Courses

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Our innovative curriculum is the heart of our program. We maintain a critical focus on the processes and practices of international affairs. Below you will find a list of common courses offered at the Graduate Program for International Affairs.

Required Courses

Elective Courses

Advanced Topics in International Affairs: Sources of Conflict
Africa and the West
Art and Politics
Cases in Advocacy and Campaigning
Children, Rights, Poverty, Equality
Cities and Employment
City in Environment
Conflict and Development
Conflict Prevention and Resolution in U.S. Foreign Policy
Conflict, Morality and Norms
Contemporary Africa
Crisis Networks
Critical Security Studies
Democracy in Dangerous Places
Designing Collaborative Development
Development Aid and Politics
Development Economics
Displacement, Asylum, Migration
Environment & Security Nexus
Ethnic Conflict and Genocide
Evaluating Development Impact
Financial Markets and Development
Food, Global Trade and Development
Gender and Development
Gender, Islam and Development
GIS for International Crises, Development, and the Environment
Global Governance
Global Intellectual Property
Global Perspectives on Reproductive Health
Global Youth Media(2)
Health, Inequality and Development
History and Practice of the Human Rights Movement
Human Rights and Media
Human Rights and Poverty: Case Studies
Human Rights and Transitional Justice
Human Rights Research and Reporting
Humanitarian Intervention
Inclusive and Developmental Finance
Independent Study
India China Interactions
International Social Policy
International Trade: Theory, History, Policy
Internship
Interntional Legal Order
Introduction to Epidemiology: Case Studies in Public Health
Issues in Latin American Development
Media and the Middle East II
Media: Conflict and Post-Conflict
Mediating Africa
Middle East Development
Negotiating with "Terrorists"
New Urban Worlds: Cities and the Politics of Globalization
News Media and Culture: Purveyors of International Affairs(2)
NGOs in Global Politics
Non-Western Approaches to the World
Peace Building and Development
Post-Conflict Policy: Case Studies
Post-Neoliberalism, State, and Democracy
Producing Short-Form Documentaries
Public Finance and Debt in Development
Research Methods- Quantitative
Rural and Regional Development in the Americas
Slums and Urban Development
State, Market, and Development Strategy in Latin America
Sustainable Development
The Amazon: Markets, State, Society
The Economic Crisis & Globalization
The Geopolitics of Global Oil
The Law and Praxis of Human Rights
The Paradox of Plenty: Natural Resources, Economic Development, and Conflict
The Poetics of Witnessing
The U.S. in the World Economy
Theories of State Formation
Thesis Supervision
Transportation and Urban Future
Truth Commissions and Accountability
Urban Africa
Urban Century
Urban Development Policy in Africa
Urban Water: Access, Privatization, & Environment
US and NATO Allies in Afghanistan
Women's Rights


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Please note: Students are advised to refer to the current applicable program catalog for degree completion requirements and to confirm their progress in satisfying those requirements with their advisors.