Global Arc

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Subject

Displaying 51 - 60 of 105
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Sociology of Finance
Can or should finance be organized differently to distribute power, status, and financial rewards more equitably and address economic inequality? Explores private equity firms that share wealth with workers, broad-based profit sharing and employee share ownership in corporations, the Alaska Permanent Fund, mutual stock and bond funds engaging in socially responsible investments, citizens owning robots to address technological unemployment, establishing investment accounts for each newborn baby to help achieve their social goals, and more democratic reforms of boards of directors in corporate governance. Examines pro and con arguments.
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Sociology of Entrepreneurship
This course takes a sociological approach to examining and analyzing the "startup" from different units and levels of analysis and how these levels interact in early stages of organizational development, growth, and survival. We also cover topics like gender and inequality in organizations, firm culture, organizational power and politics, leadership, networks, and entrepreneurship in developing economies. The course combines lecture and seminar along with some group activities and guest speakers with extensive experience in entrepreneurship and early stage investing/advising.
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The Sociology of Social Movements in the United States
This discussion-based seminar introduces students to the basic concepts sociologists use to study social movements. Readings focus on social movements that have shaped US society and politics in the 20th and 21st century. We examine several cases of social movements that are relevant to today's America, with the goal of using the concepts we have gleaned from earlier readings to understand some of the clashing forces that are driving social change right now.
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Political Sociology
What do voter turnout, the civil rights movement, the Paris Commune and suicide missions have in common? Conventional as well as unconventional politics rely on the purposive participation of individuals and groups on the basis of their shared, partisan views of what society ought to be. We will discuss the building blocks of political action such as identity and interest, social networks and influence, power and ideology, to understand topics such as electoral behavior, civic engagement, collective action and social movements. Combining theory and empirical research, the course is intended to inspire your own research in political sociology.
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Sociology of Complex Organizations
Formal organizations are basic building blocks of modern societies. We are born in organizations, educated in them, and spend our working lives navigating them. The first half of this course examines why organizations look and act the way they do. Why are they so bureaucratic? How do they influence one another? How do they evolve? The second half of the course focuses on the consequences of organizational practices. How do they shape work, inequality and diversity? How do they mediate the effects of public policies? Examples will be drawn from an array of sites including firms, schools, non-profits, hospitals, and social movements
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Environment and Migration
Environmental refugees leave their homes in response to earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, droughts, toxins, dams, and deforestation. Risk-mitigating farming households preemptively send family to seek jobs elsewhere, protecting against possible crop failure. In much of the world, households participate in cyclical or temporary migratory flows, driven by seasonality of the food supply. Students will become familiar with the manners in which environment drives migration and explore the potential for migration to impact the environment. Is vulnerability to environmental hazards distributed equitably across the world's communities?
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The Sociology of Latinos in the U.S.
Using detailed studies of four major centers (San Antonio, Los Angeles, Miami, and New York), this course will analyze the historical and contemporary experience of several Spanish-speaking populations. Discussion will focus on two questions: (a) Are there common experiences or characteristics that justify the categorization of these varied groups under a single ethnicity? and (b) What racial, class, and gender divisions exist within these groups? Two lectures, one preceptorial.
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Sociology of International Migration
International migration has been and continues to be a major force shaping the world, as it significantly affects the sending and receiving societies. This course provides an overview of immigration trends over the twentieth century and the sociological theory and research that informs our understanding about its causes and consequences.
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God of Many Faces: Comparative Perspectives on Migration and Religion
By using examples from the United States, Asia, Europe, and Latin America, this course employs a comparative approach to investigating religion as a source of strength among immigrants -- including exiles and refugees -- as they undertake perilous journeys. Key questions addressed include: How does religion transform (and how is it transformed by) the immigrant experience? How is religion used to combat stereotypes? Are there differences between the ways men and women or dominant groups and racial minorities understand religion? Two lectures, one preceptorial.
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Organizations: Management, Bureaucracy, and Work
Classical and contemporary theories of organizations as collective tools, as cultural systems, and as actors in changing environments. Research on problems of innovation and survival, authority, and control in business firms, public bureaucracies, and voluntary associations. Special emphasis on the historical development of managerial ideologies in the U.S. Two lectures, one preceptorial.