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On this page: Introduction | Programs |
See also: Faculty Members | Course Descriptions | Course Winter Timetable | Prospective Student Guide to Academic Programs | More on Department

Introduction

University College offers a number of programs and courses outside the areas traditionally covered by departments. These include programs and courses in Aboriginal Studies, Canadian Studies, Cognitive Science, Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence, Drama, Health Studies, Peace and Conflict Studies, and Sexual Diversity Studies, in addition to 199Y Seminars, and introductory courses for non-specialists in such areas as mathematics, physics, and architecture. The overall aims of the College Program are to foster interdisciplinary work in significant areas of study and to encourage intellectual breadth. Many program courses are open to students not enroled in the programs themselves.

The Aboriginal Studies Program (Major, Minor) is described elsewhere in this Calendar, under ABS -Aboriginal Studies.

The Canadian Studies Program (Specialist, Major, Minor) offers opportunities to study the structure of Canadian culture and society in an interdisciplinary manner and to explore the ways in which cultural, social, economical and political developments are linked and how they vary geographically in this diverse country. Students in the Specialist and Major programs select four courses within one of several themes listed below and they are encouraged to consider additional courses in Aboriginal Studies in completing the requirements of the Program. A student who wishes to create a new “theme” which best meets her/his interests is encouraged to discuss it with the Program Director.

The Cognitive Science Program (Specialist, Major) is an interdisciplinary exploration of the nature of cognition, drawing on the perspectives of Philosophy, Psychology, and Linguistics.

The Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence Program (Specialist) is an interdisciplinary exploration of the nature of cognition, drawing mainly on the perspectives of Computer Science and two of Linguistics, Philosophy, and Psychology.

The Drama Program (Specialist, Major, Minor) is described elsewhere in this Calendar, under Drama.

The Health Studies Program (Specialist, Major) focuses on health policy, practices, statistical methods, social and cultural expression, and the many areas of study that surround, interact with and support bio-medical research and clinical activity. The Major serves as a general introduction; the Specialist provides a more intense research focus with greater statistical emphasis.

The Peace and Conflict Studies Program (Specialist, Major) provides undergraduates with an interdisciplinary education in the causes of human conflict and strategies for its resolution; topics of study include war, revolution, rebellion, ethnic strife, international law, and negotiation theory.

The Sexual Diversity Studies Program (Minor) allows students to focus on questions of sexual identity, difference, and dissidence across disciplinary lines and cultural frameworks.

UNI, DRM and ABS courses are staffed by a combination of specific program staff members and members of various University departments, and are open to all students of the University. Pamphlets describing University College programs are available from the College.

Enquiries:

Program Office, University College, Room 173 (416-978-8746)

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE PROGRAMS

ABORIGINAL STUDIES — See under separate entry ABS

CANADIAN STUDIES PROGRAM (B.A.)

Consult Program Office, Room 173, University College, 416-978-8746

Completion of four courses is required for enrolment in the Canadian Studies Specialist or Major program; no minimum GPA required.


Specialist program (Hon.B.A.):

(12 full courses or their equivalent including at least three 300+series courses and at least one 400-
series course)

First Year:

One full course from the following list: ANT 100Y1; ECO 100Y1/105Y1; ENG 140Y1; FRE 140Y1; FSL 121Y1/161Y1/163H1/181Y1; GGR 107Y1/124Y1; POL 102Y1/103Y1; SOC 101Y1

First or Second Year:



1. UNI 220Y1; HIS 263Y1

2. One full course equivalent from FSL 161Y1/163H1/181Y1/183H1/261Y1/262Y1/264Y1/281Y1; ABS 210Y1/310Y1

Higher Years:



1. UNI 320Y1, 420Y1

2. Any four full course equivalents from one of the themes listed below plus two courses from any of the themes and/or from any ABS course

Major program (B.A.):

(8 full courses or their equivalent including at least two 300+series courses)

First Year:

One full course from the following list: ANT 100Y1; ECO 100Y1/105Y1; ENG 140Y1; FRE 140Y1; FSL 121Y1/161Y1/163H1/181Y1; GGR 107Y1/124Y1; POL 102Y1/103Y1; SOC 101Y1

