Course Search

POLC78H3 - Political Analysis I

This course examines the principles of research design and methods of analysis employed by researchers in political science. Students will learn to distinguish between adequate and inadequate use of evidence and between warranted and unwarranted conclusions.
Area of Focus: Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis

Prerequisite: 8.0 credits including 0.5 credit in POL, PPG, or IDS courses
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Course Experience: University-Based Experience

POLC79H3 - Feminist Political Thought

This course examines the challenges and contributions of feminist political thought to the core concepts of political theory, such as rights, citizenship, democracy, and social movements. It analyzes the history of feminist political thought, and the varieties of contemporary feminist thought, including: liberal, socialist, radical, intersectional, and postcolonial.
Area of Focus: Political Theory

Prerequisite: POLB72H3 or [(POLB70H3) and (POLB71H3)] or PHLB13H3 or WSTA03H3
Exclusion: POL432H
Breadth Requirements: History, Philosophy and Cultural Studies

POLC80H3 - International Relations of Africa

This course introduces students to the International Relations of Africa. This course applies the big questions in IR theory to a highly understudied region. The first half of the course focuses on security and politics, while the latter half pays heed to poverty, economic development, and multilateral institutions.
Area of Focus: International Relations

Prerequisite: 1.0 credit from POLB80H3, POLB81H3, POLB90H3, or POLB91H3
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLC83H3 - Applications of American Foreign Policy

This course examines the foreign policy of the United States by analyzing its context and application to a specific region, regions or contemporary problems in the world.
Areas of Focus: International Relations; Public Policy; Comparative Politics

Prerequisite: Any 4.0 credits
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Course Experience: University-Based Experience

POLC87H3 - Great Power Politics

This course explores the possibilities and limits for international cooperation in different areas and an examination of how institutions and the distribution of power shape bargained outcomes.

Area of Focus: International Relations

Prerequisite: POLB80H3 and POLB81H3
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLC88H3 - The New International Agenda

Traditional International Relations Theory has concentrated on relations between states, either failing to discuss, or missing the complexities of important issues such as terrorism, the role of women, proliferation, globalization of the world economy, and many others. This course serves as an introduction to these issues - and how international relations theory is adapting in order to cover them.
Area of Focus: International Relations

Prerequisite: 1.0 credit from POLB80H3, POLB81H3, POLB90H3, or POLB91H3
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLC90H3 - Development Studies: Political and Historical Perspectives

This course provides students with a more advanced examination of issues in development studies, including some of the mainstream theoretical approaches to development studies and a critical examination of development practice in historical perspective. Seminar format.
Area of Focus: Comparative Politics

Prerequisite: POLB90H3 and POLB91H3
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLC91H3 - Latin America: Dictatorship and Democracy

This course explores the origins of Latin America's cycles of brutal dictatorship and democratic rule. It examines critically the assumption that Latin American countries have made the transition to democratic government.
Area of Focus: Comparative Politics

Prerequisite: 1.0 credit from POLB80H3, POLB81H3, POLB90H3, or POLB91H3
Exclusion: POL305Y
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLC92H3 - U.S. Government and Politics

This course analyses the American federal system and the institutions and processes of government in the United States.
Area of Focus: Comparative Politics

Prerequisite: Any 8.0 credits
Exclusion: (POL203Y) and POL386H1
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLC93H3 - Public Policies in the United States

This course focuses on selected policy issues in the United States.
Areas of Focus: Comparative Politics; Public Policy

Prerequisite: One full credit in Political Science at the B-level
Exclusion: POL203Y
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Course Experience: University-Based Experience

POLC94H3 - Globalization, Gender and Development

This course explores the gendered impact of economic Globalization and the various forms of resistance and mobilization that women of the global south have engaged in their efforts to cope with that impact. The course pays particular attention to regional contextual differences (Latin America, Africa, Asia and the Middle East) and to the perspectives of global south women, both academic and activist, on major development issues.
Area of Focus: Comparative Politics

Prerequisite: POLB90H3
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLC96H3 - State Formation and Authoritarianism in the Middle East

This course examines the origins of, and political dynamics within, states in the contemporary Middle East. The first part of the course analyses states and state formation in historical perspective - examining the legacies of the late Ottoman and, in particular, the colonial period, the rise of monarchical states, the emergence of various forms of "ethnic" and/or "quasi" democracies, the onset of "revolutions from above", and the consolidation of populist authoritarian states. The second part of the course examines the resilience of the predominantly authoritarian state system in the wake of socio-economic and political reform processes.
Area of Focus: Comparative Politics

Prerequisite: 1.0 credit from POLB80H3, POLB81H3, POLB90H3, POLB91H3 or (POLB92H3)
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLC97H3 - Protest Politics in the Middle East

