May 03, 2024  
2022-2023 Westminster College Catalog 
    
2022-2023 Westminster College Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


 

Political Science

  
  • PS 101 - Introduction to Politics

    Semester Hours: 4

    An introduction to the discipline of political science. The aim of the course is to introduce students to the scope and nature of political science, the fundamental problems of political life in the contemporary world, and the main types of political systems around the world. Special attention is paid to the challenges facing democracy as a political system in the coming decades. Meets Social Thought and Tradition Intellectual Perspective requirement (ST).

    Intellectual Perspective: ST
  
  • PS 102 - American Politics

    Semester Hours: 4

    A critical introduction to the institutions, processes, powers, and limitations of the American national government. Special attention is given to an examination of the role of the citizen in American government and to the nature of democracy in America. Proposals for the reform of American government are also examined. Meets Social Thought and Tradition Intellectual Perspective requirement (ST).

    Intellectual Perspective: ST
  
  • PS 103 - Democratic Theory and Practice

    Semester Hours: 4

    An introductory examination of several of the basic problems of political life. The issues considered include the nature and function of order, authority, law, justice, freedom, equality and progress. Meets Religious and Philosophical Though Intellectual Perspective requirement (RP).

    Intellectual Perspective: RP
  
  • PS 104 - International Relations

    Semester Hours: 4

    A study of politics among states and other actors who affect global relations. Once establishing a background in the concepts used to analyze world politics, students will use these concepts to explore the Cold War era, the end of that system, and several pertinent international issues in the areas of security, economics, and the environment. Meets Social Thought and Tradition Intellectual Perspective requirement (ST).

    Intellectual Perspective: ST
  
  • PS 199 - Experimental Course

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Experimental course.

  
  • PS 204 - Model United Nations

    Semester Hours: 1

    This course prepares students to participate in a simulation that utilizes the basic structural tenets and procedural framework of the United Nations. Students develop familiarity with parliamentary procedures and a working knowledge of the national interests of member states. Students either attend a national Model United Nations conference or serve as conference staff for the Westminster College Model United Nations high school conference. Delegates work as diplomats, representing various countries and working towards solutions to various international problems. Conference staff members prepare a simulation experience and host committee sessions for area high school students. This course may be repeated for up to a total of four semester hours.

  
  • PS 211 - State and Local Government

    Semester Hours: 4

    A study of the American experience in state and local government, analytically oriented, with the objective of explaining political processes at the sub-national level. Attention is given to a description of basic institutions, to an analysis of state and municipal politics in a comparative perspective, and to salient policy questions.

  
  • PS 212 - The Congress

    Semester Hours: 4

    A study of the development and functioning of Congress and the legislative process. The course focuses on Congress’ role in policy making, with special attention given to the history, institutions, powers, and duties of Congress, and to the roles played by the committees and leadership of both Houses. The relationships of Congress to parties, interest groups, and other branches of government also are examined.

  
  • PS 213 - The Presidency

    Semester Hours: 4

    A survey of the development, roles, duties, powers, and limitations of the President and his chief advisers. The course focuses on such topics as the President and the Constitution, Presidential elections, the structure of the Presidency, and the President’s relations with Congress, the bureaucracy, and the American people. Special attention is given to the impact of the President on both domestic and foreign policy and to recent attempts to reform the Presidency.

  
  • PS 214 - The Courts

    Semester Hours: 4

    This course covers a variety of topics relating to the politics of the American judicial system. Topics include: the structure and function of the state and national courts, the causes and consequences of civil litigation, the methods used to select judges, the politics of the bar, political litigation by interest groups, the historical development of judicial power and the controversies surrounding it, the factors that influence judicial decisions, and the relationship between the courts, the public and other branches of government. Meets Social Thought and Tradition Intellectual Perspective requirement (ST).

    Intellectual Perspective: ST
  
  • PS 215 - Politics of Rock and Roll

    Semester Hours: 4

    This course examines the relationship between one of the most powerful forces of the 20th and 21st centuries - rock and roll music - and the political realm. The course focuses on the development of rock and roll in the post-war environment as well as the role the music played in the political and social tumult of the 1960s. Finally, attention is given to the interconnections between the music and the sociopolitical culture of the succeeding decades. Some of the artists covered include: Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, The Beatles, Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, Bruce Springsteen, and Michael Jackson.

