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SOCI W 1000xy The Social World

Identification of the distinctive elements of sociological perspectives on society. Readings confront classical and contemporary approaches with key social issues that include power and authority, culture and communication, poverty and discrimination, social change, and popular uses of sociological concepts.
Corequisites: Discussion Section Required. General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W1000
SOCI
1000
62446
001
TuTh 1:10p - 2:25p
309 HAVEMEYER HALL
G. Eyal 152 [ More Info ]
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI W1000
SOCI
1000
61712
001
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
TBA
S. Khan 97 [ More Info ]

SOCI V 2208x Culture in America

The values and meanings that form American pluralism. The three sections explore taste, consumption, and art; moral conflict, religion and secularism; identity, community and ideology. Examples range widely: Individualism, liberalism and conservatism; Obama's "transracial" endeavor; the food revolution; struggles over family and sexuality; multiculturalism; assimilation and immigration.
Corequisites: General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).

SOCI V 2230y Food & The Social Order

Instrumental in the formation and transformation of the social order, food is an indicator of collective as well as individual aspirations and assumptions. We shall look at the production and consumption of food, both material and symbolic, from the eating in the Bible to globalization in the 21st century.
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI V2230
SOCI
2230
81760
001
MW 1:10p - 2:25p
603 HAMILTON HALL
P. Ferguson 41 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 2240y Economy and Society

Introduction to economic sociology. Economic sociology is built around the claim that something fundamental is lost when markets are analyzed separately from other social processes. We will look especially at how an analysis of the interplay of economy and society can help us to understand questions of efficiency, questions of fairness, and questions of democracy.
Not offered in 2012-2013.
3 points

SOCI W 2400y Comparative Perspectives on Inequality

Analysis of the contours, causes, and consequences of social inequality in the contemporary United States through systematic cross-national and historical comparisons. Topics include the distribution of social and economic resources by class, race/ethnicity, and gender and the role of institutions such as families, schools, labor markets, and governments.
General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W2400
SOCI
2400
05003
001
MW 10:35a - 11:50a
302 MILBANK HALL
C. Kesler 21 [ More Info ]

SOCI V 2420x Race and Place in Urban America

Analyzing the relationship between race/ethnicity and spatial inequality, emphasizing the institutions, processes, and mechanisms that shape the lives of urban dwellers. Surveying major theoretical approaches and empirical investigations of racial and ethnic stratification in several urban cities, and their concomitant policy considerations.
3 points

SOCI V 2440y American Society

This course addresses the character of inequality, religion, family, and immigration in contemporary America from a comparative perspective. Our goal is to better understand the nature of American distinctiveness within the broader industrialized world. Through such comparisons, the course will also clarify the potential role that social science evidence can play in policy debates around these issues.
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI V2440
SOCI
2440
93048
001
TuTh 4:10p - 5:25p
603 HAMILTON HALL
T. DiPrete 13 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3000x and y Social Theory

Required for all sociology majors. Prerequisite: at least one sociology course of the instructor's permission. Theoretical accounts of the rise and transformations of modern society in the19th and 20th centuries. Theories studied include those of Adam Smith, Tocqueville, Marx, Durkheim, Max Weber, Roberto Michels. Selected topics: individual, society, and polity; economy, class, and status: organization and ideology; religion and society; moral and instrumental action.
Prerequisites: Sophomore standing. General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC). General Education Requirement: Reason and Value (REA). General Education Requirement: Ethics and Values.
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W3000
SOCI
3000
76698
001
MW 10:35a - 11:50a
509 KNOX HALL
D. Milstein 33 [ More Info ]
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI W3000
SOCI
3000
71887
001
MW 10:10a - 11:25a
TBA
G. Eyal 45 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3010x Methods for Social Research

Required for all Sociology majors. Introductory course in social scientific research methods. Provides a general overview of the ways sociologists collect information about social phenomena, focusing on how to collect data that are reliable and applicable to our research questions.
Prerequisites: SOCI W1000 The Social World or Instructor Permission General Education Requirement: Quantitative and Deductive Reasoning (QUA). General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W3010
SOCI
3010
68647
001
MW 9:10a - 10:25a
310 FAYERWEATHER
S. Iorga 62 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3020x and y Social Statistics

