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Reflecting on the causes and consequences of war involves some of the most fundamental questions facing any student of conflict, and this course is an introduction to thinking about them. Students explore the theoretical and methodological questions that arise when studying the causes of war. They consider the definition of war, and examine the role of theory in explaining and understanding its causes. Students utilize historical case studies, explore contemporary international politics and explore political change over time. This is the fall-only version for study abroad students.
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This course helps students understand how business regulation operates in domestic and global contexts. Students examine the foundational reasons for why government intervenes in market economies, as well as how regulatory agencies are designed, created, and maintained. Students look closely at the nature of regulatory standards and how they are shaped, and they examine how business organizations understand and comply with regulations. Additionally, students examine environmental regulatory tools, such as carbon taxes and cap and trade programs to understand how they are designed and how effective they are in reducing the incidence of pollution. Finally, on the domestic front, students learn about regulating innovation and technological challenges, such as artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency and social media on tech platforms.
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This course defines how endocrine and brain circuits control sexual, affiliative, and aggressive behavior. Students are introduced to comparative examples from the animal kingdom and underlying genetic mechanisms, as well as neuroendocrine circuits and peptide relays in the brain. Where possible, examples are drawn from the medical literature to indicate the common nature of these processes in our own species, and governing our behavior.
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This course explores the idea that just as English painting is renowned for its representation of landscape, poetry in Britain and Ireland has been shaped by the nature of place. The course looks at a variety of 20th-century poetry from the standpoint of its complex engagement with place. Students examine topics such as poetry and landscape; poetry, the country, and the city; poetry and the idea of England (the “spiritual, the Platonic, old England,” as Coleridge called it); insularity and post-imperial retrenchment; travel and the foreign; and what Seamus Heaney has called “the place of writing.”
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This course introduces students to the "experience economy" (Pine and Gilmore), experiential marketing, and a range of virtual and physical "experience-scapes." Research indicates that Generation Z tends to prioritize immersive, interactive, and highly personalized experiences, such as concerts, eating out, holidays, and other leisure activities, over actual products. This course addresses the meaning and characteristics of "experiences" and lifestyle from a marketing and branding perspective. It encourages students to critically explore the role of marketing in the customer experience design process and in its delivery. By synthesizing key concepts and theoretical foundations of experiential and lifestyle marketing with market orientation concepts, students are expected to interrogate customer's perspectives and assess how this highly complex mix influences consumer decision making and loyalty, and how it ultimately contributes to the customer experience.
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COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
This course introduces Greek art and architecture in the period 2500-50 BC. In the context of abroad chronological survey, the focus is on three main themes: the relationship between Greek art and society; addressing current problems in Greek art history, reception of Greek art and contemporary society; and extensive training in visual analysis and the different lenses to look at Greek art. Through images, videos, and 3D models, but also through museum visits to the British Museum, students engage in detailed and in-depth object analyses and discussions.
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This course provides an understanding of key issues and applied methodologies relating to management accounting frameworks used by managers when faced with making financial decisions in the context of the business environment. The focus is on information for cost management, budgetary control, and short and longer term financial decision making. It examines the blend of financial analysis and managerial judgment required to make sound decisions. In particular there is an emphasis on issues in overhead cost recovery; contribution costing and CVP analysis; costing issues in the context of a competitive environment, including activity based costing (ABC); relevant costs for decision making; core investment appraisal techniques (ARR, Payback, NPV and IRR); budgetary control, variance analysis, and standard costing.
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