First or Second Year:

UNI 220Y1; HIS 263Y1

Higher Years:



1. UNI 320Y1

2. Four full course equivalents from one of the themes listed below, one of which must be a 300+series courses

Minor program (B.A.):

(4 full courses)

1. One full course from the following list: ANT 100Y1; ECO 100Y1/105Y1; ENG 140Y1; FRE 140Y1; FSL 121Y1/161Y1/163H1/181Y1; GGR 107Y1/ 124Y1; POL 102Y1/103Y1; SOC 101Y1

2. UNI 220Y1; HIS 263Y1

3. UNI 320Y1

THE CANADIAN CULTURAL EXPERIENCE

ANT204Y1 Social & Cultural Anthropology

ANT323H1 Expressions of Popular Culture

ANT365Y1 Aboriginal Societies of North America

DRM268H1 Canadian Theatre History

ECO321Y1 Canadian Economic History Since 1500

ECO323Y1 Canadian Economic Development since
Confederation

ENG215H1 The Canadian Short Story

ENG216Y1 Twentieth Century Canadian Fiction

ENG252Y1 Canadian Literature

ENG254Y1 Contemporary Native North American
Literature

ENG350H1 Early Canadian Literature

ENG354Y1 Modern Canadian Poetry

ENG356H1 Topics in Canadian Literature

FAH376H1 Canadian Architecture: A Survey

FAH377H1 Toronto Architecture

FAH415H1 Problems in Canadian Painting

FAH416H1 Issues in Recent Canadian Art

FCS398H1 Diaries of Women Writers in France and
Québec

GGR240Y1 Historical Geography of the Americas

GGR246H1 Geography of Canada

HIS312H1 Immigration to Canada

HIS361Y1 Twentieth-Century Canada

HIS387H1 Ontario 1867-1900

HIS409H1 Culture, Nationality & the State in
Canada: Since 1850

HIS410H1 Spectacles, Crowds & Parades in Canada

HIS419Y1 Canadian Popular Culture, 1880 - Present

HIS462H1 Canadian Political Tradition

HIS464Y1 The Canadian Prairie West

HIS469H1 Religion, Culture & Society in Canada

HIS472H1 Canadian Aboriginal/Non-Aboriginal
Relations

HIS493H1 Cultural Encounters in Early Canada

INI308H1 The City of Toronto

INI385H1 English-Canadian Film

ITA233Y1 Ethnicity & Mainstream: Italian
Canadian Culture

ITA334H1 Italian Canadian Literature: Identity and
Voice

ITA493H1 Topics in Italian Canadian Studies

JAG321H1 Aboriginal People and Environmental
Issues in Canada

JAL253H1 Language and Society

JAL254H1 Sociolinguistics

JUG320H1 The Canadian Wilderness

LIN201H1 Canadian English

POL311Y1 Ideas and Ideologies in Canadian
Politics

POL407Y1 Canadian Political Thought

RLG307Y1 Religion and Society in Canada

SMC320H1 The Catholic Church in Canada

SLA238H1 Literature of the Ukrainian-Canadian
Experience

SOC360Y1 The Sociology of Cultural Studies

UNI218H1 Voices in Canadian Writing

UNI221H1 Culture & Media in Canada

UNI311H1 The Political Economy of Canadian
Sport

UNI330Y1 Intellect & Imagination in English
Canada

UNI335H1 The National Film Board of Canada

UNI430H1 Senior Seminar: Rights in the Canadian
Context

THE FRENCH PRESENCE IN CANADA

ECO321Y1 Canadian Economic History since 1500

ECO323Y1 Canadian Economic Development since
Confederation

FAH376H1 Canadian Architecture: A Survey

FAH415H1 Problems in Canadian Painting

FCS398H1 Diaries of Women Writers in France and
Québec

FRE210Y1 Introduction to Québec Literature and
Culture

FRE310H1 Québec Novel I: From the Land to the
City

FRE312H1 Québec Novel II: The Quiet Revolution

FRE314H1 Québec Novel III: Contemporary
Directions

FRE315H1 Québec Theatre I: Gelinas, Dube,
Tremblay

FRE317H1 Québec Theatre II: Contemporary
Directions

FRE410H1 Advanced Topics in Québec Studies