This course will teach the fundamentals of analyzing numerical data in a social science context. Students will learn effective ways of presenting informational summaries, the use of statistical inference from samples to populations, and the linear model which forms the basis of much social science research. Emphasis will be on an intuitive understanding of statistical formulae and models, and on their practical application.
General Education Requirement: Quantitative and Deductive Reasoning (QUA).
3 points

SOCI BC 3087x-BC3088y (Section 01) Individual Projects for Seniors

The instructor will supervise the writing of long papers involving some form of sociological research and analysis.
Prerequisites: Introductory course in Sociology. Required of all senior majors.
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI BC3088
SOCI
3088
05961
001
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
202 MILBANK HALL
J. Lena 7 [ More Info ]
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI BC3087
SOCI
3087
07768
001
W 4:10p - 6:00p
TBA
D. Minkoff 3 [ More Info ]

SOCI BC 3087x-BC3088y (Section 02) Individual Projects for Seniors

The instructor will supervise the writing of long papers involving some form of sociological research and analysis.
Prerequisites: Introductory course in Sociology. Required of all senior majors.
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI BC3088
SOCI
3088
09306
002
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
303 ALTSCHUL HALL
C. Kesler 4 [ More Info ]
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI BC3087
SOCI
3087
06747
002
W 4:10p - 6:00p
TBA
C. Kesler 8 [ More Info ]

SOCI BC 3087x-BC3088y (Section 03) Individual Projects for Seniors

The instructor will supervise the writing of long papers involving some form of sociological research and analysis.
Prerequisites: Introductory course in Sociology. Required of all senior majors.
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI BC3088
SOCI
3088
00434
003
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
805 ALTSCHUL HALL
P. Levin 6 [ More Info ]
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI BC3087
SOCI
3087
03537
003
W 4:10p - 6:00p
TBA
J. Lena 8 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3190y Introduction To Historical Sociology

How can we understand such major social forces as nationalism, Islam, and class conflict by combining historical analysis and sociological theory? Can these two disciplines take us further than either one alone?
Not offered in 2012-2013.
3 points

SOCI V 3208y Unity and Division in the Contemporary United States: A Sociological View

Conflict and unity in the U.S: the tensions of individualism and communalism; the schism between blue and red states; culture war; the careers of racism and anti-Semitism; identity politics and fragmentation; immigration and second eneration identities; the changing status of whiteness and blackness; cultural borrowing and crossover culture.
General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC). Not offered in 2012-2013.
4 points

SOCI BC 3211y (Section 001) Quantitative Methods

Introduction to statistical methods emphasizing their application to practical research problems. Topics include frequency distributions, cross-tabulations and correlation, basic concepts of probability, hypothesis testing, and the analysis of variance. Students will learn to execute basic statistical analyses on a personal computer.
Prerequisites: One introductory course in Sociology suggested. Recitation Section Required. General Education Requirement: Quantitative and Deductive Reasoning (QUA). Not offered in 2012-2013.
4 points

SOCI BC 3215y Sociology of Crime and Punishment

This course provides an overview of both crime and its control within the US. Beginning with an examination of mass incarceration, the course details issues of race, class, and gender in relation to crime, policing, and representations of criminality. Is there justice within the criminal justice system?
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI BC3215
SOCI
3215
03603
001
TuTh 2:40p - 3:55p
903 ALTSCHUL HALL
K. Kaye 49 [ More Info ]

SOCI V 3217x Law and Society

Examines how people use law, how law affects people, and how law develops, using social scientific research. Covers law in everyday life; legal and social change; legal subjects such as citizens and corporations, and the legitimacy of law. Recommended for pre-law and social-science majors. No required prerequisites or previous knowledge.
General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
3 points