This course examines various forms of protest politics in the contemporary Middle East. The course begins by introducing important theoretical debates concerning collective action in the region - focusing on such concepts as citizenship, the public sphere, civil society, and social movements. The second part of the course examines case studies of social action - examining the roles played by crucial actors such as labour, the rising Islamist middle classes/bourgeoisie, the region's various ethnic and religious minority groups, and women who are entering into the public sphere in unprecedented numbers. The course concludes by examining various forms of collective and non-collective action in the region from Islamist social movements to everyday forms of resistance.
Area of Focus: Comparative Politics

Prerequisite: 1.0 credit from POLB80H3, POLB81H3, POLB90H3, POLB91H3 or (POLB92H3)
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLC98H3 - International Political Economy of Finance

The course explains why financial markets exist, and their evolution, by looking at the agents, actors and institutions which generate demand for them. We also consider the consequences of increasingly integrated markets, the causes of systemic financial crises, as well as the implications and feasibility of regulation.

Area of Focus: International Relations

Prerequisite: [POLB80H3 and POLB81H3] and [MGEA01H3 or MGEA02H3] and [MGEA05H3 or MGEA06H3]
Exclusion: POL411H1
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLD01H3 - Research Seminar in Political Science

This course provides an opportunity to design and carry out individual or small-group research on a political topic. After class readings on the topic under study, research methods and design, and research ethics, students enter "the field" in Toronto. The seminar provides a series of opportunities to present and discuss their unfolding research.

Prerequisite: 1.5 credits at the C-level in POL courses
Course Experience: University-Based Experience

POLD02Y3 - Senior Research Seminar in Political Science

This course provides an opportunity for students to propose and carry out intensive research on a Political Science topic of the student’s choosing under the supervision of faculty with expertise in that area. In addition to research on the topic under study, class readings and seminar discussions focus on the practice of social science research, including methods, design, ethics, and communication.

Prerequisite: Open to 4th Year students with a CGPA of at least 3.3 in the Specialist and Major programs in Political Science or Public Policy or from other programs with permission of the instructor.
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Course Experience: University-Based Experience

POLD09H3 - Advanced Topics in International Security

This seminar course investigates the most urgent topics in the field of International Security, including American hegemonic decline, rising Chinese power, Russian military actions in Eastern Europe, great power competition, proxy wars, and international interventions. The readings for this course are drawn from the leading journals in International Relations, which have been published within the past five years. The major assignment for this course is the production of an original research paper on any topic in international security, which would meet the standard of publication in a reputable student journal.

Area of Focus: International Relations

Prerequisite: POLC09H3 and [an additional 1.0 credit at the C-level in POL or IDS courses]
Exclusion: POL466H1, POL468H1
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLD30H3 - Legal Reasoning

This course will introduce students to the ideas and methods that guide judges and lawyers in their work. How does the abstract world of the law get translated into predictable, concrete decisions? How do judges decide what is the “correct” decision in a given case? The class will begin with an overview of the legal system before delving into the ideas guiding statute drafting and interpretation, judicial review and administrative discretion, the meaning of “evidence” and “proof,” constitutionalism, and appellate review. Time will also be spent exploring the ways that foreign law can impact and be reconciled with Canadian law in a globalizing world.

Areas of Focus: Public Law, and Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis

Prerequisite: POLB30H3 and an additional 1.5 credits at the C-level in POL courses
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Course Experience: University-Based Experience
Note: Priority will be given to students enrolled in the Minor in Public Law.

POLD31H3 - Mooting Seminar

This course will offer senior students the opportunity to engage in a mock court exercise based around a contemporary legal issue. Students will be expected to present a legal argument both orally and in writing, using modern templates for legal documents and argued under similar circumstances to those expected of legal practitioners. The class will offer students an opportunity to understand the different stages of a court proceeding and the theories that underpin oral advocacy and procedural justice. Experiential learning will represent a fundamental aspect of the course, and expertise will be sought from outside legal professionals in the community who can provide further insight into the Canadian legal system where available.
Area of Focus: Public Law

Prerequisite: POLB30H3 and POLC32H3 and an additional 1.5 credits at the C-level in POL courses
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Course Experience: Partnership-Based Experience
Note: Enrolment is limited to students enrolled in the Major Program in Public Law.

POLD38H3 - Law and Global Business

This course examines how law both constitutes and regulates global business. Focusing on Canada and the role of Canadian companies within a global economy, the course introduces foundational concepts of business law, considering how the state makes markets by bestowing legal personality on corporations and facilitating private exchange. The course then turns to examine multinational businesses and the laws that regulate these cross-border actors, including international law, extra-territorial national law, and private and hybrid governance tools. Using real-world examples from court decisions and business case studies, students will explore some of the “governance gaps” produced by the globalization of business and engage directly with the tensions that can emerge between legal, ethical, and strategic demands on multinational business.

Areas of Focus: International Relations and Public Law

Prerequisite: POLC32H3 and 1.0 credit at the C-level in POL courses
Recommended Preparation: POLB80H3
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Course Experience: University-Based Experience

POLD41H3 - Advanced Topics in Politics

Topics and Area of Focus will vary depending on the instructor.

