This is an archived copy of the 2023-2024 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.uwgb.edu.

Global Studies

https://www.uwgb.edu/global-studies/

The minor in Global Studies encourages students to become aware of how contemporary political, economic, social, and environmental problems affect vast regions and diverse communities. The curriculum links global awareness to local concerns, emphasizes the responsibilities of democratic citizenship, and engages the challenges of human rights and justice, values and ethics, resource flows, cultural resistances, and environmental crises. The requirements of 24 credits complement general education at the introductory level, promote sharp thematic study in the upper-level core, and encourage practical experiences outside the classroom.

Key questions are: What is globalization? What accounts for the phenomena of globalization? When did the world’s polity, economy, environment, culture, and society become global? What analytical tools exist to help students understand globalization’s influence on politics, cultures, values and ecosystems?

An interdisciplinary introduction provokes students to think about how globalization touches their lives and to analyze distinct responses to globalization’s effects on societies, governments and natural resources. Introductory courses are drawn from existing general education requirements. Students should check carefully the prerequisites for upper-level courses in the minor before choosing lower-level general education courses.

Global Studies upper-level core courses help students acquire knowledge about globalization from a variety of interdisciplinary perspectives, historical experiences, and cultural preferences. Core requirements address the implications of globalization for citizens, states and communities around the world, include surveys of recent literature, and strengthen communication skills and critical thinking.

Students are encouraged to participate in travel courses and study abroad offered by the University. Some travel courses contain global content and may be applied to the Global Studies minor. Please contact an adviser concerning appropriateness of a specific travel course. At least two years of a modern foreign language is strongly recommended.

Upon completing the minor in Global Studies, students will be able to

  • reflect upon and ask questions about connections and contradictions in public debates over globalization. 
  • recognize and identify different disciplinary perspectives being used when discussing globalization.
  • evaluate differences in political systems, including institutional design and the roles that citizens play in them.
  • analyze the complex nature of global environmental sustainability issues and problems and the interrelated roles of science, administration, politics, and technology in their solution.
  • explain how human societies are inextricably connected with local, regional, and global systems.

Minor 

Supporting Courses9
Introduction to Environmental Sciences
World Regions and Concepts: A Geographic Analysis
Choose one of the following courses:
Varieties of World Culture
Macro Economic Analysis
Environment and Society
Human Disease and Society
World Civilizations I
World Civilizations II
World Food and Population Issues
Global Politics and Society
City Life and Globalization
Upper-Level Courses15
Choose five courses from the thematic categories below. At least one courses must be from each categories
Global Democracy: institutions and citizenship
German Politics and Society
The U.S. and the World
Studies in Comparative History
Comparative Politics
International Relations
Foreign and Defense Policies
Global Environmental Sustainability: natural resources, climate change and human needs and services
Family, Kin, and Community
Environmental Sustainability
Global Climate Change
Global Environmental Politics and Policy
Global Environmental History
War and Civilization
Special Topics in Nursing (Topic: Global Aspects of Healthcare)
Cultural Psychology
Global Peoples: nationality, ethnicity, race and religion
Geography of South America
Contemporary Europe
The Rise of Islamic Civilization to 1800
Globalization and Cultural Conflict
Topics in World Cultures
Politics of Developing Areas
Total Credits24

Faculty 

David N Coury; Professor; Ph.D., University of Cincinnati

Marcelo P Cruz; Professor; Ph.D., University of California - Los Angeles

Ekaterina M Levintova; Professor; Ph.D., Western Michigan University

Cristina M Ortiz; Professor; Ph.D., University of Cincinnati

Christine L Vandenhouten; Professor; Ph.D., Marquette University*

Tohoro F Akakpo; Associate Professor; Ph.D., Michigan State University*

Alise Coen; Associate Professor; Ph.D., University of Delaware

Clifton G Ganyard; Associate Professor; Ph.D., State University of New York at Buffalo, chair

Steven J Meyer; Associate Professor; Ph.D., University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Eric J Morgan; Associate Professor; Ph.D., University of Colorado at Boulder

Heidi M Sherman; Associate Professor; Ph.D., University of Minnesota

Elizabeth E Wheat; Associate Professor; Ph.D., Western Michigan University*

Kaden Paulson-Smith; Assistant Professor; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin - Madison

Kevin M Kain; Associate Teaching Professor; Ph.D., Western Michigan University