SOCI W 3218y Crime, Law and Society

Critically examines the interplay between crime, law, and the administration of justice in the United States and how these issues are shaped by larger societal factors. Students will receive a theoretical and empirical overview of the American legal and criminal justice system, emphasizing such issues as: the function and purpose of crime control; the roles of the actors/subjects of the criminal justice system; crime and violence as cultural and political issues in America; racial disparities in offending and criminal justice processing; and juvenile justice.
Not offered in 2012-2013.
3 points

SOCI V 3220y Masculinity: A Sociological View

Examines the cultural, political, and institutional forces that govern masculinity. Focuses on various meanings of "being a man" and the effects these different types of masculinity have on both men and women. Explores some of the variation among men and relationships between men and women.
Prerequisites: One introductory course in Sociology is suggested. General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI V3220
SOCI
3220
09277
001
TuTh 9:10a - 10:25a
324 MILBANK HALL
P. Levin 46 [ More Info ]

SOCI V 3227x The Sociology of U.S. Economic Life

Examines the social forces that shape market behavior: ideologies of liberalism and conservatism; the culture of commodities and consumption; income, class, and quality of life; the immigrant economy; life in financial institutions; the impact of the global economy.
Prerequisites: One introductory course in Sociology is suggested. General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
3 points

SOCI BC 3228y The Culture Industry

Sociological examination of range of organizations in creative sectors vital to contemporary cultural industries: film studios, television broadcasters, record labels, fashion houses, art galleries, and related firms. Core questions include: what do these organizations have in common? How are they different? What are the key principles of cultural labor operating within them? How have careers in these organizations changed? What are the lingering effects of past historical periods and organizational forms, defunct artistic movements, and the collapse of the Hollywood studio system?
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI BC3228
SOCI
3228
01717
001
MW 11:00a - 12:15p
328 MILBANK HALL
J. Lena 31 / 40 [ More Info ]

SOCI V 3235x or y Social Movements: Collective Action

Social movements and the theories social scientists use to explain them, with emphasis on the American civil rights and women's movements. Topics include theories of participation, the personal and social consequences of social movements, the rationality of protest, the influence of ideology, organization, and the state on movement success, social movements, and the mass media.
Prerequisites: One introductory course in Sociology suggested. General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI V3235
SOCI
3235
04213
001
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
TBA
D. Minkoff 13 [ More Info ]

SOCI BC 3237y Sociology of Consumers and Markets

This course surveys the ways in which credit has been provided to consumers throughout the 20th century. Topics include loan sharking, credit cards, microcredit, and subprime mortgages. We will examine the link between personal indebtedness and economic growth as a key dimension of the current economic crisis.
Not offered in 2012-2013.
3 points

SOCI W 3243y China Today: Change, Inequalities, and Social Life

Comprehensive introduction to the major social issues in contemporary China. Not a survey in general Chinese history, but a discussion of important thematic issues, we will read and discuss with an emphasis on changes in the post-Mao era. Meant to be interdisciplinary, incorporating readings in anthropology, history, economics, political science, a number of important subjects will be discussed: state politics in pre-reform China since the 1949 revolution, shift to market reforms since 1978, rural China, and various population issues.
3 points

SOCI W 3245x Religions in Chinese Society

The continuity and discontinuity of the religious ecology and culture throughout the Chinese history, from the Antiquity to the present: how religious changes and transformations were shaped by the state politics, socio-economic forces, and the penetration of foreign religions. Special focus on the religions in the Post-Mao China and how the religious ecology starts to depart from the paradigm crystallized in the past. A comparison with the religious development in contemporary Taiwanese society is used to illustrate the case. Photos and documentary films will provide a visual component.
Not offered in 2012-2013.
3 points

SOCI V 3247y The Immigrant Experience, Old and New

The immigrant experience in the United States. Topics include ideologies of the melting pot; social, cultural, and economic life of earlier immigrants; the distinctiveness of the African-American experience; recent surge of "new" immigrants (Asians, Latinos, West Indians); and changing American views of immigration. - J. Olvera
General Education Requirement: Cultures in Comparison (CUL). General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI V3247
SOCI
3247
03118
001
TuTh 1:10p - 2:25p
405 MILBANK HALL
J. Olvera 39 [ More Info ]

