP 269 The Holocaust: History and Memory

JSIS C 325 Contemporary Judaism in a Global Context

JSIS C 358 Modern Jewish Thought

JSIS C/HSTEU 368 Modern European Jewish History

JSIS C 379 Doing Jewish Identity Studies

JSIS C 462 Anti-Semitism As a Cultural System

JSIS C 463 Enlightenment, Emancipation, Antisemitism: History of the Jews, 1770-1914

JSIS C/HSTEU 465 The Jews in Eastern Europe

JSIS C 466 The Sephardic Diaspora: 1492-Present /HSTCMP 469

JSIS C 489 Special Topics: Jewish Studies (see adviser for permission)

ENGL 311 Modern Jewish Literature in Translation

NEAR E 325 Modern Hebrew Literature in English

POL S 325 Arab Israeli Conflict

WIN 2018 22

LATIN AMERICA TRACK

Required: One of the following: HSTLAC 185 Introduction to Latin American History HSTLAC 384 Latin America: Inter-American and Intra-Continental Relations HSTLAC 385 Colonial Society & the Negotiation of Rule in Latin America and the Caribbean HSTLAC 386 The Challenges of Post-Coloniality in Latin America and the Caribbean HSTLAC 488 History of the Caribbean and Central America JSIS A 323 U.S.-Latin America Relations

Plus two additional from the list above or below: ANTH 418 Indian Heritage of Central America GEOG 330 Latin America: Landscape of Change GEOG 430 Contemporary Development Issues in Latin America HSTLAC 482 The History of Brazil: Colonial Period to the Present HSTLAC 485 Social Revolution in 20th Century Latin America: Comparative Approach JSIS 480 Special Topics: Latin America (see adviser) JSIS A/ POL S 322 Political Economy of Latin America JSIS A 324 Human Rights in Latin America (w/LSJ 322) JSIS A 325 Modern Mexico: Culture, Politics, Society JSIS A/ POL S 342 Government and Politics of Latin America JSIS A/ SOC 355 Social Change in Latin America JSIS A 365/ PORT 365 Mapping Luso-Brazilian Cultures JSIS A/ SPAN 486 Latin American Photography & JSIS A 489 The Mexico-U.S. Border in Literature & Film JSIS A 492 Latin American Studies Seminar JSIS D/ GEOG 451 The Cultural Geography of Latin America

WIN 2018 23

MIDDLE EAST TRACK

Take three of the following:

ANTH 318 Anthropology of Islam and Muslim Societies ANTH 413 Anthropology of the Modern Middle East and North Africa ANTH 498 Women's Rights and Politics in Islamic Society (w/ LSJ 421) JSIS A215/NEAR E 232 Introduction to the Modern Middle East JSIS A/POL S 314 Israel: Dynamic Society and Global Flashpoint (w/NEAR E 315) JSIS A 362 Political Economy of Africa JSIS A 402 The Middle East in the Modern World JSIS A 458 Israel: Politics and Society JSIS A 465 International Humanitarian Law JSIS A 493 Water and Security in the Middle East JSIS C/GEOG 403 Modern European-Islamic Migration, Integration, and Citizenship JSIS D 468 Deeply Divided Societies JSIS 487 Special Topics: Middle East (by adviser approval)

HSTAFM 161 Survey of Muslim Near East HSTAFM 163 The Modern Middle East HSTAFM 463 History of the Middle East Since 1789 HSTAFM 465 Iran, Afghanistan and Central Asia, 1750-2001 HSTRY 498 Undergraduate Seminar - must be on a Middle East topic JSIS B 406/ POL S 432 Political Islam JSIS B 407 Political Islam & Contemporary Islamist Movements NEAR E 266 The Modern Middle East and Central Asia POL S 325 Arab-Israeli Conflict POL S 331 Government and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa POL S 431 International Relations in the Middle East