FRE411H1 Advanced Topics in Québec Studies

FRE434H1 Native Authors in Québec

FRE479H1 French Sociolinguistics

GGR392H1 Research Methods in Historical
Geography

HIS314Y1 Québec and French Canada

HIS409H1 Culture, Nationality and the State in
Canada: Since 1850

HIS413H1 French-English Relations in Canada

HIS493H1 Cultural Encounters in Early Canada

INI386H1 Québec Cinema

POL214Y1 Canadian Government and Politics

POL304Y1 Ethnicity and Politics in Canada

POL316Y1 Contemporary Canadian Federalism

POL334H1 Québec Politics & Social Change

RLG307Y1 Religion and Society in Canada

UNI201H1 Aspects of Québec Society

UNI202H1 Aspects of Québec Culture

CANADA IN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE

ECO230Y1 International Economic Institutions and
Policy

ECO321Y1 Canadian Economic History since 1500

ECO323Y1 Canadian Economic Development since
Confederation

ECO328Y1 International Economics

ENV200Y1 Assessing Global Change: Science and
the Environment

GGR240Y1 Historical Geography of the Americas

GGR314H1 Global Warming

GGR340H1 Regionalism in Canada

GGR435H1 Technology, Toronto and Global
Warming

HIS311Y1 Introduction to Canadian International
Relations

HIS405Y1 Canadian Foreign Relations

JHP420Y1 Canadian & International Foreign Policy

INI494H1 Politics of the Environment

POL312Y1 Canadian Foreign Policy

POL347Y1 Public Policy and the Environment:
North and South

POL445Y1 Canada and the Third World

POL474H1 Politics and Policy Analysis

UNI303H1 Canada and Mexico

PLURALISM AND ETHNICITY IN CANADA

ANT365Y1 Aboriginal Societies of North America

ANT448H1 Identity, Ethnicity and Culture

ENG254Y1 Contemporary Native North American
Literature

ENG277Y1 Introduction to African-Canadian
Literature

ENG356H1 Topics in Canadian Literature

FIN320H1 The Finnish Canadian Immigrant
Experience

GGR364H1 Historical Geography of Ethnic Groups
in Canada

HIS312H1 Immigration to Canada

HIS369Y1 Aboriginal Peoples of the Great Lakes

HIS409Y1 Culture, Nationality and the State in
Canada: Since 1850

INI308H1 The City of Toronto

ITA233Y1 Ethnicity and Mainstream: Italian
Canadian Culture

ITA334H1 Italian Canadian Literature I: Identity and
Voice

ITA493H1 Italian Canadian Literature II: Identity
and Voice

POL304Y1 Ethnicity and Politics in Canada

POL321H1 Ethnic Politics in Comparative
Perspective

RLG397H1 Religion & Society in Canada

SLA238H1 Literature of the Ukrainian-Canadian
Experience

SMC413H1 The Irish in Canada

SOC210Y1 Ethnicity in Social Organization

SOC330Y1 Comparative Ethnic Relations

UNI304H1 Beyond Multiculturalism: Ethnicity and
Race in Canada

UNI315Y1 First Nations’ Perspective on Canada

UNI317Y1 Politics of Aboriginal Self-Government

THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF CANADA

ANT342Y1 Kinship, Marriage and Family

GGR240Y1 Historical Geography of the Americas

GGR246H1 Geography of Canada

GGR323H1 Issues in Population Geography

GGR327H1 Social Research Methods

GGR336H1 Urban Historical Geography of North
America

GGR357H1 Geography of Housing & Housing
Policy

GGR364H1 Historical Geography of Ethnic Groups
in Canada

GGR455H1 Women in the City

GGR459H1 Urban Form, Structure and Growth

HIS312H1 Immigration to Canada

HIS313Y1 Canadian Labour and the Left

HIS350Y1 The Social History of the Family

HIS361Y1 Twentieth-Century Canada