  
  • PS 221 - American Political Thought

    Semester Hours: 4

    An examination of American political theory from the origin of this country to the present, with emphasis on the development of liberalism, conservatism, and radicalism within the American tradition.

  
  • PS 222 - Political Ideologies

    Semester Hours: 4

    Over the last two centuries, an unprecedented number of political dreamers have emerged to question social and political arrangements. Often they have dared to imagine they could craft perfect societies. Students will compare the ways that different belief systems have addressed fundamental concepts like freedom, justice, equality and human nature, as they explore the political belief systems (including liberalism, conservatism, feminism, socialism, anarchism, fascism and environmentalism) that have captured peoples’ imaginations and stirred them to action. Meets Religious and Philosophical Thought Intellectual Perspective requirement (RP).

    Intellectual Perspective: RP
  
  • PS 232 - European Politics

    Semester Hours: 4

    A comparative study of the political systems and current challenges facing selected European powers. The patterns of political culture, political interests, political power, and public policy are analyzed. In addition, the project of European integration (the European Union) will be studied, and its current and future relations with the United States investigated.

  
  • PS 233 - Politics in Developing Countries

    Semester Hours: 4

    Selected countries from the Third World will be studied to analyze the politics of change in the developing countries as they face the complex world of the international system. In particular, these issues will be studied: political instability; money management, inflation, and foreign debt; population pressures on limited resources; ethnic problems contributing to city, rural and regional frictions; asymmetrical economic development; and foreign policy issues relating to trade and diplomacy with industrialized countries of the world.

  
  • PS 235 - African Politics

    Semester Hours: 4

    A study of the interaction between politics and social structures in Africa. Topics will include political organization in pre-modern Africa, the development and impact of slavery, the operations and impact of European colonialism, the struggle for independence, the nature of the African state, the operation of democratic and authoritarian governments, the role of women, and the effects of AIDS.

  
  • PS 236 - Russian Politics

    Semester Hours: 4

    This course introduces students to important issues in contemporary Russian politics including the development of its political, economic and social institutions. Students will examine the historical development of Russia’s governing institutions; compare the Russian Federation to other post-Soviet republics, and consider Russia’s regional and global significance. Meets Social Thought and Tradition Intellectual Perspective requirement (ST).

    Intellectual Perspective: ST
  
  • PS 241 - Public Policy

    Semester Hours: 4

    An introduction to theories of policy making, policy implementation, and policy evaluation with particular attention to their applications to the American political system. An overview of policy in areas such as education, transportation, civil rights, welfare, agriculture, and defense is also provided. Special attention is given to the discussion of improving public policies. Meets Social Thought and Tradition Intellectual Perspective requirement (ST).

    Intellectual Perspective: ST
  
  • PS 242 - Environmental Policy and Politics

    Semester Hours: 4

    This course explores “the environment” as a focus of public policy, an issue in political debate, and a basis for thinking about the purposes of political life. It reviews some of the classic readings in environmentalism, considers domestic and international policy approaches to major issues such as climate change, clean air and water, and sustainable development, and explores the ways in which thinking “environmentally” challenges our standard assumptions about policy-making and political life.

    Prerequisite: PS 101  or consent of instructor.
  
  • PS 251 - Seminar in Political Behavior

    Semester Hours: 4

    Work in selected areas. These areas include PS 251 Seminar in Politics and Behavior; PS 252  Seminar in American Politics; PS 253 Seminar in Political Philosophy; PS 254 Seminar in Comparative Politics; PS 255  Seminar in International Politics. Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

    When Offered: Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

  
  • PS 252 - Seminar in Political Philosophy

    Semester Hours: 4

    Work in selected areas. These areas include PS 251  Seminar in Politics and Behavior; PS 252 Seminar in American Politics; PS 253 Seminar in Political Philosophy; PS 254 Seminar in Comparative Politics; PS 255  Seminar in International Politics. Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

    When Offered: Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

  
  • PS 252A - Seminar: Political Films

    Semester Hours: 4

    Work in selected areas. These areas include PS 251  Seminar in Politics and Behavior; PS 252  Seminar in American Politics; PS 253 Seminar in Political Philosophy; PS 254 Seminar in Comparative Politics; PS 255  Seminar in International Politics. Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