JSIS C 211/NEAR E 230 Introduction to Muslim Beliefs and Practices NEAR E 312 Looting and Loss: The Recent Destruction of Cultural Heritage Sites in the Middle East

WIN 2018 24

RUSSIA, EASTERN EUROPE & CENTRAL ASIA TRACK

Take three of the following: JSIS A/HSTEU 445 The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union JSIS D / POL S 445 Politics and Society in Eastern Europe POL S 441 Government and Politics of Russia

ANTH 425/ JSIS A 427 Anthropology of the Post-Soviet States

ECON 495 Economic Transformation of Russia and Eastern Europe

GEOG 333 Russia's Changing Landscape

HSTAFM 465 Iran, Afghanistan and Central Asia, 1750-2001 HSTEU/ JSIS A 444 Imperial Russia: 1700-1900 HSTEU 451 East-Central Europe Since 1342 HSTCMP/ JSIS B 440 The Communist Experience Around the World JSIS A/SCAND 344 The Baltic States and Scandinavia JSIS A/SCAND 345 Baltic Cultures JSIS A 350 United States - Europe Relations JSIS A/NEAR E 357 Peoples and Cultures of Central and Inner Asia JSIS A 418 Eastern Europe: the Political Economy of the Region JSIS A 420 Post-Soviet Security JSIS A 430 The Soviet Empire: Creation, Consolidation, and Collapse JSIS A 440 Russia in the International System JSIS A / SCAND 455 Baltic States since 1991 JSIS A 468 Russia in the International System JSIS A/POL S 479 Contemporary Central Asian Politics JSIS B 420 Failed States NEAR E 358 Islam and Muslims in China POL S 420 Soviet and Russian Foreign Policy POL S 421 Relations Among Communist and Post-Communist States POL S 448 Politics of the European Union

WIN 2018 25

SOUTH ASIA TRACK Take three of the following: ANTH 371 Anthropology of Development ANTH 412 South Asian Social Structure HSTAS 403 History of Modern India to 1900 HSTAS 404 History of 20th Century India JSIS A/HSTAS 202 Introduction to South Asia History, 1500-present JSIS A 206 Contemporary India & Pakistan JSIS A/HSTAS 303 Divided lands/Divided lifes: Environmental History of South Asia JSIS A / ANTH 316 Modern South Asia JSIS A 339 Social Movements in Contemporary India JSIS A/POL S 340 Politics of India, Pakistan and South Asia JSIS A/ANTH 341 Political Violence in Post-colonial South Asia JSIS A/POL S 417 Political Economy of India JSIS A/POL S 434 International Relations of South Asia JSIS A 438 Political Geographies of South Asia (w/GEOG 436) JSIS B 331 Political Economy of Development JSIS B/POL S 337 Collective Violence and the State JSIS B/ 345 Women and International Economic Development ANTH/GWSS RELIG 352 Hinduism RELIG 354 Buddhism RELIG 356 Buddhism & Society: The Theravada Buddhist Tradition in South & Southeast Asia (w/ ANTH 352) JSIS B 406 Political Islam (w/ POL S 432) JSIS B 407 Political Islam & Contemporary Islamist Movements JSIS B/POL S 436 Ethnic Politics and Nationalism in Multi-Ethnic Societies JSIS 485 Special Topics: South Asian Studies

WIN 2018 26

SOUTHEAST ASIA TRACK

Take three of the following:

ANTH/AAS 314 Ethnography, Transnationalism, and Community in Island Southeast Asia/Asian America

ANTH 408 Experiments in Southeast Asia

HSTAS 463 Southeast Asian History: 1800 to Present

JSIS A 221 History of Southeast Asia

JSIS A/HSTAS 265 The Vietnam Wars

JSIS A/ANTH 315 Southeast Asian Civilization: Buddhist and Vietnamese

JSIS A/POL S 343 Politics and Change in Southeast Asia

JSIS A/HSTCMP 367 Southeast Asian Activism & Social Engagement

JSIS A 419 Southeast Asian Knowledge & the Politics of Information

JSIS A /ANTH 447 Literature and Society in Southeast Asia (max. 5 cr.)

