2014-2015 Graduate Course Catalog 
    
    May 17, 2024  
2014-2015 Graduate Course Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Courses


Please note, when searching courses by Code or Number, an asterisk (*) can be used to return mass results. For instance a Code search of 6* can be entered, returning all 600-level courses.

 

Finance

  
  • FIN 761 - Financial Modeling

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Build models for financial statement analysis, valuation, capital budgeting, capital structure, portfolio selection, interest rate risk, option valuation, and other areas of finance using a computer tool such as Microsoft Excel.
    PREREQ: FIN 751  OR FIN 756 
  
  • FIN 827 - Corporate Financing Transactions

    1.5-2 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    This course combines diverse aspects of business and law education in a transaction-based setting. It guides students through a syndicated commercial loan, including the structuring, negotiation, pricing, and documentation.
  
  • FIN 855 - Financial Management

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Theory of financial decision making, consumption and investment decisions. Selected problems of application of corporate policy including capital budgeting under uncertainty, leasing, corporate growth, mergers, liquidation, and reorganization. Theoretical and empirical aspects of valuation.
    PREREQ: FIN 751 , MAS 766 
  
  • FIN 856 - Analytical Methods/Managerial Research

    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Selected topics in mathematical programming simulation, the general linear model, and numerical taxonomy as applied to research in the field of management. Individual research projects developed by the student. Can be taken more than once depending on the student’s interest and permission of the instructor. Knowledge of FORTRAN IV or PL/1 is assumed.
  
  • FIN 960 - Grad Seminar in Finance

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Readings, discussions, and reports for doctoral candidates.
    Repeatable

Flute

  
  • FLT 510 - Flute Instruction

    1-4 credit(s) Every semester
    For non-music students.
  
  • FLT 515 - Flute Instruction

    1-4 credit(s) Every semester
    For music students.
  
  • FLT 516 - Flute Instruction

    1-4 credit(s) Every semester
    For music students.
  
  • FLT 615 - Flute Instruction

    1-6 credit(s) Every semester
    For performance majors.
  
  • FLT 616 - Flute/Music Majors

    1-4 credit(s) Every semester
  
  • FLT 715 - Flute Instruction

    1-6 credit(s) Every semester
    For performance majors.
  
  • FLT 716 - Flute Instruction

    1-6 credit(s) Every semester
    For performance majors.

French and Francophone Studies

  
  • FRE 600 - Selected Topics

    1-3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester.
    Repeatable
  
  • FRE 605 - French Culture in Age of Louis XIV

    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Double Numbered with: FRE 405
    Study of French literature, aesthetics and culture of absolutism. Conducted in French. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FRE 607 - French Libertine Fictions

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: FRE 407
    Analysis of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century French libertine texts and their relation to philosophy, art, religion, and society. Conducted in French. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FRE 609 - French Culture and Revolution

    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Double Numbered with: FRE 409
    French enlightenment literature and culture considered within the context of the French Revolution. Conducted in French. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FRE 611 - Moliere

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: FRE 411
    Study of the playwright’s major works in light of contemporary political, social, and cultural trends. Conducted in French. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FRE 612 - French Women Writers

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Crosslisted with: WGS 612 
    Double Numbered with: FRE 412
    Trends in French feminine and feminist writing from the early modern period to the present. Conducted in French. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FRE 617 - “Impressions d’Afrique”:Caribbean Gazes

    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Double Numbered with: FRE 417
    A survey of African issues through the eyes of Francophone Caribbean writers and their texts. Conducted in French. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FRE 619 - Sembene Ousmane and the African Cinema

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: FRE 419
    A study of Sembene Ousmane’s work as an introduction to the aesthetics and politics of Black African Cinema, and to issues of film history and theory. Conducted in French. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FRE 620 - Language Training in Preparation for Research Using French

    3 credit(s)
    Language training to prepare students to conduct research in areas that require knowledge of French.
    Repeatable 3 time(s), 12 credits maximum
  
  • FRE 621 - Francophone African Criticism

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: FRE 421
    Major trends in Francophone African literary criticism. Conducted in French. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FRE 627 - The Renaissance Body

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FRE 427
    Examines the body as a trope in French literature and culture of the late-medieval and Renaissance periods. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FRE 631 - Montaigne and the New World of Renaissance Writing

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FRE 431
    Examines the modernity of Montaigne’s Essais (1580-92) by focusing on the author’s creation of a self-portrait in writing. Additional work required of graduate students.

