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Dec 04, 2024
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2021-2022 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
International Studies, BA
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Requirements
In order to earn the Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in International Studies, students must complete a minimum of 180 credits with a cumulative and major/department grade point average of 2.00, including the following:
I. Core Curriculum Requirements
Module I: Engaging Academic Inquiry
Module II: Engaging Jesuit Traditions
Module III: Engaging the World
II. College of Arts and Sciences Requirements
- Modern Language 1150, 1250, 1350 or equivalent (15)
NOTE:
All students with a major in the College of Arts and Sciences must demonstrate competency through the level of 1350 in a language other than English. This competency is ordinarily achieved by successful completion of the three-course sequence: 1150, 1250, and 1350. Because these courses are a college requirement, no courses in the sequence may be taken on a pass/fail, correspondence, or audit basis. Placement into other than the beginning course of the sequence is achieved by acceptable performance on the Modern Language Competency Examination. See the Modern Language Department for details on the examinations. International students educated to age 16 in a language other than English may request a waiver of this first-year language requirement.
III. Major Requirements
A minimum of 65 credits in international studies, including:
Area I: Foundational: 25 credits:
Area II: Professional Formation: 25 credits:
NOTE:
- Students who place out of second year language (i.e., Modern Language above 1350) must take 30 credits of international studies major electives rather than 15.
- Junior or senior standing is required for enrollment in INST 3800.
- INST 3800 plus INST 2000 and any three other INST foundational courses are prerequisites for INST 4900.
Area III: Major Electives: 15 credits:
Choose 15 credits of approved electives from the list below. At least five credits must be designated Non-Western Humanities (NWH).
- AIST 2000 - Introduction to Asian Studies (NWH)
- ANTH 3320 - Asian Families and Culture
- ANTH 3510 - Contemporary Chinese Society
- ANTH 3520 - Contemporary Japanese Society
- ARAB 3910 - Special Topics
- ARTH 2130 - Global Topics in Art History (NWH)
- BLAW 3700 - Business and International Law
- BLAW 4760 - Global Legal Issues
- CHIN 3150 - Chinese Culture and Civilization (NWH)
- CMME 3100 - Intercultural Communication
- CMME 3282 - International Affairs Writing
- CMME 3380 - Global Reputation Management
- ECON 3130 - Global and Domestic Macroeconomics *
- ECON 3710 - International Political Economy
- ECON 3750 - Asian Economic Development *
- ECON 3780 - Financial Markets and Economic Development *
- ECON 4720 - International Economics *
- ECON 4760 - Microeconomics of Development *
- ECON 4770 - Policy Analysis in International Development
- ENGL 3450 - Irish Literature
- ENGL 3460 - Russian Literature
- ENGL 3720 - Literature of India (NWH)
- ENGL 3730 - African Literature (NWH)
- ENGL 4550 - Americans in Paris
- ENGL 4710 - Japanese Drama (NWH)
- ENGL 4720 - Writing Resistance: Women in Non-Western Cultures (NWH)
- ENGL 4730 - Postcolonial Literature and Theory
- EVST 4740 - International Environmental Governance
- FILM 3600 - Introduction to International Film
- FILM 3620 - International Film: India (NWH)
- FILM 3630 - International Film: Japan (NWH)
- FILM 3640 - International Film: China (NWH)
- FILM 3650 - International Film: Russia
- FILM 3660 - International Film: German Cinema
- FILM 3670 - International Film: Global Africa (NWH)
- FILM 3680 - Latin American Film (NWH)
- FILM 3690 - Greater Middle East Film (NWH)
- FILM 3700 - European Cinema
- FILM 3710 - International Film: France
- FILM 3720 - International Film: Pacific Cinema
- FINC 4460 - International Corporate and Trade Finance
- FREN 3150 - French Culture and Civilization
- FREN 3250 - Introduction to French Literature
- FREN 4450 - French Literature and Culture, 20th Century
- FREN 4520 - Development of Modern French
- FREN 4600 - Qu