SOCI BC 3260y Sociology of Education

This course provides an introduction to how sociologists examine education and schooling. It covers a wide range of theories and concepts as well as more historically grounded studies. Key questions include education and social stratification; the reproduction of class, race, and gender; and politial domination and control.
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI BC3260
SOCI
3260
04204
001
TuTh 4:10p - 5:25p
324 MILBANK HALL
E. Natsiopoulou 32 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3264x The Changing American Family

Examines social forces contributing to changes in U.S. family formation including declines in marriage, increases in nonmarital childbearing, and women's labor force participation. Analyzes forces affecting growth of "non-traditional" families including lesbian/gay, multigenerational families. Particular attention given to urban, suburban, rural contexts of poverty.
General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI W3264
SOCI
3264
26501
001
MW 4:10p - 5:25p
TBA
A. Aidala 21 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3277x Post-Racial America?

What is race? Is the US a post-racial society? Is such a society desirable? Is a post-racial society necessarily a just and egalitarian one? We consider these questions from ethnographic, historical, and theoretical perspectives. Topics discussed include intersectionality, multiracial identity, colorism, genetics, and the race and/or class debate.
3 points

SOCI V 3285x Israeli Society

The purpose of the course is to acquaint students with Israeli society. The first part of the course will set the historical, social, political, and demographic background which is essential for understanding current processes in Israel. The second part will focus on the main social conflicts and cleavages in contemporary Israel. Patterns of continuity and change in the past sixty years will be analyzed.
3 points

SOCI W 3290x Environmental Sociology

This course is an introduction to the sociology of the environment and technology: a broad overview of the field and six key areas of study, including environmental attitudes, post-materialism, environmental movements, environmental justice, globalization, and resource dependency.
Not offered in 2012-2013.
3 points

SOCI W 3302y Sociology of Gender

Examination of factors in gender identity that are both universal (across time, culture, setting) and specific to a social context. Social construction of gender roles in different settings, including family, work, and politics. Attention to the role of social policies in reinforcing norms or facilitating change.
Prerequisites: One introductory course in Sociology suggested. General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC).
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI W3302
SOCI
3302
04418
001
TuTh 11:40a - 12:55p
TBA
E. Bernstein 53 [ More Info ]

SOCI V 3318x or y The Sociology of Sexuality

Social, cultural and organizational aspects of sex in the contemporary United States, stressing the plural in sexualities: sexual revolution and post-Victorian ideologies; the context of gender and inequality; social movements and sexual identity; the variety of sexual meanings and communities; the impact of AIDS.
Prerequisites: Introductory course in Sociology is suggested. General Education Requirement: Reason and Value (REA). General Education Requirement: Ethics and Values. Not offered in 2012-2013.
3 points

SOCI V 3324x or y Poverty, Inequality, and Policy: A Sociological Perspective

Examination of poverty, the "underclass," and inequality in the United States. Part 1: The moral premises, social theories, and political interests shaping current debates about the poor. Part 2: A more concrete analysis of the lives of the poor and the causes of family breakdown, the drug economy, welfare, employment, and homelessness.
Prerequisites: Introductory course in Sociology is suggested.
4 points

SOCI W 3324x Global Urbanism
Using classical texts about cities (do they still work for us?) and on the diverse new literatures on cities and larger sujects with direct urban implications, we ill use a variety of data sets to get a detailed empirical information, and draw on two large ongoing research projects involving major and minor global cities around the world (a total of over 60 cities are covered in detail as of 2008).
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI W3324
SOCI
3324
21799
001
MW 6:10p - 7:25p
TBA
S. Sassen 114 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3355x Topics in Religion and Politics

Exploring the major themes of religion and politics in the contemporary world: how did the major thinkers conceptualize the role of religion in society, the relationship between religion and politics, and state and church? How do different religions conceptualize and give life to these arrangements? After a mix of theoretical and historical readings, we study various substantive examples of the relationship between religion and politics, within differing contexts, different religions as well as different nation-states.
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W3355
SOCI
3355
66849
001
TuTh 9:10a - 10:25a
517 HAMILTON HALL
K. Barkey 48 / 80 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3490x Mistake, Misconduct, Disaster