Forensic Science

  
  • FSC 606 - Advanced Forensic Science

    3 credit(s) Every semester
    Double Numbered with: FSC 406
    Selected areas of current interest in forensic science presented. The application of scientific methods and techniques to crime detection and the law.
    PREREQ: CHE 113 OR CHE 106 OR CHE 109 OR BIO 121
  
  • FSC 631 - Statistics for Forensic Science

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 431
    Statistical concepts and methods relevant to forensic science. Includes probability, error limits, confidence intervals. Correlation, regression, and calibration. Focus on practical application, including DNA population probabilities, evidence evaluation, and hypothesis testing. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 632 - Research and Career Resources

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Provides practical skills and resources for research and careers in forensic science. Effective and ethical research and literature interpretation, critical thinking skills, communication methods specific to forensic science and their potential discovery issues, trial procedures.
  
  • FSC 633 - Quality Assurance and Ethics

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Application of the ISO standard for accredited forensic laboratories. Ethical decision model; case studies; root cause analysis; correcitve action; document control; method validation; roles of police, attorneys, forensic scientists; ethical issues in U.S. legal system.
  
  • FSC 635 - Medicolegal Death Investigation I

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 435
    Medicolegal death investigation which deals with the history, purpose and legal underpinning of death investigations, effectively handling a death scene, and protocols for public safety and scene processing. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 636 - Medicolegal Death Investigation II

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 436
    Second course in the sequence dealing with information on medicolegal death investigation and deals with procedures for MDI processing and other topics for conducting scientific medicolegal investigations. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 637 - Medicolegal Death Investigation for Emergency Responders

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 437
    Course focuses upon the information needed by emergency responders in dealing with suspicious or unexpected deaths. Topics will include dealing with sudden or unexpected deaths, handling the scene, death investigation laws and other topics. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 640 - Special Topics in Advanced Forensics

    3 credit(s) Every semester
    Double Numbered with: FSC 440
    An in-depth study of scientific disciplines engaged in the criminal justice and legal systems by providing a rational basis for interpreting the scientific analysis of forensic evidence through relevant case studies. Additional work required of graduate students.
    Repeatable
  
  • FSC 644 - Forensic Chemical Analysis

    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 444
    Lecture content, delivered online, and laboratory on analytical methods of forensic chemistry. Underlying theory and direct experience in various chemical tests and spectroscopic methods. Additional work required of graduate students.
    PREREQ: CHE 116 OR 119; CHE 117 OR 139
  
  • FSC 651 - Forensic Pathology

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 451
    Introduction to forensic pathology and medi-colegal investigation of death. Role and jurisdiction of the Medical Examiner, including the autopsy. Specific patterns of injury, types of deaths referred to the Medical Examiner, postmortem decompositional changes, and special topics of interest in death investigation will be discussed.Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 652 - Forensic Mental Health

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 452
    Role of consultation, research and clinical practice in areas in which psychiatry is applied to legal issues. Covers how mental health and legal systems function together; issues common to forensic psychiatric analyses. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 653 - Forensic Toxicology

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 453
    Procedures utilized in forensic toxicology, including specimen types, sample preparation, instrumentation, analytical methods, and interpretation of findings. Knowledge of organic and analytical chemistry is strongly advised. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 654 - Nuclear Forensics

    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Double Numbered with: FSC 454
    The science behind the detection, analysis, and source attribution of nuclear materials. Includes engineering, social, and governmental considerations in the wide range of circumstances encountered in this field. Offered only online. Additional work required of graduate students.
    PREREQ: CHE 116
  