- FREN 4630 - Topics in Contemporary French Culture
- FREN 4650 - French and Francophone Cinema
- FREN 4700 - Francophone African and Caribbean Literature and Culture (NWH)
- GAST 3030 - African History: 1800 - the Present (NWH)
- GBUS 3200 - Global Environments of Business
- HIST 3130 - Europe 1800-1914: Politics, Society and Culture
- HIST 3150 - Europe 1914-1945
- HIST 3160 - European and Colonial Cities, 18th-20th Centuries
- HIST 3170 - Community and Conflict in Europe since 1945
- HIST 3190 - 20th Century European Intellectual Cultural History
- HIST 3500 - History of United States Foreign Policy
- HIST / INST 3560 - History of the Modern Middle East (NWH)
- HIST /INST 3570 - Women and Gender in the Middle East (NWH)
- HIST 3580 - Arab Uprisings (NWH)
- HIST 3590 - Worlds of Islam
- HIST 3630 - African History: 1800 to the Present (NWH)
- HIST 3700 - Colonial Latin America (NWH)
- HIST 3710 - Modern Latin America (NWH)
- HIST 3720 - History of Mexico (NWH)
- HIST 3730 - History of Cuba (NWH)
- HIST 3740 - Revolution in Latin America (NWH)
- HIST 3750 - History of the Caribbean (NWH)
- HIST 3830 - Modern China (NWH)
- HIST 3860 - History of Southeast Asia (NWH)
- HIST 3870 - Modern Japan (NWH)
- HIST 3890 - Modern Asia Revolutions (NWH)
- HIST 4080 - Modern European and Colonial Cultural History
- HIST 4200 - Hitler and the Holocaust
- HIST 4730 - Cuban History Research Seminar (NWH)
- HIST 4750 - Caribbean History Research Seminar (NWH)
- INIP 4000 - International Internship Seminar I
- INIP 4010 - Field Internship
- INIP 4020 - International Internship Seminar II
- INST 3200 / PLSC 3350 - Latin American Politics
- INST 3210 / PLSC 3640 - US-Latin American Relations
- INST / PLSC 3340 - Chinese Politics
- INST 3410 - Women and Leadership in Latin America
- INST / HIST 3560 - History of the Modern Middle East (NWH)
- INST / HIST 3570 - Women and Gender in the Middle East (NWH)
- INST / PLSC 3650 - East Asian Security
- INST / PLSC 3660 - Comparative Foreign Policy
- INST 4950 - International Studies Internship
- ITAL 3150 - Italian Culture & Civilization
- JPAN 3150 - Japanese Culture and Civilization (NWH)
- MODERN LANGUAGE : Arabic, French, Chinese, Japanese, Spanish 2150, 2250, 2350 (these 2000-level courses may fulfill major elective requirements only if in a language different from the one used to meet the major modern language requirement)
- MDLG 3910 - Special Topics (non-US)
- MKTG 4560 - International Marketing
- MUSC 2050 - African Drumming (NWH)
- PHIL 3410 - Buddhist Philosophy
- PHIL 3470 - African Philosophy (NWH)
- PHIL 3480 - Africana Philosophy (NWH)
- PHIL 4450 - Philosophy in a Global Context
- PLSC 3310 - Middle East Politics
- PLSC 3370 - Politics of Development
- PLSC 3380 - The Political Economy of Africa
- PLSC 3610 - U.S. Foreign Policy
- PLSC 3620 - Global Governance
- PLSC 3630 - North-South Relations
- PLSC 3690 - Global Conflict and Cooperation
- PLSC 4340 - European Union
- PLSC 4650 - East Asian Political Economy
- PLSC 4680 - Transnational Networks and Globalization
- PLSC 4850 - Indigenous Movements in Latin America
- PSYC 4300 - Psychology of Genocide and Terrorism
- PSYC 4830 - Multi-cultural Psychology: Vietnam and Vietnamese-Americans
- PUBA 4740 - International Environmental Governance
- SOCW 3310 - Global Social Welfare and International Aid
- SPAN 3150 - Latin American and Spanish Culture and Society (NWH)
- SPAN 3200 - Mexican Cultural Topics (NWH)
- SPAN 3250 - Introduction to Latin American and Spanish Literature (NWH)
- SPAN 3500 - History, Politics, and Society in Latin America (NWH)
- SPAN 4050 - Methodology of Teaching Spanish
- SPAN 4160 - Latin American and Spanish Literature and Culture, 19th century (NWH)
- SPAN 4260 - Latin American Literature and Culture 20th Century (NWH)
- SPAN 4300 - In and Out of Law (NWH)
- SPAN 4390 - In Search for a Visa to Fulfill a Dream (NWH)
- SPAN 4510 - Arts in the Hispanic World
- SPAN 4560 - Latin American Literature and Film (NWH)
- SPAN 4630 - Contemporary Spanish Literature and Culture
- WGST 3840 - Contemporary Latin American Literature (NWH)
NOTE:
*ECON 2110 is required for some 3000 or 4000 level ECON classes. Please consult with the Department of Economics.
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