HIS363H1 Dynamics of Gender in Canadian History

HIS384H1 Colonial Canada: the East

HIS410H1 Spectacles, Crowds and Parades in
Canada

HIS460H1 Directed Research in the History of
Medicine in Canada

HIS462H1 Canadian Political Tradition: MacDonald
to Chrétien

HIS463H1 The History of Health in Canada

POL209Y1 Rethinking Government in Canada

POL304Y1 Ethnicity and Politics in Canada

POL314Y1 Public Opinion and Voting

POL474H1 Politics and Political Analysis

RLG307Y1 Religion and Society in Canada

SMC320H1 The Catholic Church in Canada

SOC205Y1 Urban Sociology

SOC220Y1 Social Inequality in Canada

SOC369Y1 The Canadian Community

SOC401Y1 Advanced Seminar

UNI303H1 Canada and Mexico

UNI304H1 Beyond Multiculturalism: Ethnicity and
Race in Canada

UNI311H1 Political Economy of Canadian Sport

UNI315Y1 First Nations’ Perspective on Canada

UNI317Y1 Politics of Aboriginal Self-Government

UNI430H1 Senior Seminar: Rights in the Canadian
Context

THE CANADIAN ENVIRONMENT

ANT315H1 Arctic Archaeology

ANT450H1 Environment and Culture

ANT453H1 Subarctic Issues

BOT430H1 Ecological Plant Geography and
Palynology

ECO313H1 Environmental Economics and Policies

ECO314H1 Energy and Resource Economics

ENV221Y1 Approaches to Environmental Issues I

ENV234Y1 Environmental Biology

ENV236Y1 Human Interactions with the
Environment

ENV321Y1 Approaches to Environmental Issues II

ENV421H1 Environmental Research

FOR200H1 Conservation and Management of World
Forests I

GGR233Y1 Environmental Management for
Sustainable Development

GGR314H1 Global Warming

GGR331H1 Resource and Environmental Theory

GGR393H1 Environmental Impact Assessment

GGR415H1 Resource and Environmental Planning

GGR418H1 Resource and Industry

GGR435H1 Technology, Toronto and Global
Warming

GLG216H1 Dynamic Geology

HIS318Y1 Canadian Environmental History

HIS463H1 The History of Health in Canada

INI320Y1 Canadian Environmental Issues

INI494H1 Politics of the Environment

INI495H1 Economics and Environmental Issues

JAG321H1 Aboriginal People and Environmental
Issues in Canada

JIE222Y1 The Study of Environment

JIE410H1 Environmental Research Skills

JUG320H1 The Canadian Wilderness

PHL273H1 Environmental Ethics

PHL373H1 Issues in Environmental Ethics

POL347Y1 Public Policy and the Environment:
North and South

THE REGIONAL STRUCTURE OF CANADA

ANT315H1 Arctic Archaeology

BIO302H1 Arctic Ecosystems

ECO236H1 Public Finance and Public Policy in
Canada

ECO319H1 Regional Economics

ENG215H1 The Canadian Short Story

ENG216Y1 Twentieth Century Canadian Fiction

ENG252Y1 Canadian Literature

GGR246H1 Geography of Canada

GGR326H1 Industrial Location: Theory,
Applications and Policy

GGR340H1 Regionalism in Canada

HIS314Y1 Québec and French Canada

HIS369Y1 Aboriginal Peoples of the Great Lakes

HIS384H1 Colonial Canada: the East

HIS387H1 Ontario 1867-1990

HIS464Y1 The Canadian Prairie West

HIS468H1 Atlantic Canada

POL214Y1 Canadian Government and Politics

POL316Y1 Contemporary Canadian Federalism

POL333Y1 Comparative Provincial Politics

POL334H1 Québec Politics and Social Change

POL336H1 Ontario Politics

POL473H1 Local Government in Canada

SOC220Y1 Social Inequality in Canada

SOC369Y1 The Canadian Community

UNI302H1 The Canadian North

UNI315Y1 First Nations’ Perspective on Canada

UNI317Y1 Politics of Aboriginal Self-Government

COGNITIVE SCIENCE (B.A.)