JSIS A 462/ Islam, Mysticism, Politics, & Performance in Indonesian Culture HSTAS 466

JSIS A 463 Topics in Southeast Asian History JSIS B 264 Violence, Myth, & Memory (w/ HSTAS 264)

JSIS B 407 Political Islam & Contemporary Islamist Movements

JSIS B 433 Environmental Degradation in the Tropics

RELIG 354 Buddhism

RELIG 356/ Buddhism & Society: The Theravada Buddhist Tradition ANTH 352 in South & Southeast Asia

SOC 470 Contemporary Southeast Asia

JSIS 486 Special Topics: Southeast Asia (if topic is not language)

WIN 2018 27

WESTERN EUROPE TRACK Required: JSIS A 301 Europe Today

Plus two of the following: ECON 475 Economics of the European Community HSTEU 303 Contemporary European History Since 1815 HSTEU 323 France Since 1814 (formerly 423) HSTEU 334 Germany 1871-1989 HSTEU 413 Europe 1914-1945 HSTEU 414 History of Europe Since 1945 HSTEU 415 Europe in the Second World War HSTEU 422 The French Revolution and Napoleon: 1789-1815 HSTEU 432 Germany 1914-1945 JSIS A 302 The Politics and Cultures of Europe JSIS A 304 Contemporary European Migration JSIS A/POL S 348 European Union as Global Actor JSIS A 349 Migration and Multiculturalism in the Mediterranean JSIS A 350 United States - Europe Relations JSIS A/ SCAND 351 Scandinavia, the European Union, and Global Climate Change JSIS A 364 Modern Greece: 1821 to the Present JSIS A 416 North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) JSIS A / COM 425 European Media Systems JSIS A/ SCAND 429 Eco-Capitalism JSIS A 442/ SCAND 445 War & Occupation in N. Europe: History, Fiction, Memoir JSIS B/ SCAND 350 Environmental Norms in International Politics JSIS B 467 Nations and States in the Modern World JSIS C/ GEOG 403 Modern European-Islamic Migration, Integration, and Citizenship POL S 324 Europe in World Politics POL S/ SCAND 326 Scandinavia in World Affairs POL S 346 Governments of Western Europe POL S/ SCAND 437 Politics in Scandinavia POL S 438 Politics in France

