Will not receive credit for SOCI 50 and SOCL 50. and the expansion of legal “rights” worldwide. We examine law’s norms, customs, culture, and institutions, and explain the proliferation of lawyers in the U.S. Interrelationships between law and society, in the U.S. Will not receive credit for SOCI 40 and SOCL 40. It will make use of both micro and macro sociological work in this area and introduce students to sociological perspectives of contemporary health-care issues. Sociology of Health-Care Issues (4)ĭesigned as a broad introduction to medicine as a social institution and its relationship to other institutions as well as its relation to society. Will not receive credit for SOCI 30 and SOCL 30. Global warming, reproductive medicine, AIDS, and other topical cases prompt students to view science-society interactions as problematic and complex. Science, Technology, and Society (4)Ī series of case studies of the relations between society and modern science, technology, and medicine. Will not receive credit for SOCI 20 and SOCL 20. The course will provide an introduction to theories of social change, as well as prepare the student for upper-division work in comparative-historical sociology. Social Change in the Modern World (4)Ī survey of the major economic, political, and social forces that have shaped the contemporary world. Will not receive credit for SOCI 10R and SOCI 10 or SOCI 10R and SOCL 10. Topics include American culture, inequality, poverty, the family, religion, the role of government, crime, social movements, and politics. This fully online course is an introduction to American society in contemporary, historical, and comparative perspectives. American Society: Social Structure and Culture in the U.S. Will not receive credit for SOCI 10 and SOCI 10R or SOCI 10 and SOCL 10. Topics will include American cultural traditions industrialization class structure the welfare state ethnic, racial, and gender relations the changing position of religion social movements and political trends. (4)Īn introduction to American society in historical, comparative, and contemporary perspectives. Will not receive credit for SOCI 2 and SOCL 1B. While 1B may be taken as an independent course, it is recommended that students take 1A and 1B in sequence, as the latter builds on the former. As in 1A, materials include both theoretical statements and case studies. The focus here is on socialization processes, culture, social reproduction and social control, and collective action. Will not receive credit for SOCI 1 and SOCL 1A.Ī continuation of Sociology/L 1A. Materials include both theoretical statements and case studies. The course focuses on both classical and contemporary views of modern society, on the nature of community, and on inequality, with special attention to class, race, and gender. Lower DivisionĪn introduction to the organizing themes and ideas, empirical concerns, and analytical approaches of the discipline of sociology. Coursesįor course descriptions not found in the UC San Diego General Catalog 2023–24, please contact the department for more information. All courses, faculty listings, and curricular and degree requirements described herein are subject to change or deletion without notice.
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