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Politics B.A.

Information and Policies

Introduction

The study of politics is a critical part of a liberal arts education. Since political issues and practices are embedded in and reflective of the whole experience of a community, the study of politics can constitute the center of a broad-based course of study drawing on history, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, political science, economics, literature, science, and law.

Politics students at the University of California, Santa Cruz have many opportunities for field work and for internship placements. Students are encouraged to develop their own extensive independent research projects. The Politics Department also encourages students to pursue additional academic opportunities while at UC Santa Cruz. Possible programs include: the UCDC program, a one-quarter program at the UC campus in Washington, D.C. that includes coursework and an internship, UC Sacramento, a one-quarter program at the UC Center in Sacramento, and the UC Education Abroad Program.

Politics faculty members give students individual attention to help them in their studies. Faculty members are firmly committed to the value of a liberal arts education, but they are also actively engaged in programs of research and writing. The research interests of the faculty range from questions of justice to the problem of war, from campaign strategy to relations between the rich and the poor countries of the world.

No specific courses at the high school level are required for admission to the major in politics at UCSC. Courses in history, literature, philosophy, and the social sciences, whether taken at the high school or college level, are appropriate background and preparation for the politics major.

A major in politics is appropriate for students interested in careers in law, journalism, or teaching; in political and governmental work from local to international settings; in non-governmental organizations; and in corporations dealing with regulatory or global issues. Many UCSC politics graduates have also gone on to do advanced work in distinguished graduate and professional schools. Others have found active and challenging careers in business and community organizing. Still others have turned to scholarship and writing. But regardless of career direction, the most significant purpose of the politics major is to help educate a reflective and activist citizenry capable of sharing power and responsibility in a contemporary democracy.

Program Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of the major, students will have met the following objectives:

  1. understand the origins, development, and nature of political institutions, practices, and ideas;
  2. place particular political phenomena in broader context (national, historical, cross-cultural, and theoretical, etc);
  3. demonstrate familiarity with various theoretical approaches to the study of politics, and their application in different geographic and substantive areas;
  4. critically evaluate arguments about political institutions, practices, and ideas based on logic and evidence;
  5. develop and sustain coherent written and oral arguments regarding political phenomena, theories, and values based on appropriate empirical and/or textual evidence and logic.

Academic Advising for the Program

Undergraduate Advisor

The undergraduate advisor offers specific information about navigating through the program and the curriculum and assists students with prerequisites, requirements, policies, procedures, learning support, guidance on internships, scholarships, and opportunities for undergraduate research. Politics advising is located in Merrill 27 and can be reached at polimajor@ucsc.edu.

Transfer students should also consult the Transfer Information and Policy section.

Peer Advisors

Peer advising assists with academic planning, guidance on major and minor requirements, and preparation of declaration paperwork. Peer advising can be reached at lgstpoli@ucsc.edu.

Advising Hours

Politics Advising

Getting Started in the Major: Frosh

This major is not highly sequential or course intensive. Although it is advisable to begin taking courses toward the major in the first year, it is not required. To ensure timely completion of the major, prospective politics majors are encouraged to meet with a major advisor to develop an academic plan during their first year.

Transfer Information and Policy

Transfer Admission Screening Policy

No major preparation courses are required prior to transfer; however, one or two of the following courses or their equivalents are recommended to ensure timely graduation.

POLI 1Politics: Power, Principle, Process, and Policy

5

POLI 3Keywords: Concepts in Politics

5

POLI 4Citizenship and Action

5

POLI 17U.S. and the World Economy

5

POLI 20American Politics

5

POLI 21Governing the Golden State

5

POLI 60Comparative Politics

5

POLI 61Politics of Social Policy

5

POLI 70Global Politics

5

Prospective students are also encouraged to complete the Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum (IGETC) or to complete all UC Santa Cruz general education requirements before matriculation.

Getting Started in the Major: Transfer Students

To ensure a smooth transition into UC Santa Cruz and timely completion of the major, transfer students should meet with the politics undergraduate advisor as early as possible to discuss a two-year major planner and course enrollment. Completion of a lower-division politics course in the first quarter will allow timely declaration of the major (required in the second quarter of enrollment).

Major Qualification Policy and Declaration Process

Major Qualification

Students may declare the major after completing two lower-division politics courses numbered POLI 1–POLI 70 with grades of C/P or better. These courses are normally taken during the first year for frosh.

Appeal Process

Students who are approaching the campus declaration deadline and who have not completed two lower-division courses POLI 1-POLI 70, or their transfer equivalents, with grades of C or better, may petition to declare the major: the petition will either be approved, denied, or provided with conditions (e.g., completion of some courses with certain grades) to be resolved within at most one more enrolled quarter.

How to Declare a Major

Petition to declare your major as soon as you have met qualification requirements and/or reach your declaration deadline quarter, whichever comes first. Before submitting the petition, students are required to meet with Politics Advising to create an academic plan. A template planner can be found here. For students needing guidance on the declaration of major process, signing up for a declaration of major workshop is highly recommended.

Letter Grade Policy

This program does not have a letter grade policy.

Double Majors and Major/Minor Combinations Policy

The department accepts proposals for double majors. A student pursuing a double major meets the full requirements of the politics major as well as the full requirements of the other major.

The Politics Department offers a combined major with the Latin American and Latino Studies Department. Requirements may be found in the Latin American and Latino studies section of the catalog.

