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Introduction to International Relations: Transnational Issues

Introduction to International Relations
Transnational Issues
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table of contents
  1. Unit 1: International Relations: Concepts and Theories
    1. Key Concepts in International Relations
    2. Realism, Liberalism, and Constructivism
    3. Marxism, Feminism, and Post-Colonialism
  2. Unit 2: Armed Conflict
  3. Unit 3: Non-state Actors: NGOs, Multinational Corporations, Terrorism, and Transnational Organized Crime
    1. Non-state Actors: NGOs, Multinational Corporations, Terrorism, and Transnational Organized Crime
    2. NGOs and other Nonstate Actors
    3. Transnational Terrorism
  4. Unit 4: Globalization, Trade, and International Political Economy
  5. Unit 5: International Law and International Organizations
    1. International Law
    2. International Law and International Organizations
  6. Unit6: Human Rights
    1. Human Rights
    2. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
    3. Core International Human Rights Treaties
  7. Unit 7: Transnational Issues
    1. Transnational Issues
    2. The Environment
    3. Feeding the World

Transnational Issues

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Some issues are by their very nature transnational. Water, weather, and microbes do not stop at state borders, but the people they affect can be either harmed or aided by the international and transnational actors we have examined this semester. In this final unit, we will take a closer look at three areas of transnational issues: the environment, food, and disease.

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The Environment
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