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Discipline ID
8c6cc18f-a222-48fa-b32e-f6dd2519e1a6

COURSE DETAIL

SOCIALIST POLITICAL IDEAS
Country
Brazil
Host Institution
Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro
Program(s)
Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology
UCEAP Course Number
135
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
SOCIALIST POLITICAL IDEAS
UCEAP Transcript Title
SOCIALIST POL IDEAS
UCEAP Quarter Units
6.00
UCEAP Semester Units
4.00
Course Description

The objective of this course is to carry out an updated reading of certain classic texts of the socialist tradition in order to discuss the relationship between the Political and the Economic, and from there, between a Politics overdetermined by class and a postmodern Politics centered on identity and subjective elements. This course explores Rousseau, the thought of the utopian socialists and their Marxist critique, the evolution of Marx and Engels' political thought from 1848, the Paris Commune, Evolutionism and reformism in the Marxism of the Second International, the Luxembourgist critique, Lenin and the emergence of Bolshevism, Gramsci, and the radicalization of Leninism by Trotsky. This course also includes contemporary assessments of these topics.

Language(s) of Instruction
Portuguese
Host Institution Course Number
SOC 1294
Host Institution Course Title
IDEIAS POLITICAS SOCIALISTAS
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Ciências Sociais

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RACE AND ETHNICITY
Country
Germany
Host Institution
CIEE, Berlin
Program(s)
The Berlin Experience
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology Ethnic Studies
UCEAP Course Number
112
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
RACE AND ETHNICITY
UCEAP Transcript Title
RACE AND ETHNICITY
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

In this course students trace the socio-political, cultural, and anthropological constructions of race, racialization and ethnicity in the host location from the country's history until the present day. Reflecting the increasingly charged articulations of race, racism, and race-based grievances in the host location, students study a wide range of issues, from the lingering legacy of colonialism and decolonization (and the attendant construction of racialized thinking), to reading race and ethnicity in host location, the role of race and ethnicity in the politics of immigration and the rise of ethno-nationalism, and the state of socio-political and cultural social policies that redress racialized and ethnic inequities – from affirmative action and (postcolonial) reparations, to social justice and police reform, and the decolonization of cultural institutions and the media landscape. By adopting an interdisciplinary approach to these issues, students learn how the history and contemporary lived reality of race (relations) and ethnicity in the host location can only be understood by accessing and closely examining -- from a variety of disciplinary vantage points -- the deep cultural archive of the host location and its people. At the same time, students analyze how discourses of race that originated in the United States circulate globally, are refracted through processes of mediation, and inflect local articulations of race, ethnicity and identity.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
SOCI 3005
Host Institution Course Title
RACE AND ETHNICITY
Host Institution Campus
CIEE Berlin
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department

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POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY
Country
Chile
Host Institution
University of Chile
Program(s)
University of Chile
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology Political Science
UCEAP Course Number
159
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY
UCEAP Transcript Title
POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description
This course analyzes modern politics, specifically in terms of the relationships between civil society and the state. It examines the systems of representation and political parties that formalize these relationships in modern political regimes, as well as the underlying political conflict. Topics include: power and politics; the state; relations between civil society and the state; political parties; structure and social conflict in politics; current problems of social and political representation of conflict.
Language(s) of Instruction
Spanish
Host Institution Course Number
SO01024
Host Institution Course Title
SOCIOLOGIA POLITICA
Host Institution Campus
Campus Juan Gómez Millas
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Facultad de Ciencias Sociales

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INVESTIGATING THE CITY: LINKING THEORY AND EVIDENCE
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Urban Studies Sociology
UCEAP Course Number
103
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
INVESTIGATING THE CITY: LINKING THEORY AND EVIDENCE
UCEAP Transcript Title
INVESTIGATING CITY
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This course focuses on sociological concepts and methods to link theory with evidence and asks how sociological concepts can be applied to the world around us. It develops the key skills of academic writing: how to write an effective academic research paper and how to read academic papers to link theory with evidence. A key learning objective is close reading of texts, understanding the key argument of each text, and applying concepts to the real world. This course has a theme of the "city" to focus on producing original research work on a focused domain. It uses key sociological readings, case studies, and in-the-news topics to study society as a complex space where buildings, people, animals, laws, policies, and international financial flows, intersect to produce our lived experience. The course examines sociological concepts through walks around in the city. It explores foundational texts and addresses specific questions related to inequality, power, conspiracy theories, global finance, environmental crisis, social policy, violence, segregation, and so on.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
ASOC 25A18
Host Institution Course Title
INVESTIGATING THE CITY: LINKING THEORY AND EVIDENCE
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Core Seminar
Host Institution Department
Sociology

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SEXUALITY AND GENDER: DIVERSITY AND SOCIETY
Country
Hong Kong
Host Institution
University of Hong Kong
Program(s)
University of Hong Kong
UCEAP Course Level
Lower Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Women’s & Gender Studies Sociology
UCEAP Course Number
19
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
SEXUALITY AND GENDER: DIVERSITY AND SOCIETY
UCEAP Transcript Title
SEX&GENDER: DIVERSE
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description

What is sexual and gender diversity? How does the experience of our own genderedness and sexuality define members of sexual and gender minorities as people, and shape our opinions about those people who do not share our experiences or who do not express their sexuality in the same ways as we do? This course looks at these sorts of questions and does so while teaching about (and in many cases meeting and talking with) people whose gender or sexuality places them on the fringes of mainstream society. People who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or asexual; transgender people and individuals who cross dress, or play with bondage, domination, use pornography, and/or are involved in commercial sex activities. In lectures and tutorials we will examine questions such as: To what extent are sexual and gender diversity biologically ‘hard-wired’ rather than learned? What is ‘normal’ in human sexuality and gender? How, in an increasingly interconnected world, are our ideas about sexual and gender diversity changing? What are the intersectionality that we can discover in the whole course of learning and how do we use these learnings to help make a better world? 

