Bulletin Archive
This archived information is dated to the 2009-10 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
This archived information is dated to the 2009-10 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
The International Relations major must be declared no earlier than the beginning of sophomore year and no later than the end of the second quarter of the junior year. Students must submit an acceptable proposal to the director of the program and declare IR on Axess. Students completing a double major, or fulfilling International Relations as a secondary major, are also required to file a proposal by the end of the second quarter of the junior year.
Requirements for the major (70 units) are as follows; IR core courses are listed in items 1-5:
The three functional specializations are:
Students must complete a total of seven courses (35 units) for their functional specialization. Four courses must be from the student's functional area (CPHA, CCAS, CIPE); two courses from a second track; and the final course from the third track (4-2-1). Functional specializations are not declared on Axess.
The following courses are approved for each functional specialization. Updated lists are made available every quarter on the web and they are also available in the International Relations office.
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL AND HISTORICAL ANALYSIS (CPHA)
INTNLREL 114D. Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
INTNLREL 116. Politics of Divided Korea
INTNLREL 120.Terrorism and Security in Israel
INTNLREL 125. Japanese Postwar Politics
INTNLREL 131. Globalization and Organizations
INTNREL 136R. Introduction to GLobal Justice
INTNLREL 140A. International Law and International Relations
INTNLREL 140B. Theories of International Law
INTNLREL 163. History and Geography of Contemporary Global Issues
INTNLREL 170. Energy and the Climate
COMM 177K. Specialized Writing and Reporting - Human RIghts Reporting
EASTASN 189K. Politics of Divided Korea
HISTORY 102. The History of the International System (WIM)
HISTORY 120C. 20th-Century Russian and Soviet History
HISTORY 123. Reform and Revolution in Modern Russia, 1856-2008
HISTORY 125. 20th-Century Eastern Europe
HISTORY 137/337. The Holocaust
HISTORY 145B. Africa in the 20th Century
HISTORY 150C. The United States in the Twentieth Century
HISTORY 158. The United States Since 1945
HISTORY 181B. The Middle East in the 20th Century
HISTORY 195. Modern Korean History
HISTORY 195C. Modern Japanese History
HISTORY 197. Southeast Asia: From Antiquity to the Modern Era
HISTORY 198. The History of Modern China
HISTORY 202/306E. International History and International Relations
HISTORY 224/324. Violence, Islam, and the State in Central Asia
HISTORY 224A/324A. Modern Russia, Iran, and Afghanistan
HISTORY 228/328. Circles of Hell: Poland in World War II
HISTORY 252/355. Decision Making in International Crises: The A-Bomb, the Korean War, and the Cuban Missile Crisis
HISTORY 256/356. U.S.-China Relations: From the Opium War to Tiananmen
IPS 210. The Politics of International Humanitarian Action
IPS 211. The Transition from War to Peace: Peacebuilding Strategies
IPS 219. The Role of Intelligence in U.S. Foreign Policy
IPS 220. The US, Europe and the World
IPS 243. Missile Defense
MS&E 93Q. Nuclear Weapons, Terrorism and Energy
MS&E 193/193W/293. Technology and National Security
POLISCI 110B. Strategy, War, and Politics
POLISCI 110D/110Y. War and Peace in American Foreign Policy
POLISCI 111D. British Politics
POLISCI 113F. The United Nations and Global Governance
POLISCI 114S. International Security in a Changing World
POLISCI 116. History of Nuclear Weapons (Same as HISTORY 103E)
POLISCI 140L. China in World Politics
POLISCI 144T. Democracies and Dictatorships
POLISCI 147. Comparative Democratic Development
POLISCI 147S. Comparative Democratic Politics
POLISCI 148/348. Chinese Politics: The Transformation and the Era of Reform
POLISCI 149S. Islam and the West
POLISCI 149T. Middle Eastern Politics
POLISCI 210C. Globalizations and Discontents
POLISCI 212. Managing Global Complexity (Same as IPS 201)
POLISCI 217. International Organizations
POLISCI 218. U.S. Relations in Iran
POLISCI 245R. Politics in Modern Iran
POLISCI 248. Mexican Politics
POLISCI 248S. Latin American Politics
POLISCI 346S. The Logic of Authoritarian Government, Ancient and Modern
SOC 167A/267A. Asia-Pacific Transformation
COMPARATIVE CULTURE AND SOCIETY (CCAS)
INTNLREL 114D. Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
INTNLREL 141A. Camera as a Witness
INTNLREL 161A. Global Human Geography: Asia and Africa
INTNLREL 161B. Global Human Geography: Europe and Americas
INTNREL 165A. Global Governance and Human Rights
INTNLREL 166. Russia and Islam
AFRICAST 111/211. Education for All? The Global and Local in Public Policy Making in Africa
AFRICAST 107. Community Restructuring and Development in South Africa
CASA 77/277. Japanese Society and Culture
EASTASN 118. History, Memory and Citizenship in East Asia
ECON 143. Ethics in Economics Policy
EDUC 136/306D. World, Societal, and Educational Change: Comparative Perspectives
HISTORY 185B. Jews in the Modern World
HISTORY 221B. The Woman Question in Modern Russia
HISTORY 227/327. East European Women and War in the 20th Century
HISTORY 245E/347E. Health and Society in Africa
HISTORY 248S/448A. African Societies and Colonial States
HISTORY 295J. Chinese Women's History
IPS 210. The Politics of International Humanitarian Action
IPS 221B. Citizenship and Immigration
JAPANGEN 51/251. Japanese Business Culture
PHIL 171/271. Justice (Same as ETHICSOC 171, IPS 208, POLISCI 136S, PUBLPOL 207)
POLISCI 141. The Global Politics of Human Rights
POLISCI 149S. Islam and the West
POLISCI 215. Explaining Ethnic Violence
SOC 110/210. Politics and Society
