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100-Level Social Science
Courses
HSS 121
Cities and Civilization I
(3-0-3)
An examination of the origins, nature and progress of urban
society. Selected readings focus on recurrent and persistent urban
problems: overcrowding, traffic congestion, political corruption,
faulty sanitation systems, etc. A student may also engage in field
analysis projects that relate either to hometown areas or to the North
Jersey region.
HSS 122
Cities and Civilization II
(3-0-3)
A continuation of HSS 121. Major emphasis is on current economic,
environmental and social problems.
HSS 127
Political Science I
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the evolution and operation of the U.S. federal
government. This course focuses on problems in energy policy, foreign
policy, elections, and civil rights.
HSS 128
Political Science II
(3-0-3)
A survey of the evolution of juries and recent legal and social
scientific analysis of jury rules. Case studies are used to explain
the scope of issues decided by juries and conceptions of justice used
to evaluate their performance.
HSS 175
Psychology: Brain, Mind, and Behavior
(3-0-3)
This course emphasizes the biological underpinnings of behavior and of
mental processes. What do we know? How do we come to know? What do we
want? Why do we act the way we do? In this course these fundamental
questions of psychology are mainly looked at from a biological
perspective that emphasizes the study of the brain and nervous
systems. Historical, philosophical, as well as evolutionary
perspectives on mental processes are considered as well.
HSS 176
Psychology: Development, Personality, and Pathology
(3-0-3)
An introduction to issues and theories in Life Span Development,
Personality Theory and psychological disorders. Topics include
cognitive and social development, attachment, moral thinking,
psychoanalytical theory. Focus is placed on those seminal theories
that have had lasting import for psychology as well as other
disciplines. These theories include, but are not limited to, those of
Piaget, Erikson and Freud.
300,400-Level Social Science
Courses
HSS 321
Modern Urban Culture
(3-0-3)
The course examines aspects of modern subcultural American life
including deviancy and delinquency, crime, drug abuse and ethnicity.
HSS 324
Comparative Ethnic Culture
(3-0-3)
This course is a survey of various cultural traditions. Typical study
units include Afro-American, Asian, Hispanic and American ethnic
cultures in historical perspective.
HSS 371
Computers and Society
(3-0-3)
An introduction to arguments about the relationship between computing
and society, the impact of computing activities on social
relationships, and the evolution of institutions to regulate
computer-mediated activities.
HSS 373
Social Choice Theory
(3-0-3)
An introduction to the history of and theoretical principles
associated with using voting techniques to resolve conflicts. Emphasis
is placed on the analysis of operational rules. Student projects
constitute a major part of the course.
HSS 375
History of Psychology
(3-0-3)
An analysis of the historical development of psychology. Issues such
as perception, learning, cognition and memory are explored within the
context of various schools of thought.
HSS 376
Theories of Personality
(3-0-3)
What is theory? What is personality? A review of Freud, Adler,
Sullivan, Jung, Rogers, et al., on the nature of personality.
HSS 377
Cities and the Global Economy
(3-0-3)
An analysis of major socioeconomic trends impacting modern American
cities. Topics covered include: the nature of globalism, major
economic and social trends, U.S. competitiveness, urban economic
restructuring and the roles of government.
HSS 379
International Politics
(3-0-3)
An analysis of the contemporary international political framework. The
course explores the character of the state system, the nation-state,
the role of leadership personality, transnational actors, the
balance-of-power, security and economic issues, the nature and
limitations of power, the uses of terrorism and Third World issues.
HSS 401
Seminar in Leadership Studies
(3-0-3)
This course will study the human phenomenon of leadership, focusing on
the two main (and oft-times competing) analyses of leadership: the
Humanistic approach and the Behaviorist approach.
HSS 410
Arab Nationalism and the Formation of the Middle East
(3-0-3)
This course will explore the birth, triumph and fall of Arab
nationalism, focusing not only on intellectual and political leaders
of the movement but also incidents in history which in one way or
another shaped political and/or social traits of the movement. Factors
which contributed to the development and/or decline of the movement
will be examined are: the rise of colonialism, the dissolution of the
Ottoman Empire, the World War I and WW-II, the Cold War, emergence of
the State of Israel and the recent incidents in the region and the
world. The ideological links between Arab nationalism and modern
radical movements will also be examined.
HSS 415
Islamic Political Thought
(3-0-3)
This course surveys the philosophical foundations and developmental
stages of Islamic political thought from the Prophet to the modern
ages. In the first part of this course, the theories of early Muslim
philosophers, i.e. Avicenna, Al-Farabi, Al-Ghazali, Averreos and Ibn
Khaldun, on the state, government and politics will be examined. The
second part will concentrate on pre-modern (Al-Mawardi) and modern
Muslim intellectuals who contributed to the genre of Islamic political
philosophy, including liberal and radical trends.
HSS 475
Introduction to Sociology
HSS 477
Psychology of Religion
(3-0-3)
A survey of different approaches to the psychological interpretations
of religious phenomena such as the image of God, rituals, myths, faith
healing, meditation, mysticism and conversion.
HSS 478
Psychology of Gender
(3-0-3)
An analysis of gender differences and perceptions in contemporary
society.
HSS 480
Introduction to Anthropology
(3-0-3)
HSS 481
Cultural Anthropology
(3-0-3)
An examination of the varieties of organization of human societies in
a comparative ethnographic context.
HSS 489
Freud and Jung
(3-0-3)
An in-depth and extensive study and discussion of the theories of
Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung. Each theory is examined individually; the
nature of the unconscious, dream interpretations, religious symbolism
and the aim of psychotherapy are critically examined. Students read
from primary sources including Freud's Interpretation of Dreams,
Totem and Taboo, Jung's Man and His Symbols, Modern Man
in Search of a Soul as well as from biographical material and
other secondary sources. Emphasis on points of confluence and of
departure between the two. The course is limited to 15 students.
Prerequisites:
HSS 376 or permission of the
instructor.
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