| source Johns Hopkins University (11) |
level Upper Level Undergraduate (X) |
department Sociology (X) |
Focused on the "Middle East" neighborhood, nearby the site of JHU's new biomedical park and the downtown campus, students in this course will document and explore this neighborhood's rich history from the 1920s to the present day. Collecting and analyzing oral histories with current and former residents and supporting the work of several community organizations dedicated to improving quality of life for those who make the neighborhood home today will be critical to our work. Interviews, photographs, and related material collected as part of this class will become part of the JHU Center for Africana Studies "East Baltimore Oral History Project," a part of the African Diaspora Pathways Project. Cross-listed with Africana Studies
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
We will ask: "how do arrangements of tasks, rewards, roles, and opportunities in schools affect student learning, behavior, and sense of attachment?" and "in what ways are social control processes in schools related to the demands and dynamics of other institutions, particularly the family and the labor market?" before addressing these questions, we will define social organization and social control, and describe the forms (both intended and unintended) they take in schools.
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
This course is an examination of sociological theories and studies of African-American families and an overview of the major issues confronting African-American family life. The contemporary conditions of black families are explored, as well as the historical events that have influenced the family patterns we currently observe. Special attention will be given to social policies that have evolved as a result of the prominence of any one perspective at a given point in time.
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 230.205 Introduction to social statistics. This course provides "hands on" research experience applying sociological research tools and a sociological perspective to problems of substance. Qualitative observational and/or interviewing methods will be emphasized. Students will design and carry out a research project and write a research report.
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
This course introduces students to medical sociology, which is the application of the sociological perspective to health and health care. Major topics include stress, social epidemiology, and the social organization of health care. Cross-listed with Public Health Studies
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
This course introduces students to medical sociology, which is the application of the sociological perspective to health and health care. Major topics include stress, social epidemiology, and the social organization of health care. Cross-listed with Public Health Studies
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
This course introduces students to medical sociology, which is the application of the sociological perspective to health and health care. Major topics include stress, social epidemiology, and the social organization of health care. Cross-listed with Public Health Studies
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
This course introduces students to medical sociology, which is the application of the sociological perspective to health and health care. Major topics include stress, social epidemiology, and the social organization of health care. Cross-listed with Public Health Studies
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
This course introduces students to medical sociology, which is the application of the sociological perspective to health and health care. Major topics include stress, social epidemiology, and the social organization of health care. Cross-listed with Public Health Studies
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
This course introduces students to medical sociology, which is the application of the sociological perspective to health and health care. Major topics include stress, social epidemiology, and the social organization of health care. Cross-listed with Public Health Studies
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page
Latin American development will be analyzed as a historical process that is driven by intertwined internal socio-economic factors and constraint by the world economy. The inclusion of these countries in the world economy since the colonial times fostered the formation of outward oriented economies based on primary export commodities. After a short period of inward-oriented development, the new global order fostered a reorientation of the national economies towards global markets. The new developmental model led to downsizing of the state, and the reconfiguration of social structures. The course will focus on the analysis of the economic developmental patterns starting in the middle of the 19th century. Finally, in the second half of the semester, we will analyze in depth the contemporary neoliberal approach to development. Globalization is the force that drives economic, social and political processes in Latin America. The course will include case studies as well the social conflicts generated by the increasing polarization of the society. Cross-listed with Program in Latin American Studies
Score: 9.882017 Details | Listing | Web page