The study of politics has been an integral part of a university education
since the philosopher Plato established an academy in classical Greece to teach the "royal
art". Political decisions shape the character of our public and private institutions,
determine our foreign and domestic policies, and through these, establish our character as
a people. As the eighteenth-century writer Jean-Jacques Rousseau observed in a letter
"everything is radically connected with politics."
At Mount Allison, courses in Political Science fall into four sub-disciplines: Political Theory, Canadian Politics, Comparative Politics, and International Politics.
The department offers a range of courses in each of these sub-disciplines. As a small department we also encourage students to develop more
specialized interests by taking related courses in other disciplines and by taking
advantage of the Directed Readings course offered to senior students with high academic
standing.
Political Science 1001 is the introductory political science course and is the normal prerequisite for all of the
second year Political Science courses. Students should
consult the program advisor for additional information.
POLITICAL SCIENCE COURSES
Note: The listing of a course in the Calendar is not a guarantee that the
course is offered every year.
Note: Students must obtain a grade of at least C- in all courses used to
fulfill prerequisite requirements. Otherwise, written permission of the
appropriate Department or Program Co-ordinator must be obtained.
POLS 1001 (3CR)
FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICS
Format: lecture 3 hours
Exclusion: POLS 1000
This course is an introduction to the foundations of politics through the medium of political theory, Canadian politics, comparative politics, or international politics.
POLS 2001 (3CR)
DEMOCRATIC THOUGHT
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: POLS 1000 or 1001; or permission of the Department
Exclusion: Any version of POLS 2001 previously offered with a different title
This course examines democratic thought from its origins in the ancient polis through
to its modern incarnation in the writings of Rousseau, Tocqueville, John Stuart Mill and
selected contemporary theorists. It places particular emphasis on
the conflict between participatory and elite models of democratic
citizenship.
POLS 2101 (3CR)
CANADIAN GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: POLS 1000 or 1001; or permission of the Department
This course is a study of the political process in Canada. It presents an overview of
the constitution, institutions, and political actors that represent the essential components of
Canada's political culture and government.
POLS 2201 (3CR)
GOVERNMENT OF THE U.S.A.
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: POLS 1000 or 1001; or permission of the Department
This course is a study of political institutions and practices in the United States of
America.
POLS 2211 (3CR)
CANADA AND THE WORLD
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: POLS 1000 or 1001; or permission of the Department
This course is a critical analysis of Canada's place in a rapidly evolving global order. It places particular emphasis on media technology.
POLS/INLR 2301 (3CR)
TOPICS IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: POLS 1000 or 1001; or permission of the Department
Note: This course is cross-listed as INLR 2301 and may count as
3 credits in either discipline.
This course is a study of the major issues and themes in international relations, including the
nature of war and the conditions of peace.
POLS 3001 (3CR)
ANCIENT POLITICAL THOUGHT
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: Six credits in Political Science at the 2000 level, or POLS 1000; or permission of the Department
Exclusion: Any version of POLS 3001 previously offered with a different title
This course examines the ancient tradition of political thought from Plato, Aristotle,
and Augustine through to its eclipse in Machiavelli. It emphasizes the enduring
themes of nature, virtue, citizenship, property, religion and the best regime.
POLS 3011 (3CR)
MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Format: lecture3 hours
Prereq: Six credits in Political Science at the 2000 level, or POLS 1000; or permission of the Department
Exclusion: Any version of POLS 3011 previously offered with a different title
This course examines the modern tradition of political thought from its origins in
Hobbes and Locke to its zenith in Rousseau and Marx. It emphasizes the defining
problems of freedom, history, property, revolution, and the state.
POLS 3021 (3CR)
SOCIALIST THOUGHT
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: Three credits from POLS 2001 or 3011; or permission of the
Department
This course examines the socialist tradition from Marx to the present, with particular
emphasis on the relationship between theory and practice in the writings of Lukács,
Gramsci, and the Frankfurt School. It also considers the recent challenges of feminism and postmodernism.
POLS 3031 (3CR)
WOMEN AND POLITICS
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: Six credits in Political Science at the 2000 level; or permission of the Department
This course examines the relationship between women and politics. Its topics may include the historical
and conceptual roots of the problem
of citizenship for women, patterns of women's participation in politics and
government, the politics of the women's movement, and women's effects on public
policy.
POLS 3081/3181/3281/3381 (3CR)
INTERMEDIATE SELECTED TOPICS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: Six credits in Political Science at the 2000 level; or permission of the Department
This is an intermediate course which focuses on topics not covered by current course
offerings in Political Science, or topics not covered in depth in the courses offered.
POLS 3101 (3CR)
POLITICAL LEADERSHIP IN CANADA
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: Six credits in Political Science at the 2000 level or POLS 1000; or permission of the Department
This course studies the various public offices in Canada and the individuals who fill them,
including the Prime Minister, Provincial premiers, members of parliament, mayors and
judges. It emphasizes the opportunities and challenges that each faces in providing
political leadership in Canada.
POLS 3111 (3CR)
CANADIAN FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: Six credits in Political Science at the 2000 level, or POLS 1000; or permission of the Department
Exclusion: Any version of POLS 3111 previously offered with a different title
This course is an examination of the evolution and operation of the Canadian federal system.
Its topics may include the concept and meaning of federalism, constitutional reform, fiscal federalism
and intergovernmental relations.
