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Spring courses in UCS major/minor with seats available

Dear UCS Majors and Minors,

 

UCS has a few courses that still have seats available this spring on the various campuses. Some of the offerings are online and others are in person. If are seeking another course in the UCS major or minor, please take note of these offerings listed below. If you have any questions as to whether you should enroll in one of these courses as it pertains to your specific degree plan, then we encourage you to contact your UCS advisor for guidance.

URBN 3998, Variable Topic: Human Services in Policing

Tuesdays, 3:30pm top 6:00pm (Online Synchronous) with Bryan Hall

Supporting (Group IV) course in the UCS major/minor

Search Online o­fferings – This course is listed under Waterbury in Student Admin. but is open to all students.

Please note:, If you are interested in this specific topic you are encouraged to enroll this semester if it fits your degree plan and schedule. This course is not likely to be offered next year on any campus since it is only offered periodically.

  • This course focuses on the diverse assortment of policing issues and challenges involving the enforcement of laws while simultaneously protecting and effectively partnering with the public.
  • Students in this course will engage in practical discussion and exercises to explore the importance of ethical behavior pertaining to controversial issues and decision-making in law enforcement.
  • Through those discussions, exercises and a final group presentation, the student will be able to better analyze the complexities of policing while articulating the need for law enforcement to infuse aspects of human services that are built upon social justice and anti-racist frameworks.

 

SOCI 3201, Methods of Social Research

Tuesdays & Thursdays, 9:30am – 10:45am (Online Synchronous – Hartford Campus Listing) with Kim Price-Glynn

Methods (Group III) course in UCS major

UCS majors may seek a permission number if their home campus is not Hartford by contacting Prof. Kim Price-Glynn

 

In our information saturated world, it is easy to be overwhelmed. Social media and news feeds are filled with reports on societies, social institutions, and the behavior of social groups. Often, we do not know where this information comes from or how reliable it is. How can we distinguish good information from bad? One answer is to understand how research is produced.

 

URBN 2000, Intro. to Urban and Community Studies

Tuesdays & Thursdays, 11:00AM – 12:15PM (In Person – Hartford Campus) with Ken Foote

Required Core (Group I) in UCS major/minor

 

URBN 2000 is an interdisciplinary introduction to the intricacies and complexities of urban communities and urban life in the U.S. and around the world.  We will be focusing on the city as a physical and spatial system as well as a place defined by its people and the political, social, cultural, economic institutions that shape city life. The social and behavioral dynamics of urban communities, including the diversity produced by factors such as race, class, gender, and ethnicity. The course will help to understand the interplay of environmental, social, economic, and political forces that shape many contemporary cities. If you are considering a major or minor in Urban and Community Studies, URBN 2000 counts as a core course in both.

 

POLS 3632, Urban Politics

Mondays, 4pm to 6:30pm (In Person – Hartford Campus) with Brian Waddell

Core (Group II) course in UCS major/minor

 

Cities in Europe are considered the jewels of the continent with residents and tourists flocking to them as the most desirable places.  In the U.S. cities grew incredibly quickly as the landing place for millions of immigrants and migrants from rural areas.  Their chaotic growth, combined with what was thought of as their less desirable residents, made U.S. cities undesirable to many, and those who could flee to the suburbs did so.  Unlike in Europe, then, central cities in the U.S. became areas of decline and controversy by the 1960s, caused by white flight and economic shifts.  We will study cities in terms of these changes.  We will begin by examining different ways of understanding who controls urban politics.  We will then examine the institutional constraints on urban politics imposed by the federal system and the problems of financing urban government.  We will analyze the suburbanization of America and how this impacted cities and conclude by considering race and poverty in American cities.

 

POLS 3617, American Political Economy

Tuesdays, 4pm to 6:30pm (In Person – Hartford Campus) with Brian Waddell

Supporting (Group IV) course in the UCS major/minor

Please note: This course is not likely to be offered on the regional campuses next year, so if you are interested in this specific topic you are encouraged to enroll this semester if it fits your degree plan and schedule.

 

This course is designed to offer an introduction to some central issues of current American political economy, including a look at the power major corporations exercise over politics, business-government relations, business-labor relations, the often-problematic relationship of capitalism and democracy, and the problems we as a nation face today. We begin with theoretical issues of conceptualizing the complex relations of government and economy. We will look at the problematic emergence of labor unions in the United States and how the Reagan “revolution” dramatically weakened labor and strengthened major corporations. We round out the semester by considering globalization, and then on to understanding current problems in the U.S. political economy. If you need a permission number to enroll in this course, please reach out to Prof. Brian Waddell.

 

GEOG 3000, Race, Sex, Space, and Place

Thursdays, 3:30pm – 6:00pm (In Person – Waterbury Campus) with Melisa Argañaraz Gomez

Supporting (Group IV) course in the UCS major/minor

 

This course critically examines how gender, race, sexuality, class, age, and other forms of differentiation intersect in spaces, places, boundaries, and bodies. Throughout the course, we will review critical writings of feminist geography and urban studies that question hierarchies of power (patriarchy, colonialism, capitalism, and globalization, among others). Students will begin the course by exploring how feminist urban geographers have contributed and challenge geography as a discipline. Next, the course will explore the theoretical overview of debates, conceptualizations, and constructions of gender, sexuality, and race in everyday spaces and places. We will cover work on the politics of knowledge production and methodologies; economic processes, including women’s work and labor, migration, and development, and political processes, such as (trans)nationalism and feminist geopolitics.

