PubPol 474.001 Values & Ethics: Social Inequality and Violence | Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
PubPol 474

PubPol 474.001 Values & Ethics: Social Inequality and Violence

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Level
Undergraduate
Term
Fall 2024
Session
Fall 2024
Course Section
001
U-M Course Number
24111
Credit Hours
3
Class Size
25

"What are the values and ethics of foreign policy? Foreign policy refers to interactions between states, yet states are built by and use violence. States also create and reinforce social inequalities. Therefore, the state-to-state interactions that typify foreign policy often have implications for both violence and social inequalities. This course will rely upon a multidisciplinary body of literature from political science, history, sociology, psychology, and economics as a theoretical base for in-class discussion, then interrogate real examples of foreign policies from both the U.S. and around the world that have implications for political violence--civil war, mass repression, interstate war, rebellion--and enduring social inequities. Students will consider the ethical and practical implications of the works reviewed for real-world foreign policy debates."