The request to create ANTH 3135, 3136 and cross-list with INTL 3135, 3136

Date: April 23, 2015
To: College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
From: Office of Academic Affairs
Approved On: April 8, 2015
Approved by: Undergraduate Course and Curriculum Committee
Implementation Date: Spring 2016


Note: Deletions are strikethroughs. Insertions are underlined.


Catalog Copy

INTL 3135. Origins of Globalization. (3) Cross-listed as ANTH 3135. An analysis of European colonial expansion from the 16th through the 19th century, emphasizing the creation of the first global systems of political, economic, and cultural interaction that form the foundation of modern globalization. Using a cross-cultural approach, the course explores the competition and conflict among the great powers and the effects of conquest and colonialism on the indigenous peoples of Africa, Asia and the Americas. (Yearly)

ANTH 3135. Origins of Globalization. (3) Cross-listed as INTL 3135. An analysis of European colonial expansion from the 16th through the 19th century, emphasizing the creation of the first global systems of political, economic, and cultural interaction that form the foundation of modern globalization. Using a cross-cultural approach, the course explores the competition and conflict among the great powers and the effects of conquest and colonialism on the indigenous peoples of Africa, Asia and the Americas. (Yearly)

INTL 3136. Globalization and Resistance. (3) Cross-listed as ANTH 3136. A cross-cultural analysis of changing patterns of resistance by indigenous peoples to the political, cultural and economic effects of globalization from the colonial period to the present. Using case studies from the Americas, Africa and Asia, the course examines a variety of indigenous resistance strategies and movements and the socio-political dynamics that have driven them and impacted on their effectiveness.

ANTH 3136. Globalization and Resistance. (3) Cross-listed as INTL 3136. A cross-cultural analysis of changing patterns of resistance by indigenous peoples to the political, cultural and economic effects of globalization from the colonial period to the present. Using case studies from the Americas, Africa and Asia, the course examines a variety of indigenous resistance strategies and movements and the socio-political dynamics that have driven them and impacted on their effectiveness. (Yearly)