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Foreign Propaganda, Perceptions and Policy

The goal of this course is to prepare the student to recognize and analyze the use of foreign disinformation and propaganda to affect U.S. perceptions and policy formation, and to employ countermeasures against them.

Propaganda as a tool of statecraft can be traced to antiquity. The refinements and innovations introduced in the 20th century and the information technology revolution give the foreign propagandist greater opportunities than ever to attempt to influence perceptions and policy in the United States and elsewhere. Those who shape public opinion or design or implement U.S. national security strategy and foreign policy are among the principal targets of foreign propaganda.

This course examines the history, theory and methodology of foreign propaganda and disinformation in modern statecraft, both from democratic and non-democratic countries, with an emphasis on how the practitioners target the United States. It is intended to help prepare the student to recognize foreign propaganda in all its forms, to analyze and isolate it, and to employ countermeasures.

The class website, which contains an updated list of readings, assignments and other information, is www.foreignpropaganda.com. The site is open only to registered students during the fall semester.

Semester Available


Fall Semester

Part of


  Specialization in Intelligence (Required)
  Specialization in Public Diplomacy and Political Warfare (Required)
  Introductory Courses (Required)
  Introductory Courses (Required)
  Electives (Choose at least 3)
  Choose Two of the Following Courses
  Electives (select one)

Related Courses


  Information Operations and Information Warfare
  Political Warfare: Past, Present and Future
  Ideas and Values in International Politics

Principal Professor


   J. Michael Waller
Walter and Leonore Annenberg Professor of International Communication, IWP {read more}

Peace, Strategy and Conflict Resolution

The purpose of this course is to help students develop a deeper appreciation of the underlying conditions that provoke conflict and, conversely, that may produce lasting peace, justice, and political order. This course introduces the larger dimensions surrounding the issues of peace, war, and conflict resolution such as the transcendent nature of lasting peace, the relationship between peace and a just moral order, and the diverse approaches to conflict resolution undertaken throughout history.

Principal Professor

  John J. Tierney, Jr.

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