Consult Program Office, Room 173, University College, 416-978-8746.

Enrolment in the program is limited; admission requires 1) 63% or better in JUP 250Y1; 2) completion of LIN 100Y1 and two other full courses
or their equivalent; and 3) a GPA of 2.0. Students enroled in this program will be permitted to take the PSY courses listed in this program
without taking PSY 100Y1. Students should explore combining this program with a Major in Linguistics, Philosophy, or Psychology.


Specialist program (Hon.B.A.):

(12 full courses or their equivalent, including at least one full 400-series course equivalent)

First Year:

CSC 107H1/108H1/148H1/150H1; JUP 250Y1; LIN 100Y1; PHL 240H1

Second Year:

LIN 228H1/232H1/JAL253H1; PHL 245H1/246H1/247H1, 351H1; PSY 201H1/STA 220H1/250H1; PSY 270H1, 210H1/280H1/290H1

Third and Fourth Years:



1. Psychology: PSY 370H1; two of 312H/316H/371H/372H/380H/393H

2. Linguistics: JLP 374H1; two of JLP 315H1/471H1/LIN 323H1/331H1/341H1/372H1/423H1

3. Philosophy: PHL 342H1; two of PHL 325H1/326H1/340H1/344H1/345H1/347H1/349H1/479H1/480H1/481H1

4. 1.5 additional full course equivalents from among the above listed courses not yet taken, or from the following list: PSY 379H1, 389H1, 392H1, 396H1, 410H1, 472H1, 473H1. (With the permission of the Program Director, the following may also be counted: LIN 495Y1-499H; PHL 490Y1, 496H1-499H; PSY 303H1, 304H1, 400Y1, 401H1-404H, 470H, 471H, 480H, 490H.)

NOTE: Some courses listed in the paragraph above have prerequisites or recommended preparation not included in this program. JLP courses are
Social Science courses; students who take two JLP half-courses will have satisfied their Social Science distribution requirement. Students
interested in speech recognition should take LIN 323H1 and 423H1; in cognitive development PSY 210H1, 312H1, 410H1, and JLP 315H1; in the
brain PHL 340H1, PSY 290H1, 391H1, 393H1, and 490H1; in perception PSY 280H1, 380H1, and 480H1; in language and thought PHL 351H1, 451H1,

and LIN 372H; in psycholinguistics JLP 315H1 and 471H1; in thinking and reasoning PHL 247H1, PSY 372H1, 472H1, and 473H1.

Major program (B.A.):

(7 full courses or their equivalent)

Enrolment in the program is limited; admission requires 1) 63% or better in JUP 250Y1; 2) completion of LIN 100Y1 and two other full courses
or their equivalent; and 3) a GPA of 2.0. Students enroled in this program will be permitted to take the PSY courses listed in this program
without taking PSY 100Y1. Students should explore combining this program with a Major in Computer Science, Linguistics, Philosophy, or
Psychology.


First Year:

JUP 250Y1; LIN 100Y1; PHL 240H1, 245H1/246H1/247H1

Second Year:

PSY 201H1/STA 220H1/250H1; PSY 270H1; PSY 210H1/280H1/290H1

Second and Higher Years:



1. Psychology: PSY 312H1/316H1/370H1/371H1/372H1/380H1/393H1/410H1

2. Linguistics: JLP 374H1; LIN 228H1/372H1/JLP 315H1

3. Philosophy: Two of PHL 325H1/326H1/340H1/342H1/344H1/345H1/347H1/349H1/351H1/479H1/480H1/481H1

COGNITIVE SCIENCE AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (Hon.B.Sc.)

Consult Program Office, Room 173, University College, 416-
978-8746.

Enrolment in the program is limited; admission requires at least 1) 63% in CSC 148H1; 2) 63% in JUP 250Y1; and 3) a GPA of 2.0. Students
enroled in this program will be permitted to take the PSY courses listed in this program without taking PSY 100Y1. Students should explore
combining this program with a Major in Computer Science, Linguistics, Philosophy or Psychology.