  • FSC 657 - Principles of Human Toxicology

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Crosslisted with: BIO 657 
    Double Numbered with: FSC 457
    This course examines key aspects of human toxicology, including dose-response relationships, absorption, distribution, biotransformation, elimination, toxicokinetics, molecular mechanisms of toxicity, pesticides, metals, and toxic responses in specific organ systems. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 661 - Firearms and Impression Evidence

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 461
    Forensic analysis of firearm and impression evidence and its presentation through court testimony. Manufacturing methods’ impact on identification. Serial number restoration, distance determination, full auto conversions, trace evidence, latent print analysis, laboratory quality assurance. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 662 - Forensic Entomology

    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Double Numbered with: FSC 462
    Application and utility of insects as evidence in criminal investigations. Biology and importance of different insect groups in decomposition process. Collection, identification, and processing of insect evidence. Temperature-time relationship in insect growth, its practical use in calculating post-mortem intervals. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 663 - Bloodstain Pattern Analysis

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 463
    A lecture and laboratory introduction to the analysis of bloodstain patterns in a forensic context. History, theory, and scientific principles behind the analysis methods are supported by laboratory creation and analysis of various types of bloodstains. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 665 - Latent Prints

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 465
    Biology of friction ridge skin including pattern class recognition. Digital imaging of latent prints, analysis and comparison, evidence processing including individual mock cases near the end of the semester. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 667 - Forensic Photography

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 467
    Use of photography in criminal and civil investigations and trials. Changing face of photography and how use of digital cameras has altered rules of evidence and admissibility. Proper use of digital single lens reflex cameras and digital flash. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 668 - Crime Scene Investigation

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FSC 468
    History and practice of crime scene investigation, including photography, sketches, note-taking, processing and collection of evidence. Includes bloodstain pattern interpretation, collision reconstruction, case studies, mock crime scenes, moot court. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FSC 671 - Firearms and Impressions Evidence II

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Modeled after an internationally recognized firearms examiner training program. Students operate comparison microscopes, perform firearms comparisons, receive operability/armorers training, and view firearms manufacturing processes to understand the forensic identification of fired ammunition components.
    PREREQ: FSC 661 
  
  • FSC 690 - Independent Study

    1-6 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest
    Repeatable

Fashion Illustration

  
  • FSH 570 - Fashn Illustratn Res Prob

    3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest
    Individual development in specialized areas of fashion illustration.
    PREREQ: FSH 471

Food Studies

  
  • FST 600 - Selected Topics

    1-3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest
    Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester.
    Repeatable
  
  • FST 601 - Seminar in Food Studies and Systems

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Introduction to selected foundational texts, research strategies, and disciplinary developments in food studies and food systems.
  
  • FST 603 - The Human Right to Adequate Food and Nutrition

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FST 403
    Evolution of human right to adequate food. Social, political, economic and cultural conditions influencing progressive realization of right to food and nutrition. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FST 621 - Morality of a Meal:Food Ethics

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: FST 421
    Food consumption and production are explored in the context of community and environment with the application of ethical theories to broad food issues and challenges. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • FST 700 - Selected Topics

    1-3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester.
    Repeatable
  
  • FST 702 - Political Economy of Food

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Classic and contemporary debates within the political economy of agriculture and food. Explores peasant economies, agrarian questions, the capitalist development of agriculture, neoliberalization, governance, and politics of consumption.
  
  • FST 703 - Transnational Food, Health and the Environment

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Explores the relationship between human and environmental health outcomes and the history, structure, function and governance of the food system at global, national and subnational levels.
  
  • FST 706 - Gender, Food, Rights

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Advanced investigation of the relationship between the human right to adequate food and nutrition, and women’s rights.
    PREREQ: FST 603 
  
  • FST 797 - Practicum in Food Studies and Systems

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Students participate in the practical functioning of food systems using learned competencies in an organization or other setting. Requires completion of core requirements and instructor consent.