How Organizations Fail - the fundamental principles of organizations, examining how and why organizations fail, producing harmful outcomes. Studying failures opens up parts of organizations for public view that are seldom seen; studying the dark side is especially revealing. Students will examine cases to identify the causes of failures and think about what kind of strategies can be developed that prevent failure.
3 points

SOCI W 3660y Political Sociology

The course studies seminal interpretations of democratic politics from the perspectives of sociology, comparative politics and political theory. Theoretical analyses are discussed in the context of illustrative historical documents and accounts, and extended to contemporary concerns involving citizenship, culture, identity, representation and war.
Prerequisites: Contemporary Civilization or one course in sociology, or political science, or European or American history. Not offered in 2012-2013.
3 points

SOCI W 3675y Organizing Innovation

This course examines major innovations in organizations and asks whether innovation itself can be organized. We study a range of forms of organizing (e.g., bureaucratic, post-bureaucratic, and open architecture network forms) in a broad variety of settings: from fast food franchises to the military-entertainment complex, from airline cockpits to Wall Street trading rooms, from engineering firms to mega-churches, from scientific management at the turn of the twentieth century to collaborative filtering and open source programming at the beginning of the twenty-first. Special attention will be paid to the relationship between organizational forms and new digital technologies.
3 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W3675
SOCI
3675
23322
001
TuTh 10:35a - 11:50a
209 HAVEMEYER HALL
D. Stark 92 / 96 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3900y Societal Adaptations to Terrorism

Examines how countries have adjusted to the threat of terrorism. How the adaptation reflects the pattern of terrorist attacks, as well as structural and cultural features of the society. Adaptations by individuals, families, and organizational actors.
Prerequisites: Junior or Senior standing
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W3900
SOCI
3900
91549
001
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
707 KNOX HALL
S. Spilerman 17 / 22 [ More Info ]
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI W3900
SOCI
3900
28786
001
W 4:10p - 6:00p
TBA
S. Spilerman 21 / 24 [ More Info ]

SOCI V 3901y The Sociology of Culture

Drawing examples from popular music, religion, politics, race, and gender, explores the interpretation, production, and reception of cultural texts and meanings. Topics include aesthetic distinction and taste communities, ideology, power, and resistance; the structure and functions of subcultures; popular culture and high culture; and ethnography and interpretation.
Prerequisites: SOCI BC1003 or equivalent social science course and permission of the instructor. Enrollment limited to 15 students. General Education Requirement: Cultures in Comparison (CUL).
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI V3901
SOCI
3901
07824
001
W 2:10p - 4:00p
903 ALTSCHUL HALL
J. Lena 13 [ More Info ]
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI V3901
SOCI
3901
02523
001
Th 4:10p - 6:00p
TBA
J. Lena 0 [ More Info ]

SOCI V 3902x or y Institutional Analysis in Organizations

Introduction to an institutional perspective on organizations, moving between theoretical discussion of institutions and organizations and empirical research. Coverage of the rise of quantification; how comparative political cultures implement industrial policy; how institutional knowledge affects the environment; and how the Civil Rights movement contended with the American political environment.
Prerequisites: Junior or Senior standing; preference to majors. Not offered in 2012-2013.
4 points

SOCI BC 3903y Work and Culture

Sociological approaches to understanding work and culture. Theoretical underpinnings of workplace interactions, with attention to ethnographies of work across a range of organizations. Examines changes in work due to technological advances and globalization. Special emphasis on gender.
Prerequisites: Preference for Barnard Leadership Initiative participants, Juniors and Seniors. Permission of the instructor. Not offered in 2012-2013.
4 points