 

Wishing you all the best for the spring semester!

 

Maria Winnick

Education Program Assistant

Urban and Community Studies

Job Opening – City of New Britain

The City of New Britain is hiring Administrative Services Officer (Police Department). Click here to apply!

 

Please note: Job and internship postings are being provided for informational purposes only. Anyone interested in applying for one of these positions is responsible for verifying all related information. The Urban and Community Studies Program, nor the University is recommending these employers nor guaranteeing the accuracy of the information furnished in the job posting.

The Crystal Molina Memorial Scholarship

The Crystal Molina Memorial Scholarship is for continuing CLAS undergraduates who have an interest in and/or participate in social justice, environment, and/or advocacy outreach programs assisting disadvantaged populations including migrant workers. Candidates must demonstrate financial need, and preference will be given to those who have overcome obstacles such as socioeconomic or education disadvantage of disabilities, who are first generation college students, members of underrepresented groups at UConn, or have experience living/working in diverse environments. This award is renewable.

For an application or for information on other scholarship opportunities through the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, please visit the CLAS website.

Greenblatt Undergraduate Research Award

The Greenblatt Undergraduate Research Award is awarded to CLAS undergraduates who demonstrate high academic achievement and an interest in conducting academic research in the area of United States race relations, United States civil rights, or United States human rights.

For an application or for information on other scholarship opportunities through the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, please visit the CLAS website.

Director of Planning and Development West Haven

TITLE: DIRECTOR OF PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT

DEPARTMENT: PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT

 

Disclaimer

Please note: Job and internship postings are being provided for informational purposes only. Anyone interested in applying for one of these positions is responsible for verifying all related information. The Urban and Community Studies Program, nor the University is recommending these employers nor guaranteeing the accuracy of the information furnished in the job posting

The Urban and Community Studies Major and Fall 2020 Course Offerings

Dear Advisors,

Below is information about the Urban and Community Studies major as well as some information regarding our Fall 2020 course offerings. We hope you will share the information below with ACES advisees as well as any students that you may feel might find UCS as a good fit possibly as double major, minor or as elective courses to complement a student’s primary major.

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Do you have an interest in making a difference in your community? Then take a closer look at the Urban and Community Studies major and our Fall 2020 course offerings https://urban.uconn.edu/course-schedules/.

UCS is an interdisciplinary major for students who seek meaningful career opportunities in public service, human services, urban and social change, as well as many other rewarding fields. Our flexible curriculum offers students the ability to take courses within the major based on their own personal career or graduate school aspirations. The program offers emphasis areas in Criminal Justice and Law, Nonprofit and Public Management, Public Health, Public Policy and Social Service and Community Organizing as well as a Fast Track to the Master of Public Administration. Students are welcome also to personalize their degree plan based on their academic interests.

Below are just a few courses that you may want to consider. For a complete list of course offerings and timeslots please visit urban.uconn.edu.

 

HARTFORD, WATERBURY, STORRS & STAMFORD

URBN 1300 – Exploring Your Community (Meets CA 2 and CA 4 requirements): various aspects of urban and community life emphasizing the interplay of social justice, diversity, individual and social well being. Explores theories, concepts, and methods in community studies. May contain a service learning component.

 

HARTFORD, WATERBURY & STORRS

URBN 2000 – Introduction to Urban and Community Studies: Introduction to the analysis of urban development with particular stress on those problems pertinent to the American central city.

 

HARTFORD

URBN/GEOG 3200 – Urban Geography: Analysis of the growth, distribution, and functional patterns within and among Western cities. Application of urban geographical concepts to city planning problems.

URBN 3275W/SOCI 3901W – Urban Sociology: Social and physical organization of cities and suburbs.

 

STORRS

GEOG 2400E – Introduction to Sustainable Cities (Meets CA 2. CA 4-INT): Pathways to make cities more sustainable from social, economic, and environmental perspectives. Topics include sustainable transportation, renewable energy, recycling of waste, and green infrastructure in contemporary metropolitan areas in developed and developing nations.

URBN/HIST 3541 – The History of Urban America: The development of Urban America with emphasis on social, political, physical, and environmental change in the industrial city.

PP 4034 – Social Policy: Examination of the concepts and principles of public policy analysis, with applications to important social issues.

URBN/POLS 3632 – Urban Politics: Political systems and problems confronting urban governments.

 

WATERBURY

POLS 3842 – Public Administration: The politics of public administration. Role of administrative agencies and officials in American national, state, and local government

URBN 2400. City and Community in Film (Meets CA 1.): Aesthetics, history, and contemporary relevance of American films that feature the urban, suburban, and/or small town landscape as a major “character” shaping plot and story. Films read closely as texts that make meaning through a range of tools, including narrative, mise-en-scene, editing, camera work, and genre conventions.

Frontiers in Historical GIS Symposium