POLS 3121 (3CR)
CANADIAN ELECTORAL STUDIES
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: Six credits in Political Science at the 2000 level, or POLS 1000; or permission of the Department
This course is a study of Canadian elections and the Canadian electoral system. Its topics
include an examination of how rules shape electoral competition; the
role of the media in election campaigns; obstacles facing women candidates; and whether
elections provide governments with mandates.
POLS 3200 (6CR)
EUROPEAN POLITICS
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: POLS 2211; or permission of the Department
This course is a comparative analysis of government and politics with particular emphasis on
Europe's role in a changing geopolitical order.
POLS 3310 (6CR)
STRATEGIC STUDIES
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: POLS 2211 and 2301; or POLS 1000; or permission of the Department
This course is an analysis of strategic thought in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with particular
reference to the ideas of Karl von Clausewitz and their relevance to the nuclear
era.
POLS/HIST 3731 (3CR)
JAPAN IN THE MODERN WORLD
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: Second-year standing and at least six credits in History at the 1000 or 2000
level; or permission of the Department
Note: This course is cross-listed as HIST 3731 and may therefore count as
three credits in
either discipline.
Exclusion: HIST/POLS 3321
This course will examine Japan's relations with the international community in the
years following renewed contact with the West in the 1860's. Particular emphasis will be
placed on the expanding intellectual, diplomatic and economic interchange and the impact
of that interchange on the shaping of modern Japan.
POLS 4000 (6CR)
PROBLEMS IN THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT
Format: seminar 3 hours
Prereq: Three credits from POLS 3001, 3011 or 3021; or permission of the
Department
Exclusion: Any version of POLS 4000 previously offered with a different title
This course examines a selected problem in the history of political thought.
POLS 4001 (3CR)
FEMINIST POLITICAL THOUGHT
Format: seminar 3 hours
Prereq: Three credits from POLS 3001, 3011 or 3031; or permission of the
Department
This course examines contemporary feminist political thought with particular
emphasis on feminist critiques and reconstructions of traditional concepts such as
politics, citizenship, equality, justice, and freedom.
POLS 4011 (3CR)
LIBERAL DEMOCRACY AND ITS DISCONTENTS
Format: seminar 3 hours
Prereq: Three credits from POLS 3001 or 3011; or permission of the
Department
This course examines the critical theories of the culture and politics of liberal
democracy which have shaped the main currents of modern political thought from the nineteenth
century to the present.
POLS 4100 (6CR)
POLITICAL PARTIES AND INTEREST GROUPS
Format: seminar 3 hours
Prereq: Three credits from POLS 3101, 3111 and 3121 or POLS 3100; or permission of the
Department
An examination of political parties, party systems, and interest groups, primarily
from a Canadian perspective. Topics covered include: a review of the principal models of
political parties; the organization, character and functions of parties; the development
of party systems; and, the development and role of interest groups.
POLS 4131 (3CR)
CANADIAN POLITICAL PARTIES
Format: seminar 3 hours
Prereq: Three credits from POLS 3101, 3111 and 3121 or POLS 3100; or permission of the
Department
Exclusion: POLS 4100
This course is an examination of political parties primarily from a Canadian perspective.
Its topics include the principal models of political parties, the organization, character and functions
of parties, and the development of party systems.
POLS 4141 (3CR)
INTEREST GROUPS AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS IN CANADA
Format: seminar 3 hours
Prereq: Three credits from POLS 3101, 3111 and 3121 or POLS 3100; or permission of the
Department
Exclusion: POLS 4100
This course is an examination of interest groups and social movements primarily
from a Canadian perspective. It studies the development and role of interest groups and
social movements both in the past and present.
POLS 4200 (6CR)
POLITICAL AND CULTURAL CHANGE: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF NORTH AMERICA AND
EUROPE
Format: lecture/seminar 3 hours
Prereq: Three credits in Political Science at the 2000 or 3000 level; or permission of
the Department
A comparative analysis of the impact of political change on the broader culture, as
expressed in literature, cinema, architecture and communications media. Examples will be
taken from North American and European experience.
POLS 4211 (3CR)
POLITICS AND LITERATURE
Format: lecture/seminar 3 hours
Prereq: Three credits in Political Science at the 2000 or 3000 level; or permission of
the Department
An analysis of the relationship between literature and social change. Selected
works of a number of recent Latin American and Central European writers will be
examined.
POLS 4300 (6CR)
CANADIAN FOREIGN POLICY
Format: lecture 3 hours
Prereq: POLS 3310; or permission of the Department
A study of the major themes and issues in post-1945 Canadian Foreign policy, with a
focus on the concept of internationalism as the foundation for Canada's post-war
approaches to international order and security.
POLS 4700/4701 (6/3CR)
SPECIAL TOPICS
Format: lecture/seminar 3 hours
Prereq: Permission of the Department
A seminar/tutorial open to senior students in an advanced research area of
political science. Course content and requirements will be set by individual
instructors.
POLS 4950 (6CR)
DIRECTED READING ON SPECIAL TOPICS
Format: directed readings
Prereq: Permission of the Department
This course permits a senior student, under the direction of one faculty member, to
pursue a program of independent reading or study. Normally, only students with a
minimum average of B in their previous years of study at the University are eligible to
register for this course.