SOCI BC 3907y Communities and Social Change

Examines how social transformations have altered the ways in which people go about creating, losing, and recreating community. The primary focus is on how changes in the economy, the state, immigration, racial dynamics, and class inequality inhibit and promote the maintenance of communities in contemporary American society.
Prerequisites: SOCI BC1003. Sophomore Standing. Enrollment limited to 20 students.
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI BC3907
SOCI
3907
07492
001
Tu 11:00a - 12:50p
227 MILBANK HALL
J. Olvera 11 [ More Info ]

SOCI BC 3909y Ethnic Conflict and Unrest

Post-1965 immigration in the U.S. has prompted conflicts between new immigrant groups and established racial and ethnic groups. This seminar explores ethnic conflict and unrest that takes place in the streets, workplace, and everyday social life. Focus is on sociological theories that explain the tensions associated with the arrival of new immigrants.
Prerequisites: Sophomore Standing. SOCI BC1003 or permission of the instructor. Enrollment limited to 20 students.
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI BC3909
SOCI
3909
06389
001
W 4:10p - 6:00p
227 MILBANK HALL
J. Olvera 15 [ More Info ]

SOCI BC 3910y Research Seminar in Sociology

Substantial participation in an ongoing faculty-led Sociological research project. Movement between substantive discussion of theory and methodological study of a specifc topic. Coverage of how to frame a research project, using qualitative and quantitative tools to carry out analysis, and how to write up research in conjunction with a substantive literature and topic. Spring 2010: Where do art prices come from?
Prerequisites: SOCI BC1003 or equivalent; permission of the instructor.
4 points

SOCI BC 3911x The Social Contexts of U.S. Immigration Law and Policy

Examines the historical and contemporary social, economic, and political factors that shape immigration law and policy along with the social consequences of those laws and policies. Addresses the development and function of immigration law and aspects of the immigration debate including unauthorized immigration, anti-immigration sentiments, and critiques of immigration policy.
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI BC3911
SOCI
3911
04445
001
Th 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
J. Salyer 21 [ More Info ]

SOCI BC 3912y Social Media

Sociological examination and critical assessment of effects of unprecedented levels of connectivity afforded by social media such as Twitter and Facebook. Seminar will be guided by a interest in how social relationships are being redefined as a result of these media and how they are managed, with particular attention to commercial uses of these technologies, especially new ways in which businesses are reaching potential audiences, new roles for consumers in evaluating products and shaping trends, and changes in contemporary business models of both large corporations and smaller firms.
4 points

SOCI BC 3913y Inequalities: Race, Class, Gender and Sexuality in U.S. Law and Society

This class will examine the historical roots and ongoing persistence of social, economic, and political inequality and the continuing role that it plays in U.S. society by examing how such issues have been addressed both in social science and in law.
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI BC3913
SOCI
3913
05930
001
Th 2:10p - 4:00p
227 MILBANK HALL
J. Salyer 13 [ More Info ]

SOCI BC 3914x Ethnic Diversity and the Welfare State

Examines the relationship between ethnic diversity and the social provision of welfare in historical and cross-national perspective. Topics include the effects of longstanding diversity on the establishment of modern welfare states; the relationship between formal state policies of multiculturalism and welfare provision; the challenges contemporary immigration poses to existing welfare states; and debates about diversity, social solidarity, and social capital. Special emphasis on diversity-related explanations for the United States' exceptionally weak social safety net. - C. Kesler
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2012 :: SOCI BC3914
SOCI
3914
02505
001
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
C. Kesler 0 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3915x Stigma and Discrimination

This course considers stigma and discrimination as general processes that apply to a broad range of phenomena, from mental illness to obesity to HIV/AIDS to racial groups. We will use a conceptual framework that considers power and social stratification to be central to stigma and discrimination. We will focus on both macro- and micro-level social processes and their interconnections, and we will draw on literature from both sociology and psychology.
4 points

SOCI W 3917y Collective Identites

Explores the social, political, and cultural processes that influence the construction of collective identities in contemporary American society. Topics include the content and meaning of race and ethnicity; the construction of whiteness; the politics of gender and sexuality; citizenship and national identities; and the limits of identity politics
Not offered in 2012-2013.
4 points