Specialist program:

(13 full courses or their equivalent, including at least one full 400-series course equivalent)

First Year:

CSC 108H1, 148H1/150H1; JUP 250Y1; MAT 133Y1/135Y1/136Y1/137Y1/157Y1

Second Year:

CSC 238H1, 270H1; PHL 340H1; PSY 270H1

Second and Higher Years:



1. CSC 324H1, 384H1, 401H1/485H1/486H1/487H1; JLP 374H1

2. Two of the following course sequences:

a) Psychology Stream: PSY 201H1/STA 220H1/250H1, PSY 210H1/280H1/290H1, 370H1, two of 312H/316H/371H/372H/380H/391H/392H/393H

b) Linguistics Stream: LIN 100Y1; three of JLP 315H1/LIN 323H1/331H1/341H1/372H1/423H1

c) Philosophy Stream: PHL 246H1/247H1/351H1, 342H1, 451H1/479H1/480H1/481H1; two of PHL (325H1/326H1)/344H1 (or CSC 438H1/MAT 309H1)/ 345H1/347H1/349H1/351H1

3. One additional full course equivalent from among the above listed courses not yet taken, or from the following list: CSC 318H1, 320H1, 321H1, 340H1, 364H1, 378H1, 420H1, 428H1, 448H1, 465H1; JLP 471H1; PSY 379H1, 389H1, 392H1, 396H1, 410H1, 472H1, 473H1. (With permission of the
Program Director, the following may also be counted: CSC 494H1, 495H1; LIN 495Y1-499H; PHL 390Y1, 395H1-397H; PSY 303H1, 304H1, 400Y1, 401H1-404H, 470H, 471H, 480H, 490H)

NOTE: Some courses listed in the paragraph above have prerequisites or recommended preparation not included in this program. JLP courses are
Social Science courses; students who take two JLP half-courses will have satisfied their Social Science distribution requirement. Students
interested in speech recognition should take LIN 228H1, 323H1, and 423H1; in cognitive development PSY 312H1, 410H1 and JLP 315H1; in the
brain PHL 340H1, PSY 290H1, 391H1, 393H1, and 490H1; in perception PSY 280H1, 380H1, 480H1 and CSC 487H1; in language and thought PHL 350H1, 450H1; LIN 372H1, and CSC 485H1; in psycholinguistics JLP 315H1 and 471H1; in thinking and reasoning PHL 247H1, PSY 471H1, 472H1, 473H1, and CSC 486H1.

DRAMA — See under separate entry DRM

HEALTH STUDIES (B.A.)

Consult Program Director Professor Dennis Magill, Room 173, University College, 416-978-4416.

Enrolment in the Specialist program is limited to 20 students per year. Students enrol at the end of Second Year, after entering the Major
program at the end of First Year. Entry Requirements: 1) students must have completed 8.5 courses and be enrolled in the Health Studies

Major program; 2) UNI 200Y1 (minimum grade 70%), SOC 242Y1, PHL 281Y1; 3) competitive CGPA.


Specialist Program (Hon.B.A.): (12.5 full courses or their equivalent, including at least three 400-series courses)

First Year:

No specific courses required. (Students are advised to take introductory courses that will serve as prerequisites for optional courses of
interest to them later in the program, e.g. ANT 100Y1, POL 102Y1/103Y1, PSY 100Y1, SOC 101Y1.)

Second Year:

UNI 200Y1; SOC 242Y1*; PHL 281Y1*; one course from Group A.

Third Year:

UNI 300Y1; SOC 300Y1*/(STA 220H1, 221H1); SOC 387Y1; one course from Group B.

Fourth Year:

Adv. Quantitative Methods: one course from UNI 440H1/UNI 441H1/SOC 451H1/STA 429H1.

Adv. Qualitative Methods: one course from UNI 442H1/4443H/444H1.

Practicum: UNI 400Y1

Policy: At least one half course from Group D

Option: At least one course from Groups B, C or D.