Prerequisite: 1.5 credits at the C-level in POL courses
Exclusion: (POLC41H3)

POLD42H3 - Advanced Topics in Public Law

Topics and area of focus will vary depending on the instructor and may include global perspectives on social and economic rights, judicial and constitutional politics in diverse states and human rights law in Canada.
Area of Focus: Public Law

Prerequisite: 1.0 credits from the following [POLC32H3, POLC36H3, POLC39H3]
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Course Experience: University-Based Experience

POLD43H3 - Writing about Politics

Some of the most powerful political texts employ literary techniques such as narrative, character, and setting. This class will examine political themes in texts drawn from a range of literary genres (memoire, literary non-fiction, science fiction). Students will learn about the conventions of these genres, and they will also have the opportunity to write an original piece of political writing in one of the genres. This course combines the academic analysis of political writing with the workshop method employed in creative writing courses.

Prerequisite: [1.5 credits at the C-level in POL, CIT, PPG, GGR, ANT, SOC, IDS, HLT courses] or [JOUB39H3 or ENGB63H3]
Recommended Preparation: At least one course in creative writing at the high school or university level.
Breadth Requirements: History, Philosophy and Cultural Studies

POLD44H3 - Comparative Law and Social Change

This seminar examines how legal institutions and legal ideologies influence efforts to produce or prevent social change. The course will analyze court-initiated action as well as social actions “from below” (social movements) with comparative case studies.

Areas of Focus: Comparative Politics and Public Law

Prerequisite: POLB30H3 and [POLC33H3 or POLC38H3 or POLC39H3] and [0.5 credit in Comparative Politics]
Exclusion: POL492H1
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Note: Priority will be given to students enrolled in the Minor Program in Public Law.

POLD45H3 - Constitutionalism

This course studies the theory of constitutionalism through a detailed study of its major idioms such as the rule of law, the separation of powers, sovereignty, rights, and limited government.
Areas of Focus: Political Theory and Public Law

Prerequisite: [[(POLB70H3) and (POLB71H3)] or POLB72H3 or POLB30H3] and [1.5 credits at the C-level in POL courses]
Breadth Requirements: History, Philosophy and Cultural Studies

POLD46H3 - Public Law and the Canadian Immigration System

Immigration is one of the most debated and talked about political issues in the 21st century. Peoples’ movement across continents for a whole host of reasons is not new; however, with the emergence of the nation-state, the drawing of borders, and the attempts to define and shape of membership in a political and national community, migration became a topic for public debate and legal challenge. This course dives into Canada’s immigration system and looks at how it was designed, what values and objectives it tries to meet, and how global challenges affect its approach and attitude toward newcomers. The approach used in this course is that of a legal practitioner, tasked with weighing the personal narratives and aspirations of migrants as they navigate legal challenges and explore the available programs and pathways to complete their migration journey in Canada.
Areas of Focus: Canadian Government and Politics, and Public Law

Prerequisite: 1.0 credits from the following: POLC32H3, POLC36H3, POLC39H3
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences
Course Experience: University-Based Experience

POLD50H3 - Political Interests, Political Identity, and Public Policy

This course examines the interrelationship between organized interests, social movements and the state in the formulation and implementation of public policy in Canada and selected other countries.
Areas of Focus: Canadian Government and Politics; Public Policy

Prerequisite: [(POLB50Y3) or [POLB56H3 and POLB57H3]] and [1.5 credits at the C-level in POL or PPG courses]
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLD51H3 - Topics in Canadian and Comparative Politics

This seminar course explores selected issues of Canadian politics from a comparative perspective. The topics in this course vary depending on the instructor.

Areas of Focus: Canadian Government and Politics; Comparative Politics

Prerequisite: [(POLB50Y3) or [POLB56H3 and POLB57H3]] and [1.5 credits at the C-level in POL courses]
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLD52H3 - Immigration and Canadian Political Development

Immigration has played a central role in Canada's development. This course explores how policies aimed at regulating migration have both reflected and helped construct conceptions of Canadian national identity. We will pay particular attention to the politics of immigration policy-making, focusing on the role of the state and social actors.

Areas of Focus: Canadian Government and Politics; Public Policy

Prerequisite: [[(POLB50Y3) or [POLB56H3 and POLB57H3]] and [1.5 credits at the C-level in POL or PPG courses]] or [15.0 credits including SOCB60H3]
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences

POLD53H3 - Political Disagreement in Canada

Why do Canadians disagree in their opinions about abortion, same-sex marriage, crime and punishment, welfare, taxes, immigration, the environment, religion, and many other subjects? This course examines the major social scientific theories of political disagreement and applies these theories to an analysis of political disagreement in Canada.

Area of Focus: Canadian Government and Politics

Prerequisite: [(POLB50Y3) or [POLB56H3 and POLB57H3]] and [1.5 credits at the C-level in POL courses]
Recommended Preparation: STAB23H3 or equivalent
Breadth Requirements: Social and Behavioural Sciences