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Courses Offered at Yale-NUS
Global Affairs Capstone Seminar
An advanced seminar for all Capstone honors thesis students in the Global Affairs major at the College, this course helps ensure that students are developing their research puzzles/questions, formulating a coherent argument and set of hypotheses, adopting and applying the appropriate research methods for empirical analysis, and making overall, measured progress toward a timely completion of their Capstone honors thesis.
An advanced seminar for all Capstone honors thesis students in the Global Affairs major at the College, this course helps ensure that students are developing their research puzzles/questions, formulating a coherent argument and set of hypotheses, adopting and applying the appropriate research methods for empirical analysis, and making overall, measured progress toward a timely completion of their Capstone honors thesis.
International Relations
A core requirement of the major, this course provides an introduction to the study of major theoretical paradigms in international relations to explain the causes and consequences of war and peace among key actors in the international system.
A core requirement of the major, this course provides an introduction to the study of major theoretical paradigms in international relations to explain the causes and consequences of war and peace among key actors in the international system.
Chinese Foreign Policy
A senior level seminar, the course familiarizes students with an in-depth knowledge of China's contemporary foreign policy, analyzing major conceptual and empirical works on the topic and preparing students to conduct advanced research on China's international relations, security, and strategy.
A senior level seminar, the course familiarizes students with an in-depth knowledge of China's contemporary foreign policy, analyzing major conceptual and empirical works on the topic and preparing students to conduct advanced research on China's international relations, security, and strategy.
Conflict and Cooperation in East Asia
Part of the Global Affairs major, the primary objective of this course is to prepare students to understand the theoretical and empirical issues related to conflict and cooperation in East Asia (including Southeast Asia), especially when they appear in scholarly texts, journal articles, policy papers, and the media.
Part of the Global Affairs major, the primary objective of this course is to prepare students to understand the theoretical and empirical issues related to conflict and cooperation in East Asia (including Southeast Asia), especially when they appear in scholarly texts, journal articles, policy papers, and the media.
Empirical Qualitative Analysis in Global Affairs
An advanced methods course, this course offers practical skill sets for students intending to major in international politics and global affairs to carry out empirical qualitative analysis in their research. The course focuses on the principles and practices of case study research as a strategy and method for empirical social inquiry.
An advanced methods course, this course offers practical skill sets for students intending to major in international politics and global affairs to carry out empirical qualitative analysis in their research. The course focuses on the principles and practices of case study research as a strategy and method for empirical social inquiry.
Comparative Social Inquiry
Part of the Common Curriculum at Yale-NUS College, this interdisciplinary course encourages critical, creative, and active thinking about some of the fundamental ideas and institutions that underpin society: markets, politics, nation-states, rules and norms, social movements, families and kinship, race and gender, and religion, to name a few. The course provides the analytical skill sets for first-year students to better describe, explain, and change the social world around them.
Part of the Common Curriculum at Yale-NUS College, this interdisciplinary course encourages critical, creative, and active thinking about some of the fundamental ideas and institutions that underpin society: markets, politics, nation-states, rules and norms, social movements, families and kinship, race and gender, and religion, to name a few. The course provides the analytical skill sets for first-year students to better describe, explain, and change the social world around them.