Major Program (B.A.): 6.0 full courses or their equivalent, including at least 2.0 at the 300/400 series.

Enrolment in the Major program is limited to 40 students per year. Entry Requirements: 1)four full courses or their equivalent; 2)
competitive CGPA.


First Year:

No specific courses required. (Students are advised to take introductory courses that will serve as prerequisites for optional courses of
interest to them later in the program, e.g. ANT 100Y1, POL 102Y1/103Y1, PSY 100Y1, SOC 101Y1.)



Second Year:

UNI 200Y1; SOC 242Y1*; PHL 281Y1*; one course from Group A.



Third and Fourth Years:

UNI 300Y1; one course from Group B



Group A: Students should consult the Program Director, who will approve a relevant course in an interdisciplinary field. Students may also satisfy
the requirement for Group A with courses from Group B for which they have prerequisite access.

Group B: Options without prerequisites: ANT 328H1, HPS 314Y1; INI 341H1; NEW 367H1; POL 316Y1*; UNI 311H1, 370H1, 371H1, 373H1; (from UT
Scarborough) ANT C61H, IDS B04H

Options with prerequisites: ANT 348Y1; PHL 381H1, 382H1, 383H1, 384H1; PSY 313H1, 333H1, 343H1

Group C: Available only to Specialists: UNI 470H1, 471H1, 472H1, 473H1

Group D: Available only to Specialists: UNI 445H1, 446H1, 447H1, 448H1, 449H1, 450H1, 451H1, 460H1, 461H1, 462H1, 463H1, 464H1, 465H1



*NOTE: Prerequisites for courses marked with an asterisk ( * ) will be waived for students in Health Studies.



PEACE AND CONFLICT STUDIES (B.A.)



Consult Professor T. Homer-Dixon Program Assistant, Room H01, University College, 416-978-2485.

Enrolment in the Specialist and Major programs is limited; selection is based on a personal interview and GPA in the first four university
courses taken. The Director approves each student's proposed program of study based on its relevance, coherence and focus.


Specialist program (Hon.B.A.):

(12 full courses or their equivalent, including at least one 400-series course)

1. HIS 103Y1/ECO 100Y1/105Y1; PSY 100Y1/SOC 101Y1; POL 208Y1

2. UNI 260Y1, 360Y1, JUP 460Y1

3. Three courses from one of Group A, Group B, Group C or Group D (below); at least one course must be at the 300+ series level

4. Three complementary courses with either a disciplinary, regional, or thematic focus relevant to Peace and Conflict Studies (on approval of the
Director); at least one must be at the 300+ level

Disciplinary focus:

3 courses from one of ANT, ECO, GGR and Environmental Studies (combined), HIS, HPS, PHL, POL, PSY, RLG, SOC.
(Note: HIS is excluded for students who have taken 3 HIS courses in 3. above; POL is excluded for students who have taken 3 POL courses in
3. above.)

Regional Studies focus:

3 courses on, for example, Canada, Southern Africa, the Middle East, or Latin America.

Thematic focus:

3 courses on a topic such as negotiation and conflict resolution, diplomatic history, gender and conflict, morality of war,
quantitative analysis, group-identity conflict, economic development and conflict, or environmental change and conflict.



Group A: HIS 103Y1, 106Y1, 232Y1, 241H1, 242H1, 243H1, 244H1, 250Y1, 251Y1, 271Y1, 306Y1, 311Y1, 317Y1, 319H1, 325Y1, 333Y1, 334Y1, 343Y1, 344Y1, 351Y1, 355H1, 356Y1, 370H1, 372Y1, 377Y1, 379H1, 396Y1, 401Y1, 405Y1, 407H1, 409H1, 411Y1, 412H1, 414Y1, 421Y1, 424Y1, 429H1, 436H1, 439Y1, 442Y1, 445Y1, 453H1, 457Y1, 458Y1, 461H1, 473Y1, 475H1, 479Y1, 482Y1, 488Y1, 490H1, 491Y1, 492Y1; TRN 421Y1