SOC 111/211. State and Society in Korea
SOC 117A/217A. China Under Mao
STS 110. Ethics and Public Policy (Same as MS&E 197, PUBLPOL 103B)
COMPARATIVE AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY (CIPE)
INTNLREL 114D. Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law
INTNLREL 115. Development Issues in South Asia
INTNLREL 117. Varieties of Capitalism in East Asia: Politics and Economic Reforms
INTNLREL 118. The Political Economy of Modern Iran
INTNLREL 122A. The Political Economy of the European Union
INTNLREL 130. Science, Technology, and Development
INTNLREL 133. Introduction to Comparative and International Political Economy
INTNLREL 143. Nongovernmental Organizations and Development in Poor Countries
INTNLREL 147. The Political Economy of the Southern Cone of South America
INTNLREL 148. Economic Integration of the Americas
INTNLREL 149. The Economics and Political Economy of the Multilateral Trade System
BIO 147/247. Controlling Climate Change in the Twenty-First Century
EASTASN 183C. Doing Business in China
EASTASN 185C/285C. Economic Development of Greater China: Past, Present, and Future
ECON 106. World Food Economy
ECON 111. Money and Banking
ECON 113. Technology and Economic Change
ECON 115. European Economic History
ECON 117. Economic History and Modernization of the Islamic Middle East
ECON 118. Development Economics
ECON 120. Socialist Economies in Transition
ECON 122. Economic Development of Latin America
ECON 124. Contemporary Japanese Economy
ECON 126. Economics of Health and Medical Care (Same as BIOMEDIN 156/256)
ECON 150. Economic Policy Analysis (Same as PUBLPOL 104)
ECON 155. Environmental Economics and Policy (Same as EARTHSYS 112)
ECON 162. Monetary Economics
ECON 165. International Trade and Finance
ECON 166. International Trade
ECON 167. European Monetary and Economic Integration
ECON 169/269. International Financial Markets and Monetary Institutions
HISTORY 279/379. Latin American Development: Economy and Society, 1800-2000
HUMBIO 129. Critical Issues in International Women's Health
HUMBIO 129S. International Health
IPS 222. Economic Development
POLISCI 110A. Sovereignty and Globalization
POLISCI 110C/110X. America and the World Economy (110C fulfills WIM)
POLISCI 140. Political Economy of Development
POLISCI 211. Political Economy of East Asia
POLISCI 213R. Political Economy of Financial Crisis
POLISCI 216. Law, Economics, and Politics of International Trade (Same as LAW 306)
POLISCI 242S. Politics of Welfare State Expansion and Reform
POLISCI 247R. Politics and Economics in Democracies (WIM)
1- and 2-unit options
INTNLREL 191. International Relations Journal
INDEPENDENT STUDY/HONORS
INTNLREL 197. Directed Reading in International Relationsopen only to declared International Relations majors.
INTNLREL 198. Senior Thesisopen only to declared International Relations majors with approved senior thesis proposals.
INTNLREL 199. Honors Research: Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law in Developing Countries
INTNLREL 200A. International Relations Honors Field Research
INTNLREL 200B. International Relations Honors Seminar
The area specializations are: Africa, Europe, Latin America, and Russia/East Europe. Students must complete a total of seven courses (35 units) with five courses directly related to their area specialization. Three of these five courses must be in one of the three tracks (CPHA, CCAS, CIPE), one course in a second track, and the final course in the third track. The ten remaining units must be fulfilled by comparative or further area course work.
Students must also demonstrate proficiency in a language, other than English, commonly spoken in the area chosen, by completing two years of language study or by passing a second-year, third-quarter proficiency exam.
Check the IR office for updated information about the area specialization requirements. Area specializations are not declared on Axess.
The International Relations honors program offers qualified students the opportunity to conduct a major independent research project under faculty guidance. Such a project requires a high degree of initiative and dedication, significant amounts of time and energy, and demonstrated skills in research and writing.
In their junior year, students should consult with prospective honors advisers, choose the courses that provide academic background in their areas of inquiry, and demonstrate an ability to conduct independent research. Students can select from the IR honors option or the CDDRL (Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law) option which focuses on issues of democracy, development, and the rule of law; for information on the CDDRL, see http://cddrl.stanford.edu.
Students should submit their honors thesis proposal late in Winter Quarter of the junior year; check with IR office for the exact deadline.
Prerequisites for participation include a 3.5 grade point average (GPA), a strong overall academic record, good academic standing, successful experience in writing a research paper, and submission of an acceptable thesis proposal. Students are required to enroll in INTNLREL 200A, International Relations Honors Field Research, in Spring Quarter of their junior year and consider participating in Honors College. CDDRL option students should enroll in INTNLREL 199, Honors Research: Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law in Developing Countries. In their senior year, honors students must enroll in INTNLREL 200B in Autumn Quarter and in research units each quarter with their faculty adviser. Honors students present a formal defense of their theses in mid-May. Students must receive at least a grade of 'B+' in order to graduate with honors in International Relations.
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