Skip to Content

Course Search Results

  • 3.00 Credits

    This course examines topics in development economics focusing on the global South. Topics include meanings and measures of economic development, poverty, and income inequality; brief historical background of today's low- and middle-income economies; the major macroeconomic theories and approaches to economic development ranging from developmentalist theories to neoliberalism to new developmentalism, focusing on the problems of industrialization, external payment imbalances, environmental degradation, structural adjustment programs and market reforms imposed by international financial and trade institutions; and the debates on alternatives to the reigning neoliberal economic policies. Graduate students should register for ECON 6530 and will be held to higher standards and/or additional work.
  • 3.00 Credits

    The purpose of this course is to examine and understand the logic and historical evolution of capitalism and socialism as economic systems. We will examine varieties of capitalist systems. We will study racial, ethnic, class, and gender economic roles and outcomes in the context of capitalist development. We will use a political economy approach to understand the role of market forces and other institutions such as the state, the family, cultural evolution, and the legal system in reinforcing, changing, or diminishing economic differences among people. Graduate students should register for ECON 6540 and will be held to higher standards and/or additional work.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course presents an in-depth treatment of trade theory and policy and relevant controversies. The course addresses the determinants of trade patterns: we study classical and neoclassical trade theory models, as well as their limitations; examine trade policies (tariffs, quotas, subsidies, etc.) and their uses; and set current trade and trade policy within a historical context. Additionally, as class interest and time permits, we will examine other trade-related issues of our highly globalized world, including the rise and current dominance of multi-national firms; economic growth and development as it relates to international trade; global, regional and bilateral trade agreements and institutions; international factor movements (technology and labor); and the trade-related difficulties of formalizing international environmental policy. Graduate students should register for ECON 6550 and will be held to higher standards and/or additional work.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course examines the gender dimensions of economic development and globalization from the perspective of feminist economics. The main focus is on gender inequalities in paid and unpaid work, control over resources, and well-being outcomes in the global South. The course first provides a historical overview of the policy-oriented field of gender and development that emerged in the 1970s, the conceptual frameworks of feminist economics, and measures of gender inequality. The second part reviews selected topics, including structural adjustment/austerity macroeconomic policies; women's employment and working conditions in export sectors; poverty, microcredit, conditional cash transfers; international migration, trafficking; violence against women; gender-responsive budgets. Graduate students should register for ECON 6560 and will be held to higher standards and/or additional work.
  • 1.00 - 5.00 Credits

    Prerequisites: Instructor Consent.
  • 1.00 - 5.00 Credits

    For upper-division students of high scholastic standing. Prerequisites: Instructor Consent.
  • 1.00 - 4.00 Credits

    No course description available.
  • 1.00 - 6.00 Credits

    Topics vary. Taught by members of the University Statistics Committee. Check current class schedule for cross-listings.
  • 3.00 Credits

    History, concepts, and theoretical base for multicultural education. Models and strategies for teaching minority students as well as effective curriculum material. Creating a classroom climate for acceptance of differences--cultural, linguistic, genetic, disabling. Prerequisite to early childhood, elementary, and secondary teacher certification programs. Prerequisite: ETHNC 2550 or 2560 or 2570 or 2580 or 2590.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Although schools usually take center stage when the topic of education comes up, teaching and learning are not confined by the walls of school buildings. Community centers, grassroots organizations, sports fields, art studios, resettlement agencies, online communities ' all of these can be contexts for facilitated educational experiences. The people who work in these spaces may be called teachers but also may go by other names, like youth worker, teaching artist, after-school coordinator, community organizer, or mentor. They continue long traditions in the US and abroad of what is often called 'community education.' At its best, community education is rooted in the strengths, cultures, and priorities of particular communities. Not limited by the constraints of traditional school curricula, community education offers a more holistic approach to learning that includes goals related to positive youth development, critical consciousness, community wellbeing, and action for social change. This course introduces the theory and principles of community education and explores the history of community education in the US and abroad. Students will be introduced to an array of different approaches to community education and will have the chance to learn from community-based educators in Salt Lake valley.