Group B: JPE 400Y1; JHP 420Y1; JPJ 464H1; POL 108Y1, 180H1, 201Y1, 204Y1, 242Y1, 300H1, 301Y1, 304Y1, 305Y1, 310Y1, 312Y1, 313Y1, 321Y1, 323Y1, 324Y1, 326Y1, 340Y1, 342H1, 343Y1, 346Y1, 347Y1, 405Y1, 412H1, 416Y1, 417Y1, 419Y1, 422Y1, 428Y1, 435Y1, 437Y1, 445Y1, 454Y1, 459Y1, 463Y1, 464H1, 465H1, 479H1

Group C: ENV 200Y1, 234Y1, 235Y1, 236Y1, 321Y1; GGR 107Y1, 124Y1, 203H1, 220Y1, 233Y1, 239H1, 312H1, 314H1, 323H1, 327H1, 331H1, 338H1, 343H1, 344H1, 348H1, 363H1, 364H1, 368H1, 393H1, 402H1, 409H1, 415H1, 456H1; INI 422H1; JIE 222Y1; PHL 273H1, 373H1

Group D: ANT 100Y1, 204Y1, 329Y1, 343Y1, 349H1, 363Y1, 366Y1, 367Y1, 425H1, 426H1, 427H1, 440Y1, 441H1, 448H1, 450H1, 452H1; JAL 253H1, 254H1;
SOC 205Y1, 210Y1, 212Y1, 213Y1, 215Y1, 220Y1, 250Y1, 274H1, 301Y1, 306Y1, 312Y1, 320Y1, 330Y1, 336H1, 339H1, 340Y1, 355Y1, 356Y1, 360Y1, 365Y1, 367H1, 385Y1, 386Y1



Major program (B.A.):

(7 full courses or their equivalent)

1. HIS 103Y1/ECO 100Y1/105Y1; PSY 100Y1/SOC 101Y1; POL 208Y1

2. UNI 260Y1, 360Y1

3. Two complementary courses, at least one of which must be at the 300+ series level, from:
ECO 230Y1, GGR 239H1, HIS 241H1, 242H1, 300H1, 343Y1, 344Y1, 377Y1, 401Y1, 412Y1, 445Y1, 482Y1; HPS 306H1; JPJ 464H1; PHL 278H1; POL 201Y1, 304Y1, 310Y1, 313Y1, 321H1, 323Y1, 326Y1, 340Y1, 417Y1, 437Y1, 454Y1; PSY 220H1, 311H1, 314H1, 320H1, 321H1, 322H1, 327H1, 328H1, 334H1;
RLG 100Y1; SOC 210Y1, 330Y1, 340Y1; or alternative courses on the approval of the Program Director

JOINT INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS PROGRAM/PEACE AND CONFLICT STUDIES PROGRAM — See TRN

SEXUAL DIVERSITY STUDIES (B.A.)

Consult Program Director, Dr. M. FitzGerald, Room 355, University College, 416-978-4532.

Completion of four courses is required for enrolment in the Sexual Diversity Studies program. The Students enroling in the program should
confer with the Program Director at their earliest convenience.


Minor program (B.A.):

(4 full courses or their equivalent)

1. UNI 255H1

2. At least one of UNI 355H1/POL 315H1

3. Three full course equivalents (or 2.5 courses if both UNI 355H1 and POL 315H1 are taken) drawn from the following: ANT 323Y1, 343Y1, 366Y1;
ENG 273Y1, 290Y1; FAH 435H1 (ERI); FCS 397H1; GGR 455H1; HIS C10Y (SCA); HIS 430Y1; JAL 355H1; NEW 240Y1, 261Y1, 374H1; PHE 403H1; PHL 243H1, 267H1; POL 216H1, 344Y1; PSY 323H1; SOC 214Y1, 309Y1, 369Y1; UNI 365H1, 393Y1, 394H1, 455H1; VIC 343Y1; VIS 202H1, 208H1, 209H1, 302H1; WDW 380H1

NOTE: At least one full course equivalent of the four courses must be at the 300+ level. Additional courses may be approved by the Program
Director on an individual basis. Students are responsible for checking co- and prerequisites for courses listed under 3.


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