ST-Politics of Development

This course is intended to introduce students to the field of theorizing about processes of development and to the ways that different actors - states, social movements, international financial institutions, development agencies, NGOs, and the "populations" (farmers, women, ethnic/racial groups, refugees, street children, sex workers, small entrepreneurs etc.) on whose behalf they claim to act - have engaged with one another through their practices in this field.

S-Organizational Theory

This course is an introduction to the major theoretical approaches and ongoing debates within organization theory. Organization theory draws on disciplinary roots in economics, political science, psychology, and sociology to explain the origins, persistence, and disappearance of the institutional structures that order economic life. We will read classic and contemporary statements of the major approaches and trace the history of ideas as the field has developed up to the present.

Grad Stat Soc Sci II

An intensive introduction to general linear models (multiple regression, analysis of variance, violations of regression assumptions, alternative estimation methods, simultaneous equation models) and qualitative data analysis (logistic regression, log-linear models and event history analysis). Prerequisite: Sociol 711 or consent of instructor in spring semester in time for any assigned summer preparation.

Grad Stat Soc Sci II

An intensive introduction to general linear models (multiple regression, analysis of variance, violations of regression assumptions, alternative estimation methods, simultaneous equation models) and qualitative data analysis (logistic regression, log-linear models and event history analysis). Prerequisite: Sociol 711 or consent of instructor in spring semester in time for any assigned summer preparation.
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