Apply

Donate Request Information

  Facebook Twitter Google Plus Soundcloud YouTube LinkedIn RSS  

American Founding Principles and Foreign Policy

IWP 608
Four credits

American foreign policy rests in part on the character of America.  The American political order is a particular expression of Western political thought. Thus, an understanding of what fuels American foreign policy is in part dependent on a solid understanding of Western political thought: ancient, medieval, and modern. The course emphasizes the way in which the American political order and its philosophic foundations affect U.S. foreign policymaking. Particular attention will be given to the Federalist and the writings and speeches of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln and other American statesmen of renown.

Semester Available


Fall Semester
Spring Semester

Principal Professor


   Joseph R. Wood
Professor {read more}

Immigration and National Security

 

Immigration is a central issue that illuminates the United States’s view of its role in the world. This course examines the history of immigration policies, the arguments surrounding current policy debates, and the problem of naturalization, addressing these issues from economic, demographic, environmental, cultural, and national security perspectives.

 

Copyright 2013 Institute of World Politics. All Rights Reserved eResources