WIN 2018 28

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES FACULTY MIKA AHUVIA, PhD Princeton. Assistant Professor JSIS, Jewish Studies, rabbinic literature, Hebrew bible, ancient magic, New Testament and early Christianity. MARIE ANCHORDOGUY, PhD California-Berkeley. Professor, JSIS; Political scientist; the state’s role in industrial development, comparative government-business relations, Japan and East Asia. DAVID BACHMAN, PhD Stanford. Professor, JSIS; Chinese domestic and foreign policy, Asian politics, comparative politics, international relations. JEFFREY BEGUN, PhD University of Washington. Senior Lecturer; Economist; political economy in International Studies; economy and the environment, China. DANIEL BESSNER, PhD Duke. Historian; Assistant Professor, JSIS; Cultural and intellectual history, US foreign relations, US-Europe relations, Jewish studies, history of . MARY P. CALLAHAN, PhD, Cornell. Associate Professor, JSIS; Political scientist; Southeast Asian politics, comparative politics, international relations, security studies. DANIEL CHIROT, PhD Columbia. Professor, JSIS and Sociology; economic and political change in the 20th century, communist societies, ethnic conflict. PATRICK CHRISTIE, PhD Michigan. Professor, Marine Affairs and JSIS; tropical coastal zone , participatory research and planning, marine protected areas. SARA CURRAN, PhD North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Associate Professor, International Studies and Evans School of Public Affairs; Sociologist; migration and immigration; gender; economic and social change; institutions; population; environment; Southeast Asia; Thailand . MADELEINE YUE DONG, PhD California-San Diego. Professor, JSIS and History, adjunct Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies; Historian; Chinese social/cultural history in the late 19th and 19th centuries, Chinese urban history, . KATHIE FRIEDMAN, PhD SUNY-Binghamton. Associate Professor, JSIS, adjunct Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies; Sociologist; sociology of gender, race, and ethnicity; international immigration. VANESSA FREIJE, PhD Duke. JSIS, Latin America & Caribbean Studies. History of Mexico, intra-American relations, the politics of knowledge production, and the role of journalists in development. MARIA ELENA GARCIA, PhD Brown University, Associate Professor Comparative History of Ideas (CHID) and JSIS; Anthropologist; Latin America; cultural politics of food, indigeneity, and violence. BENJAMIN GARDNER, PhD University of California-Berkeley. Assistant Professor, Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences UW-Bothell; Adjunct Professor, Geography, UW Main Campus. Global, cultural and environmental politics, Africa, development, cultural geography, tourism. CHRISTOPH GIEBEL, PhD Cornell. Associate Professor, JSIS and History; Historian; modern Vietnamese history, modern SE Asian history, post-1945 Vietnamese historiography, communism and labor in Viet Nam. ANGELINA SNODGRASS GODOY, PhD, UC-Berkeley. Professor, JSIS and Law, Society and Justice; Sociologist; Latin American, violence and social control and their implications for human rights and democracy; Guatemala. YONG-CHOOL HA, PhD UC-Berkeley. Korea Foundation Professor of Korean , JSIS; comparative politics, Asian politics, Soviet and Russian politics, international relations, and LIORA HALPERIN, PhD UCLA. Associate Professor. Israel Studies, JSIS and History. Jewish-Arab relations in Ottoman and Mandate Palestine, Zionist national memory in Jewish agricultural colonies. DONALD C. HELLMANN, PhD California-Berkeley. Professor, JSIS and ; America in the world, Japanese politics and foreign policy, international relations of East Asia. CHRISTOPHER R. JONES, PhD Harvard. Associate Professor, JSIS; military affairs, the nuclear question, East-West relations, alliance politics, politics of the USSR, the Warsaw Pact SUNILA KALE, PhD University of Texas-Austin, Associate Professor, JSIS; Political Scientist; economic development in India, globalization, liberalization.