Geography

  
  • GEO 500 - Topics in Geography

    1-3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    In-depth studies of selected topics.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 510 - Research on North America

    1-3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Reading and special work
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 520 - Research on Latin America

    1-3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Crosslisted with: LAS 520 
    Reading and special work
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 530 - Research on Africa

    1-3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Reading and special work.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 537 - Environmental Policy in a Development Context

    3 credit(s) Every semester
    Crosslisted with: LAS 537 
    Offered only in Santiago. Examines historical/intellectual/ material processes that transformed nature into natural resources to be exploited; ways global political process has guided global responses to environmental problems; Chilean environmental policy over the last 20 years.
  
  • GEO 538 - Research on Europe

    1-3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Reading and special work.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 540 - Research on Southern and Eastern Asia

    1-3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Reading and special work.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 550 - Research on Physical Geography

    1-3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Reading and special work.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 560 - Research: Economic Geography

    1-3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Reading and special work.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 561 - Global Economic Geography

    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Globalization, world economic processes, international development, and policy issues; emphasizing geographical perspectives.
  
  • GEO 563 - The Urban Condition

    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Contemporary cities. Economic growth and decline. Social polarization. Construction of the built environment. Case studies from around the world.
  
  • GEO 564 - Urban Historical Geography

    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Cities in western civilization through classical, medieval, mercantile, and industrial eras to 1945. Historical geographic meanings of urbanism; social construction of the built environment; and relationships between power, social justice, and urban spatial form.
  
  • GEO 570 - Research on Cultural Geography

    1-3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Reading and special work.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 572 - Landscape Interpretation in Cultural Geography

    3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest
    Contemporary theories and methods. Traditional, historical-materialist, postmodernism, and post-structuralist approaches to landscape. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • GEO 573 - The Geography of Capital

    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    In-depth reading of Marx’s Capital to understand: (a) the relationship between political economy and the geographical landscape; (b) the formative role of “Capital” in contemporary geographic theory.
  
  • GEO 576 - Gender, Place, and Space

    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Crosslisted with: WGS 576 
    Contemporary debates in feminist geography on the gendered construction of space and the spatial construction of gender.
  
  • GEO 580 - Research on Cartographic Techniques

    1-12 credit(s) Irregularly
    Reading and special work.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 583 - Environmental Geographical Information Science

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Data types, collection techniques, and processing strategies in natural resource survey. Monitoring and environmental sciences. Basic concepts of GIS data structures and algorithms. Data quality issues. User requirements, management aspects, and implementation experience.
    PREREQ: GEO 383 OR GEO 683 
  
  • GEO 595 - Geography and the Internet

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    An introduction to the structure and functions of the Internet and its impact on spatial relations from the global to the local. A detailed examination of the World Wide Web and practical training in web page design.
  
  • GEO 600 - Selected Topics

    1-3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 602 - Research Design in Geography

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Approaches to research, alternative philosophies, and research designs. Research procedures, information gathering. Collection of original data. Formulation of individual research topics.
  
  • GEO 603 - Development of Geographic Thought

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Historical survey of development of Geography. Emphasis on 20th century: regionalism, positivism, humanism, Marxism, feminism, post-structuralism/post-colonialism
  
  • GEO 606 - Development and Sustainability

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Critical analysis of international development and sustainability. Focuses on the complex political, economic, cultural, and ecological processes involved in development discourse and practice. Readings and case studies drawn from Latin America, Africa, and Asia.
  
  • GEO 609 - Readings and Special Work in Advanced Geography

    1-3 credit(s) Every semester
    Topics to be selected in conference with advisor for individual program of study and research.
  
  • GEO 610 - Qualitative Methods in Geography

    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    This course provides an overview of qualitative methods in human geography. It examines the relationship between methodology, epistemology, and politics, compares different qualitative methods, and gives students hands-on experience with a range of methodological tools.
  