    When Offered: Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

  
  • PS 252B - Seminar: Trials of the Century

    Semester Hours: 4

    Work in selected areas. These areas include PS 251  Seminar in Politics and Behavior; PS 252  Seminar in American Politics; PS 253 Seminar in Political Philosophy; PS 254 Seminar in Comparative Politics; PS 255  Seminar in International Politics. Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

    When Offered: Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

  
  • PS 254A - Seminar: Nationalism

    Semester Hours: 4

    Work in selected areas. These areas include PS 251  Seminar in Politics and Behavior; PS 252  Seminar in American Politics; PS 253 Seminar in Political Philosophy; PS 254 Seminar in Comparative Politics; PS 255  Seminar in International Politics. Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

    When Offered: Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

  
  • PS 255 - Seminar in International Politics

    Semester Hours: 4

    Work in selected areas. These areas include PS 251  Seminar in Politics and Behavior; PS 252  Seminar in American Politics; PS 253 Seminar in Political Philosophy; PS 254 Seminar in Comparative Politics; PS 255 Seminar in International Politics. Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

    When Offered: Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

  
  • PS 255A - Seminar: International Political Economy

    Semester Hours: 4

    Work in selected areas. These areas include PS 251  Seminar in Politics and Behavior; PS 252  Seminar in American Politics; PS 253 Seminar in Political Philosophy; PS 254 Seminar in Comparative Politics; PS 255  Seminar in International Politics. Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

    When Offered: Special topics related to the selected area to be offered are announced prior to each registration period.

  
  • PS 299 - Experimental Course

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Experimental course.

  
  • PS 301 - Junior Seminar: Research Design and Analysis

    Semester Hours: 4

    An introduction to the various approaches to and challenges of research design and analysis in the discipline of political science. The goal is for each student to design a research project which will then be pursued in the Senior Capstone course. This course must be taken in the spring of the junior year.

    Prerequisite: PS 101 , PS 102 , PS 103 , PS 104  and junior standing.
  
  • PS 302 - Seminar: Mock Convention I

    Semester Hours: 2

    Seminar to be held in the Spring term before Westminster’s Mock Convention. Students will learn about the role of National Nominating Conventions in the American political system. Planning will begin for Westminster’s Mock Convention to be held in the fall of the following academic year.

  
  • PS 303 - Seminar: Mock Convention II

    Semester Hours: 2

    Seminar to be held in the same term as Westminster’s Mock Convention. Students will continue to plan, prepare and execute the convention. Students will gain experience in all aspects of the process: credentials, public relations, platform, etc.

  
  • PS 311 - Campaigns and Election

    Semester Hours: 4

    An examination of the processes by which Americans and their government are linked. Special attention is given to the study of the structures and functions of political parties and interest groups. Attention is also given to the role of the individual citizen, public opinion and elections in the linkage process. Problems in citizen-government linkage in the United States and proposals for reform are emphasized.

    Prerequisite: PS 102 , or permission of instructor.
  
  • PS 321 - American Constitutional Law: Government Powers

    Semester Hours: 4

    An examination of the U.S. Supreme Court as an agency of judicial decision making within the framework of the American political system. The Supreme Court is studied within its political, historical, and constitutional framework, where it seeks to protect or expand its own powers as it is called upon to clarify social values as it interprets the major clauses of the U.S. Constitution.

    Prerequisite: PS 102  or PS 103 , or permission of instructor.
  
  • PS 322 - American Constitutional Law: Civil Rights

    Semester Hours: 4

    An examination of the role of the Supreme Court, judicial review, and political struggle in shaping the evolution of the Constitutional framework of American politics. This course focuses on judicial review and the role of the Supreme Court in articulating and defending the civil rights and liberties of American citizens, through the interpretation and application of the Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment. Particular focus will be placed on the issues of freedom of speech and expression, the relationships between church and state, the right of privacy, and the constitutional guarantees of equal protection before the law.

    Prerequisite: PS 102  or PS 103 , or permission of instructor.
  
  • PS 323 - Modern Political Philosophy

    Semester Hours: 4

    A study of normative values, as related to government and politics, utilizing the writings of the great political thinkers of the West from Machiavelli to the present.