WIN 2018 29

REŞAT KASABA, PhD SUNY-Binghamton. Director, JSIS; Stanley D. Golub Professor of International Studies; Sociologist; ethnic and religious conflict, historical social change in the Mediterranean area, Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey, migration, world-system theory. NEKTRIA KLAPAKI, PhD King’s College London. Visiting Assistant Professor; JSIS Hellenic Studies; Modern Greek Studies. SABINE LANG, PhD Free University Berlin. Associate Professor, JSIS; adjunct in Political Science and Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies; Political scientist; comparative and European politics, civil society and the nongovernmental sector, gender, Germany. WILLIAM R. LAVELY, PhD Michigan. Associate Professor, JSIS and Sociology; Chinese and society. JAMES LIN, PhD UC-Berkeley. Assistant Professor, Taiwan Studies. International agrarian development, and global development missions from Taiwan. FREDERICK LORENZ, JD Marquette. Senior Lecturer JSIS, International law and peacekeeping. JOSE ANTONIO LUCERO, PhD Princeton. Associate Professor, JSIS; Latin American politics, indigenous politics, social movements, race and ethnicity. MARK METZLER, PhD UC-Berkely. Professor JSIS and History, post-war Japan, world econcomic history STEPHEN MEYERS, PhD UC-San Diego. Assistant Professor JSIS & LSJ, Human rights, and global disability studies, Nicaraqua, civil society JOEL S. MIGDAL, PhD Harvard. Robert F. Philip Professor of International Studies, JSIS; Political scientist; Robert F. Philip Professor of International Studies; international political economy, Third World development, the Middle East, the Arab- Israeli conflict, change among peasants. DEVIN E. NAAR, PhD Stanford. Assistant Professor JSIS and History. Jewish cultural history, Sephardic Studies. HWASOOK NAM, PhD University of Washington. Associate Professor, James B. Palais Endowed Professorship, JSIS, History; Korean history. CHRISTIAN LEE NOVETZKE, PhD Columbia University. Professor, JSIS; International Studies and Comparative Religion; South Asian religious practice and literature; Hinduism. ROBERT PEKKANEN, PhD Harvard. Associate Professor, JSIS; Political Scientist; Japanese politics, civil society, political party organization. SAADIA PEKKANEN, PhD Harvard. MSL Yale Law School. Job and Gertrud Tamaki Professor of International Studies, JSIS; Japanese politics and foreign policy, WTO, law and politics of international trade, international political economy, international law. NOAM PIANKO, PhD Yale. Professor, JSIS; modern Jewish thought, theories of religion in an international context. DEBORAH PORTER, PhD Princeton. Associate Professor, JSIS; Chinese languages and literature, cosmogony, archaeoastronomy, paleography. KENNETH B. PYLE, PhD Johns Hopkins. Professor emeritus, JSIS and History; modern Japanese history, nationalism, Japanese-American relations. SCOTT RADNITZ, PhD MIT. Associate Professor, JSIS; Political scientist; social movements, state breakdown, democratization, comparative politics, former Soviet Union/Central Asia. PRITI RAMAMURTHY, PhD Syracuse. Professor, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies; Economics; political economy of development, agro-food systems, irrigation, Third World feminism, South Asia. CABEIRI DEBERGH ROBINSON, PhD Cornell. Associate Professor, JSIS; Anthropologist; International Studies, refugees, human rights, Islam, Kashmir, South Asia. SASHA SENDEROVICH, PhD Harvard. Slavic Languages and Literatures and JSIS. Assistant Professor. Russian Jewish literature and culture. CLARK SORENSEN, PhD Washington. Professor, JSIS; Anthropologist; Korea, East Asia; peas-ant economic and social organization, development, social change in modern East Asia, family organization.

WIN 2018 30

MATTHEW SPARKE, Ph.D. British Columbia. Professor, JSIS and Geography; globalization, global health, neoliberalism, borderlands, America and the world. JONATHAN WARREN, PhD California-Berkeley. Associate Professor, JSIS; Latin American Studies, race, ethnicity and nationalism in the Americas, visual sociology. REBECCA WEBER, PhD California-Berkeley. Historian; Assistant Professor JSIS; US international relations, oral history methods, Latin American Studies, US-Latin America relations. FRANK WENDLER, PhD University of Göttingen, Germany. Political scientist; Visiting Assistant DAAD Professor JSIS and Political Science; European integration, party politics and democracy. JAMES WELLMAN Jr., PhD Chicago. Professor, JSIS and Comparative Religion; Humanist; comparative religion; history of Western religion thought and culture; American religious communities, theoretical study of religion, religion and society. MICHAEL A. WILLIAMS, PhD Harvard Professor, JSIS and Near Eastern Languages and Civilization; early Christianity and religion in late antiquity, study of religion. NATHALIE WILLIAMS, Ph.D., University of Michigan. Assistant Professor, JSIS and Sociology; social demography, armed conflict and disasters, migration, mental and physical health, data collection and research design. ANAND A. YANG, PhD Virginia. Professor, JSIS and History; Historian; South Asia; popular culture in colonial India; colonial systems of discipline and punishment; South Asian diasporas and migrations. CLAIRE YANG, PhD Northwestern. Assistant Professor, China, political economy, applied micro-economics GLENNYS YOUNG, PhD California-Berkeley. Professor, JSIS and History; Russian and Soviet history, Stalinism, religion in Soviet history, peasants.

WIN 2018 31