CS 2625 World Politics
This course aims to analyze world structure from a political approach.
This course aims to analyze world structure from a political approach.
By the end of this course, students will be able to identify problems that International organizations face. They will also get acquainted with decision-making tools for the effective and efficient management of such problems.
This course offers an overview of North American thinking and values. Additionally, it studies the way in which society and culture were structured and shaped in this part of the world.
By the end of this course, students will be able to evaluate the development of public projects by using statistical techniques, with particular emphasis on their local and regional effect.
After completing the course, students will be able to set up a technology development project that will involve participants from various fields in order to create a real solution to a problem that a company has in the present-day world, or to seize an opportunity found in their surroundings.
This course aims to study the history and development of FTAA (the Free Trade Area of the Americas), an item in the diplomatic agenda of the countries of the American continent.
This course aims to present a general overview of the evolution and background of public works in Mexico, as well as an introduction to who is who in this field in Mexico.
The aim of this course is to access different electronic databases of an educational institution to support the educational process, as well as for their use in academic decision-making, learning strategies, and vocational guidance.
This course aims to analyze the formation and measurement of public opinion in a democracy and understand the relation between mass media and politics.
This course aims to describe the influence that de facto powers and the state reform process have on the challenges to Mexico´s governability, considering the process of democratic consolidation.