  • GEO 655 - Biogeography

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: GEO 455
    Exploration of the environmental factors that influence the distribution of organisms. Emphasis is on plant distributions and dynamics, and consideration includes both natural and human factors. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • GEO 670 - Experience Credit

    1-6 credit(s) Every semester
    Participation in a discipline- or subject-related experience. Student must be evaluated by written or oral reports or an examination. Limited to those in good academic standing.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 672 - Geopolitics and the State

    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Survey of political geographic research on states, nations, territories, and their connection with geopolitical theories and the practice of foreign policy; focus on critical approach to applied geopolitical thinking.
  
  • GEO 681 - Map Design

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Principles of cartographic design. Expository cartography for geographic research. Projections, symbolization, generalization, and use of electronic publishing technology.
  
  • GEO 682 - Remote Sensing for Environmental Applications and Research

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Principles and environmental applications of remote sensing, emphasizing research. Uses and limitations of remotely-sensed data; typical image processing operations and analyses; laboratory exercises and individualized advanced work and term project.
  
  • GEO 683 - Geographic Information Systems

    3-4 credit(s) Every semester
    Double Numbered with: GEO 383
    Basic concepts in spatial data handling. Algorithms and data structures for Geographic Information Systems (GIS). Demonstration of power, potential, and limitations of GIS. Graduate students register for three credits. Undergraduate students register for four credits with required laboratory work.
  
  • GEO 685 - Community Geography

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: GEO 485
    Introduces community-based and participatory research methods and participatory GIS, including origins, ethics and challenges. Examines how and why grassroots organizations use GIS and geospatial technologies. Students conduct local research projects. Additional work required of graduate students.
  
  • GEO 686 - Quantitative Geographic Analysis

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: GEO 386
    Descriptive and inferential statistics for use geo-referenced data, spatial autocorrelation, and geostatistics. Geographic examples. Weekly labs. Individualized advanced work and term project.
  
  • GEO 687 - Environmental Geostatistics

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Crosslisted with: CIE 687 
    Statistical analysis of spatial patterns in environmental data. Exploratory data analysis; estimation, modeling, and interpretation of variograms; prediction using driging. Applications in engineering, geography, earth science and ecology. Use of geostatistical software.
  
  • GEO 688 - Geographic Information and Society

    3 credit(s)
    Double Numbered with: GEO 388
    Effects of geographic information technologies on governments, communities, and individuals. Mapping as an information industry, a political process, a surveillance technology, and a communication medium. Copyright, access, hazard management, national defense, public participation, and privacy.
  
  • GEO 705 - Theories of Development

    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Crosslisted with: SOS 705 
    Review of theories of development, economic growth, and social change. Comparison of explanatory power and limits of each theory. Review of prospects for synthesis and implications for empirical research in geography and other social sciences.
  
  • GEO 720 - Seminar: Latin America

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Research seminar on contemporary problems in human and regional geography, emphasizing development and socio-economic issues.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 730 - Political Economy of Nature

    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Explores the complex relationships between capitalism and the natural environment. It covers both classical and contemporary debates within political economy and geography.
  
  • GEO 750 - Seminar: Physical Geography

    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Advanced work in climatology, land forms, and other aspects of physical geography.
    Repeatable
  
  • GEO 754 - Seminar in Environmental History

    3 credit(s)
    Origins of field, key debates, research methods relating to the historical geography of humans and the environment.
  
  • GEO 755 - Seminar in Political Ecology

    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Conceptual origins, theoretical influences, and current debates in political-economic and cultural aspects of nature-society relations. Topics include environmental social movements, theories of nature, environmental justice, environmental conflicts, gender and environment.
  
  • GEO 757 - Environmental Sediment Mechanics

    3 credit(s)
    Physical processes of sediment transport in the environment including fluid behavior, sediment properties, roughness of bed forms, resistance to flow, initiation of particle motion, bed-load transport, and relevant practical issues.
  
  • GEO 764 - Gender and Globalization

    3 credit(s)
    Crosslisted with: ANT 764 , WGS 764 
    The impact of the increasing hypermobility of capital and culture flows across borders on gender relations.
  
  • GEO 772 - Seminar: Cultural Geography

    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Examination of major currents in western cultural theory from the industrial revolution to the present, their development and transformation in light of advances in spatial theory.
    Repeatable
 

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