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
CCHU9007
Host Institution Course Title
SEXUALITY AND GENDER: DIVERSITY AND SOCIETY
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Common Core: Humanities

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DIVERSITY MANAGEMENT
Country
Sweden
Host Institution
Lund University
Program(s)
Lund University
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Women’s & Gender Studies Sociology Health Sciences
UCEAP Course Number
142
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
DIVERSITY MANAGEMENT
UCEAP Transcript Title
DIVERSITY MGMT
UCEAP Quarter Units
6.00
UCEAP Semester Units
4.00
Course Description

This course develops knowledge of equality and diversity with a special focus on intersectionality. The course contains central theories and perspectives on diversity and equality. The course addresses how equality and diversity work is organized, developed, and run in different types of service organizations. These efforts reflect issues around individual situations and needs, which makes it doubly important to be able to understand and think critically about gender, ethnicity, sexuality, age, and functional impairment. The course gives space for both the critical analysis of organizational equality and diversity issues, as well as the application of theoretical tools to understand these.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
SEMA53
Host Institution Course Title
DIVERSITY MANAGEMENT
Host Institution Campus
Lund University
Host Institution Faculty
Social Sciences
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department

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SOCIOLOGY OF YOUTH: CRITICISM OF ADULT-CENTRIC SOCIETY
Country
Chile
Host Institution
University of Chile
Program(s)
University of Chile
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology
UCEAP Course Number
109
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
SOCIOLOGY OF YOUTH: CRITICISM OF ADULT-CENTRIC SOCIETY
UCEAP Transcript Title
SOCIOLOGY OF YOUTH
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description

This course presents the hypothesis of generational perspective, intersected with others such as class, gender, race, and territory,  as an alternative episteme for the sociological analysis of youth worlds and adult-centric societies. The social component is read as constituted by multiple opresions from the perspective of youth world vision.

Language(s) of Instruction
Spanish
Host Institution Course Number
SOCO1226
Host Institution Course Title
SOCIOLOGIA DE LO JUVENIL: CRITICA A LA SOCIEDAD ADULTOCENTRICA
Host Institution Campus
Juan Gomez Millas
Host Institution Faculty
Ciencias Sociales
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Sociologia

COURSE DETAIL

RUBBISH!
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Humboldt University Berlin
Program(s)
Humboldt University Berlin
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology Environmental Studies
UCEAP Course Number
127
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
RUBBISH!
UCEAP Transcript Title
RUBBISH
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This seminar takes a deep dive into histories and theories of rubbish, discards and waste, from the proposition that to be human is to make waste, through to the claim that humans can 'design out waste' in order to survive. Questions include when and where does something become rubbish, and how can its value be transformed? What does it mean to waste something, and when does waste become ’toxic'? This course examines how the politics of waste and its (mis)management lie at the heart of contemporary debates concerning environmental degradation, social and economic injustice, and the planetary crisis humans face. 

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
532834
Host Institution Course Title
RUBBISH!
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Institut für Kulturwissenschaft

COURSE DETAIL

GENDERED INEQUALITY IN LATIN AMERICA AND EMERGING RESPONSES
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Women’s & Gender Studies Sociology Latin American Studies
UCEAP Course Number
158
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
GENDERED INEQUALITY IN LATIN AMERICA AND EMERGING RESPONSES
UCEAP Transcript Title
GENDERED INEQUALITY
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This course explores the evolution of women's work inside and outside of the home; traditional and emerging views relative to women and domestic and/or care work; and current models that include greater State involvement and societal support for domestic and care work as prerequisites for gender equity and more robust democracies in Latin America. Students derive the conceptual tools for their own critical analyses, developing an amplified understanding of the role of care and domestic work in Latin America; the role that women play in the same, and what this classic equation has meant for the region's development trajectories. Likewise, the course introduces existing models and policy alternatives. It is divided into two parts: the first part covers Latin American women's inequality in labor and in society, and the second part considers emerging responses.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
DSOC 25A34
Host Institution Course Title
GENDERED INEQUALITY IN LATIN AMERICA AND EMERGING RESPONSES
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Seminar
Host Institution Department
Sociology

COURSE DETAIL

UNDERSTAND SOCIAL PROBLEMS & POLICIES
Country
Ireland
Host Institution
University College Dublin
Program(s)
University College Dublin
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology
UCEAP Course Number
102
UCEAP Course Suffix
N
UCEAP Official Title
UNDERSTAND SOCIAL PROBLEMS & POLICIES
UCEAP Transcript Title
SOC PROBLEMS&POLICY
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description

This course equips students with basic research and analytical skills that are needed to understand and respond to social policy problems. Its main focus is on statistical data available in online databases that are widely used to describe such problems and design policy solutions to them. Students learn about major relevant databases for Ireland and the EU and receive guidance and hands-on experience on how to access those databases, search through them for data on specific social policy topics, select and extract particular relevant indicators into Excel spreadsheets, present the data in graphs and tables, and write brief descriptive commentaries on what the data reveal. For illustrative purposes, the course focuses on unemployment as a representative social problem and concentrates on analyzing that problem and policy responses to it in Ireland and in the EU. A special focus is on the impact of Covid-19 on the labor market and its effects on employment and unemployment among younger cohorts in particular.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
SPOL10030
Host Institution Course Title
UNDERSTAND SOCIAL PROBLEMS & POLICIES
Host Institution Campus
University College Dublin
Host Institution Faculty
Social Policy, Social Work and Social Justice
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
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