Syllabus

Syllabus for IIPS 30401, Terrorism, Peace and Other Inconsistencies, Fall 2006

Course Purpose:

This course addresses a set of inter-related questions that have become central to global peace and security in the modern era:

By the end of the course we expect students to be independent thinkers, conversant citizens, and persuasive commentators regarding these difficult questions. Our aim is that you become more knowledgeable, more thoughtful and more likely to continue to read and learn in this area than 99% of the US population. We hope to achieve this through the following course mechanisms:

Required Reading

Course Expectations, Assignments and Grading

Active attendance and Class Commitment

This course asks a lot of students.  To be successful in this course you need to be organized about your work, smart about your choices, and committed to reading and to attendance at all class sessions. We also will be using a number of good films and media material in the course which contribute greatly to our understanding of the material. In addition, we will ask students to engage in serious discussion more frequently than is the case in a class this size.

Grading

Component Percentage
Completion of a few, semi-random writing assignments. A good example is for the first class. 14%
Completion of two essay exams.  These will be difficult; actually they will be deadly. 10%
15%
Writing three (3) op-ed pieces like in the NYTimes.  Each is 500 words and is a very tight and persuasive essay about a topic involving terrorism and/or our response to it. 12%
12%
12%
Final Examination 25%
100%

Honor Code

This course, both within the guidelines of this great university, and due to its importance for peace and security, absolutely must internalize all aspects of academic honesty.  When I am presenting material which I did not originate in my own mind, I will acknowledge this intellectual debt in the ppt. slides and elsewhere.  So too when you use material from other sources it will need to be fully documented.  More discussion on other aspects of the honor code as it effects the op-eds etc will be forthcoming.

Citation: Lopez, G. (2006, September 18). Syllabus. Retrieved February 16, 2012, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/peace-studies/terrorism-peace-and-other-inconsistencies/copy_of_syllabus.
Copyright 2012, by the Contributing Authors. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Creative Commons License