    Prerequisite: PS 103  or permission of instructor.
    Intellectual Perspective: RP
  
  • PS 331 - Geopolitics

    Semester Hours: 4

    This course reviews traditional understanding of geopolitics, but moves beyond examining how geography impacts the projection of military power; addressing broader issues regarding the relationship between territory and international conflict. Particular attention will be paid to how nationalism and globalization have transformed the relationship between geography and war. Meets Social Thought and Tradition Intellectual Perspective requirement (ST).

    Intellectual Perspective: ST
  
  • PS 332 - U.S. Foreign Policy

    Semester Hours: 4

    An exploration of the actors, institutions, and processes that shape the making of contemporary U.S. foreign policy. The course begins with an overview of Cold War foreign policy, and then focuses on the challenges facing American policy in the post-Cold War era. Special attention is given to the continuities and changes in the political processes through which foreign policy is made, and different theoretical approaches to the explanation of United States foreign policy.

    Prerequisite: PS 104  or permission of instructor.
  
  • PS 342 - Politics and Economy

    Semester Hours: 4

    An examination of the manifold relationships between political life and economic organization, with an emphasis on advanced capitalist societies. The course will consider major theories about the relationship between government and the economy, explore the history and variety of relationships between the state and the market economy, evaluate the impact of economic change on political life, and discuss some of the pressing contemporary issues in this area, such as fiscal policy and government deficits, free trade/protectionism and international economic interdependence, monetary policy, government regulation of the economy, and questions of poverty and inequality.

    Prerequisite: PS 101  or permission of instructor.
  
  • PS 345 - Nationalism

    Semester Hours: 4

    This special topics course introduces students to the study of nationalism and nationality. The course, run as a seminar, surveys the existing theoretical literature on nationalism and national identity formation. It examines nationalism from a broadly comparative and interdisciplinary perspective. The first half of the course reviews the debates within the literature over theories of nationalism, and examines the origins of nationalism in the European context. The second half of the course focus on a variety of issues related to the contemporary expressions nationalism and its relations to other forms of political identity in an increasingly globalized world.

    Intellectual Perspective: HC
    When Offered: Offered alternating years.

  
  • PS 399 - Experimental Course

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Experimental course.

  
  • PS 411 - Political Psychology

    Semester Hours: 4

    A study of the dynamic relationship of the individual to his/ her political environment, with emphasis on theories of political personality, political socialization, and political efficacy. Students are introduced to a means of scientifically studying the subjective communication that is inherent in theories of political personality. Meets Social Thought and Tradition Intellectual Perspective requirement (ST).

    Prerequisite: PS 101  or PS 102 , or permission of instructor.
    Intellectual Perspective: ST
  
  • PS 431 - International Law and Organization

    Semester Hours: 4

    A study of selected international institutions that have been constructed to address challenges faced by the world’s states. The course will introduce the student to several theories of international cooperation and explore the validity of these approaches in explaining behavior in the United Nations system (which consists of many international organizations). Students will leave the course with an understanding of the structures of these organizations, as well as a sense of how and why they work and sometimes fail to work. Topical areas will include peacekeeping, arms control and disarmament (e.g., nuclear weapons, biological and chemical warfare), development and trade, social and humanitarian issues (e.g., refugees, drug trafficking, transnational crime), and legal issues (e.g., war criminals, asylum).

    Prerequisite: PS 104  or permission of instructor.
  
  • PS 499 - Experimental Course

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Experimental course.

  
  • PS 590 - Field Experience/Internship

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Prerequisite: two courses in political science and consent of department.
  
  • PS 601 - Capstone

    Semester Hours: 4

    An examination of central theoretical debates and challenges confronting modern political scientists. Over the course of the semester, each student will complete a substantial research project that applies a contemporary theoretical approach to a pressing issue in contemporary political life. This course must be taken in the fall of the senior year.

    Prerequisite: PS 301 .
  
  • PS 620 - Independent Study

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Prerequisite: two courses in political science and consent of department.
  
  • PS 660 - Honors Research

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Prerequisite: Honors status and departmental approval.
  
  • PS 670 - Honors Research

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Prerequisite: Honors status and departmental approval.
  
  • PS 680 - Honors Research

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Prerequisite: Honors status and departmental approval.
  
  • PS 690 - Honors Research

    Semester Hours: 1-4

    Prerequisite: Honors status and departmental approval.