Honors

Students receiving "Honors" and "Highest Honors" in the politics major upon graduation will typically have taken at least 10 major courses for a letter grade and will have achieved in those courses GPAs of 3.7 and 3.85 respectively. Final determinations about honors are made by a faculty committee that judges the rigor, breadth, depth, improvement, and overall achievement evident in the student's academic record in the major.

Independent and Field Studies

Students may petition the department to substitute only one upper-division independent study or field study toward the elective requirement in the politics major. UCDC and UCSAC internships are exempt from this limit.

Requirements and Planners

Course Requirements

Lower-Division Courses

Two lower-division politics courses

Students complete two courses numbered POLI 1 through POLI 70, as a foundation for continued success in the politics major and as a requirement to declare the major. These courses are normally taken during the student's first year.

Upper-Division Courses

Four upper-division politics core courses.

The following four groups of courses constitute the core of the politics major. Four courses are required: two courses from one group, one course from a second group, and one course from a third group. In general, upper-division courses are not recommended for frosh. This requirement also satisfies the disciplinary communication requirement.

Theory
POLI 105A
/LGST 105A
Ancient Political Thought

5

POLI 105B
/LGST 105B
Early Modern Political Thought

5

POLI 105C
/LGST 105C
Modern Political Thought

5

POLI 105D
/LGST 105D
Contemporary Political Theory: Modernity and its Discontents

5

U.S. Politics
POLI 120A
/LGST 120A
Congress, President, and the Court in American Politics

5

POLI 120B
/LGST 120B
Society and Democracy in American Political Development

5

POLI 120C
/LGST 120C
State and Capitalism in American Political Development

5

Comparative
POLI 140AEuropean Politics

5

POLI 140CLatin American Politics

5

POLI 140DPolitics of East Asia

5

POLI 140EMiddle East Politics

5

Global Politics/International Relations
POLI 160ATheories of International and World Politics

5

POLI 160B
/LGST 160B
International Law

5

POLI 160CSecurity, Conflict, Violence, War

5

POLI 160DInternational Political Economy

5

Four upper-division politics electives

Four additional courses selected from POLI 100-POLI 189.

Disciplinary Communication (DC) Requirement

Students of every major must satisfy that major’s upper-division Disciplinary Communication (DC) requirement. The DC requirement for politics majors is satisfied by completing any three of the four required core courses. The politics core course list is detailed above in the major requirements.

Comprehensive Requirement

The comprehensive requirement in the Politics Department can be satisfied in any of the following methods:

  • Senior Seminar: Successful completion of a politics senior seminar (POLI 190 series) that includes the writing of an extensive paper (no less than 15 pages) with substantial research content. To enroll in a specific POLI 190 seminar, students must have successfully completed the prerequisite courses listed in the seminar’s catalog course description.
  • Additional (Fifth and Sixth) Electives: Successful completion of two additional politics upper-division electives numbered POLI 100-189, one of which includes a substantial writing component comparable to a paper for a senior seminar, either as part of the existing course requirements or added with the approval of the instructor. The student must receive prior approval from the instructor of the course with the substantial writing component, and must enroll in a two-credit independent study, POLI 199F, as part of this option. Generally, instructors with the title of lecturer are not available to supervise POLI 199F.
  • Graduate Seminar: Successful completion of a politics graduate seminar (enrollment is contingent on the written recommendation of two politics faculty) that includes the writing of an extensive paper (no less than 15 pages) with substantial research content.
  • Thesis (2-3 quarters): Successful completion of a senior thesis (POLI 195A, POLI 195B, POLI 195C) of a minimum of 50 pages. This option is for students interested in working on original research and writing under the supervision of a politics faculty member.

Planners

The tables below are for informational purposes and do not reflect all university, general education, and credit requirements. See Undergraduate Graduation Requirements for more information.

A four-year course plan for frosh majoring in politics and a two-year course plan for transfer students are provided below.

Four-Year Sample Course Planner for Frosh Students

Year Fall Winter Spring Summer
Entering College 1A
Summer Edge (optional)
1st (frosh) POLI (Lower-division) POLI (Lower-division)
College 1 WRIT 1/WRIT 1E (if needed)
2nd (soph) POLI (Upper-division elective) POLI (Upper-division elective) POLI (Upper-division core)
WRIT 2*
3rd (junior) POLI (Upper-division core) POLI (Upper-division elective) POLI (Upper-division core)
POLI (Upper-division elective) POLI (Upper-division core)
4th (senior) POLI 190 (Senior Seminar)

* WRIT 2 should be taken in or before spring quarter of the second year.

In addition to the specific courses shown in this four-year planner, a student must complete courses satisfying the general education requirements. While many politics courses that fulfill major requirements also fulfill a GE requirement, which GE requirements are fulfilled by completion of the major depends on which specific courses a student takes to fulfill the major requirements.

Two-Year Sample Course Planner for Transfer Students

Year Fall Winter Spring Summer
Entering KRSG 1T
Summer Edge (optional)
1st (junior) POLI (Lower-division)* POLI (Upper-division elective) POLI (Upper-division elective)
POLI (Lower-division) POLI (Upper-division core) POLI (Upper-division core)
POLI (Upper-division elective)
2nd (senior) POLI (Upper-division core) POLI 190 (Senior Seminar)
POLI (Upper-division elective) POLI (Upper-division core)

* WRIT 2 should be taken in or before spring quarter of the second year.

This planner assumes that a student has completed all general education requirements–beyond major preparation requirements before coming to UC Santa Cruz.

*Articulated equivalent courses may be taken prior to transfer.