SOCI W 3923y Adolescent Society

Explores the social and cultural construction of adolescence in contemporary American society. Adolescence is an important life-stage where experiences and decision-making have both individual and group consequences. Major themes will include: cultural and legal socialization of youth, crime and deviance, health and sexuality, employment and educational outcomes, and political behavior/civic engagement.
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W3923
SOCI
3923
26780
001
Tu 9:00a - 10:50a
509 KNOX HALL
C. Shedd 10 / 15 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3932x Sociology of the Arts

We sketch general keys to socio-cultural construction --sorts of identities and their stories in networks of relations amidst swirling searches for footing and control -- from which emerge realms and languages of all sorts, including arts. The main text - Careers and Creativity: Social Forces in the Arts provides tools and examples.
Not offered in 2012-2013.
4 points

SOCI W 3933y Art and Social Movements

The interaction of culture and politics: the relations between artistic and social movements, political engagement among artists, the dynamics of the public sphere and civic participation, and the communicative potential of artists and their work within social movements. The use of art as propaganda, counter-cultural expression as resistance, art as a utopian model, and art as a path to participation and collaboration.
Not offered in 2012-2013.
4 points

SOCI W 3934x Religions in Chinese Society

The continuity and discontinuity of the religious ecology and culture throughout the Chinese history, from the Antiquity to the present: how religious changes and transformations were shaped by the state politics, socio-economic forces, and the penetration of foreign religions. Special focus on the religions in the Post-Mao China and how the relgious ecology starts to depart from the paradigm crystallized in the past. A comparison with the religious development in contemporary Taiwanese society is used to illustrate the case. Photos and documentary films will provide a visual component.
4 points

SOCI W 3936x Sociology and the Public

Explores how sociologists address pressing public concerns. With a focus on contemporary American issues, we will discuss: (1) how particular problems are identified; (2) what resolutions are put forth, who is likely to achieve them, and how; (3) what the audience is (and should be) for such work.
Prerequisites: V1000 recommended (not required) Not offered in 2012-2013.
4 points

SOCI W 3945x Seminar: Inequality and Public Policy

Economic inequality in the United States; the roles of labor market processes and inheritance with respect to wealth assimilation; assets and the poor; public policies in regard to income redistribution; taxation of income, wealth, and bequests; issues in poverty policy.
4 points

SOCI W 3955x Real and Imagined Communities: Sociology in/and/of the Novel

Given that both the novel and sociology of products of and responses to modern society, this seminar will explore interconnections between the two. We shall read sociological texts and novels against each other to ascertain where and how each connects to the other and where they part.
4 points

SOCI W 3958y Fact and Fiction

"Correct" findings are often mistranslated into "facts" prematurely and lead to misguided social policy. This course asks how do we become better readers, how do we become better critical analysts, and how do we evaluate evidence that has direct bearing on how we lead our lives?
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W3958
SOCI
3958
76548
001
Tu 11:00a - 12:50p
507 PHILOSOPHY HALL
J. Cole 15 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3960y Law, Science, and Society

Addresses basic contemporary social issues from several angles of vision: from the perspective of scientists, social scientists, legal scholars, and judges. Through the use of case studies, students will examine the nature of theories, evidence, "facts," proof, and argument as found in the work of scientists and scholars who have engaged the substantive issues presented in the course.
4 points

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Spring 2012 :: SOCI W3960
SOCI
3960
76784
001
M 11:00a - 12:50p
402 HAMILTON HALL
J. Cole 24 / 25 [ More Info ]

SOCI W 3975 American Education

Over the course of the semester, we will cover a set of topics that address the performance of American schools and of students in these schools. We will explore the sources of inequality in school performance by class, race, and gender, the impact of schools on learning, and the ways that schools both succeed and fail to fulfill the mission that Americans want from them.
Not offered in 2012-2013.
4 points


Cross-Listed Courses

History

W3850 Contemporary Chinese Culture & Society

Urban Studies

V3420 Introduction to Urban Sociology

V3830 Eminent Domain and Neighborhood Change