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.
To receive a B.A. in Political Science, a student must:
International Relations (1, 110-119, 210-219, 310-319)
American Politics (2, 120-129, 220-229, 320-329)
Political Theory (3, 130-139, 230-239, 330-339)
Comparative Politics (4, 140-149, 240-249, 340-349)
Methodology (150-159, 350-359)
POLISCI 1. Introduction to International Relations
POLISCI 2. American National Government and Politics
POLISCI 3. Introduction to Political Philosophy
POLISCI 4. Introduction to Comparing Political Systems
POLISCI 151A. Doing Political Science,
or POLISCI 151B. Data Analysis for Political Science
AFRICAST 111/211. Education for All? The Global and Local in Public Policy Making in Africa
AFRICAST 112/212. AIDS, Literacy, and Land: International Aid and the Problems of Development in Africa
ECON 1A,1B. Introductory Economics A, B
EDUC 260X. Understanding Statistical Models and their Social Science Applications (Same as HRP 239, STATS 209)
ETHICSOC 181M. The Ethics of Risk (Same as PHIL 79)
ETHICSOC 185M. Contemporary Moral Problems (Same as PHIL 72)
HISTORY 150A. Colonial and Revolutionary America
HUMBIO 172A/B. Children, Youth, and the Law
IPS 206B. Organizations (Same as PUBLPOL 204B)
IPS 243. The History, Science, Technology, and Politics of Missile Defense
MS&E 193/193W/293. Technology and National Security
OSPBEIJ 66. Essentials of China's Criminal Justice System
OSPBER 115X. The German Economy: Past and Present
OSPBER 126X. A People's Union? Money, Markets, and Identity in the EU
OSPBER 15. Shifting Alliances? The European Union and the U.S.
OSPFLOR 106V. Italy: From Agrarian to Post-Industrial Society
OSPFLOR 78. An Extraordinary Experiment: Politics and Policies of the New European Union
OSPKYOTO 215X. The Political Economy of Japan
OSPMOSC 72. Space, Politics, and Modernity in Russia
OSPMOSC 74. Post-Soviet Eurasia and SCO: Society, Politics, Integration
OSPOXFRD 18. Making Public Policy: An Introduction to Political Philosophy, Politics, and Economics
OSPOXFRD 24. British and American Constitutional Systems in Comparative Perspective
OSPOXFRD 35. Modern UK and European Government and Politics
OSPPARIS 122X. Challenges of Integration in the European Union
OSPPARIS 211X. Political Attitudes and Behavior in Contemporary France
OSPSANTG 116X. Modernization and its Discontents: Chilean Politics at the Turn of the Century
OSPSANTG 129X. Latin America in the International System
OSPSANTG 221X. Political Transition and Democratic Consolidation: Chile in Comparative Perspective
PUBLPOL 102. Organizations and Public Policy
PUBLPOL 183. Philanthropy and Social Innovation
REES 320. State and Nation Building in Central Asia
The honors program offers qualified students an opportunity to conduct independent research, write a thesis summarizing their findings, and make a presentation of their work. During the process of research, analysis, thinking, drafting, rethinking, and redrafting, students work closely with a faculty adviser and their fellow students.
Applicants must have a minimum grade point average (GPA) of 3.5, and an adviser who is a member of the academic council. Students interested in pursuing honors should apply in Axess by the beginning of Spring Quarter of their junior year. Applications can be obtained from the department office and will be due by the first Friday of Spring Quarter to the undergraduate administrator in Encina Hall West, room 100.
Students pursuing honors must complete the following by the end of Spring Quarter of their junior year: Methods requirement (POLISCI 150A,B,C, 151A, 151B, STATS 60, or ECON 102A), WIM requirement, and a completed research paper from an advanced undergraduate seminar or directed reading. Students are required to enroll in one quarter of POLISCI 299Q, Junior Research Seminar, in spring quarter of their junior year. This C/NC course is designed to help students map out a concrete time line for their thesis work.
Students who are accepted into the program should plan to make the thesis the focus of their senior year. They should enroll in 10-15 units of POLISCI 299A,B,C, which covers research and writing directed by the student's adviser.
To complete the honors program, students must:
Students cannot apply units from the POLISCI 299Q, Junior Research Seminar, toward the 70-unit requirement for the major. However, students can apply up to 10 units from POLISCI 299A,B,C Senior Project, toward the 70-unit requirement.
There are several annual prizes for undergraduate students: the Arnaud B. Leavelle Memorial Prize for the best paper in the History of Political Thought sequence (POLISCI 130A,B,C), a cash prize for the best thesis written in political theory, the Lindsay Peters, Jr., Memorial Prize for the outstanding student each year in POLISCI 2, and Cottrell Prizes for outstanding students in POLISCI 1, 3, and 4.
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