Internship

Last Updated: Tue, 04/14/2026
Syllabus
General Class Information
Academic year:
2026
Semester:
Fall
Course prefix:
PUBP
Course number:
2695
Section:
RDC
CRN
89657
Department (you may add up to three):
Instructor first name:
Mark
Instructor last name:
Taylor
Catalog Description

Undergraduate Internship for Public Policy for academic credit.

Administrative Data
Course status
Active

Sci, Tech & Human Values

Last Updated: Wed, 05/13/2026
Syllabus
General Class Information
Academic year:
2026
Semester:
Fall
Course prefix:
PHIL
Course number:
3127
Section:
K05
CRN
86605
Department (you may add up to three):
Instructor first name:
Hans
Instructor last name:
Klein
Catalog Description

Exploration of the boundaries between science, religion, and social values, examining science and technology in a broader social context. Examines claims that science is isolated from social problems and values. Credit not allowed for both PHIL 3127 and PST 3127.

Administrative Data
Course status
Active

Sci, Tech & Human Values

Last Updated: Wed, 05/13/2026
Syllabus
General Class Information
Academic year:
2026
Semester:
Fall
Course prefix:
PHIL
Course number:
3127
Section:
K06
CRN
86606
Department (you may add up to three):
Instructor first name:
Hans
Instructor last name:
Klein
Catalog Description

Exploration of the boundaries between science, religion, and social values, examining science and technology in a broader social context. Examines claims that science is isolated from social problems and values. Credit not allowed for both PHIL 3127 and PST 3127.

Administrative Data
Course status
Active

Engineering Ethics

Last Updated: Tue, 04/14/2026
Syllabus
General Class Information
Academic year:
2026
Semester:
Fall
Course prefix:
PHIL
Course number:
3109
Section:
R05
CRN
86598
Department (you may add up to three):
Instructor first name:
Cayla
Instructor last name:
Clinkenbeard
Catalog Description

Ethical reasoning in the context of professional work in science and technology. Prepares future technical professionals to approach decision with a coherent ethical framework. Credit not allowed for both PHIL 3109 and PST 3109.

Administrative Data
Course status
Active

Workshop Pub Pol Res I

Last Updated: Mon, 04/13/2026
Syllabus
General Class Information
Academic year:
2026
Semester:
Fall
Course prefix:
PUBP
Course number:
8101
Section:
MFF
CRN
83743
Department (you may add up to three):
Instructor first name:
Mary
Instructor last name:
Fox
Catalog Description

Course provides an overview of research and professional socialization. It presents topics partially satisfying GT RCR policy for in-person training. Student will brainstorm dissertation topics.

Administrative Data
Course status
Active

Environmental Ethics

Last Updated: Tue, 04/14/2026
Syllabus
General Class Information
Academic year:
2026
Semester:
Fall
Course prefix:
PHIL
Course number:
4176
Section:
RK
CRN
89187
Department (you may add up to three):
Instructor first name:
Robert
Instructor last name:
Kirkman
Catalog Description

Conceptual and normative foundations of environmental attitudes and values. Impacts of traditional and modern beliefs that shape human attitudes toward nature on creating a more compatible relationship between humans and their environment. Credit not allowed for both PHIL 4176 and PST 4176.

Administrative Data
Course status
Active

Special Topics

Last Updated: Fri, 04/10/2026
Syllabus
General Class Information
Academic year:
2026
Semester:
Fall
Course prefix:
PUBP
Course number:
8823
Section:
O01
CRN
89892
Department (you may add up to three):
Instructor first name:
Jon
Instructor last name:
Lindsay
Catalog Description

This course provides students with a framework for interpreting power politics in and through cyberspace. The organizing assumption of the course is that classic concepts from international relations remain useful for understanding modern technologies, but they must be combined in new ways to explain the potential for exploitation and subversion at scale. The course provides tools for analyzing cyber power, which is organized deception via information systems for strategic advantage. Cyber power differs in important ways from military power, bargaining power, and soft power. Different political logics are often combined in practice, which creates complex strategic tradeoffs. Students will learn how to analyze these tradeoffs in modern cyber campaigns and in the use of cyber power for national security objectives.

Administrative Data
Course status
Active