Conflict Analysis and Resolution (CONF)
Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution
Unless otherwise noted, all nondepartmental majors and extended study students
require permission of instructor to register for CONF classes. Note: The ICAR
curriculum is being revised for 2003. Please call for more information.
501 Introduction to Conflict Analysis and Resolution (3:3:0). Prerequisite
or corequisite for all M.S. CONF majors. Introduction to the field of conflict
analysis and resolution. Examines definitions of conflict and diverse views of
its "resolution." Explores thinking about human behavior and social
systems as they relate to the origins of conflict and the role of conflict in
violent and peaceful social change. Considers appropriate responses to conflict
at interpersonal, intergroup, industrial, communal, and international levels.
601 Theories of Conflict and Conflict Resolution (3:3:0).
Prerequisite: CONF 501 or 801. Examines major social scientific theories
of conflict. Emphasis is on the need for theories to inform our ability to resolve
conflict. Weaves together ideas from conventional disciplines with new approaches,
especially to causes of deep-rooted conflict. Focus is on analysis as a tool.
610 Philosophy and Methods of Conflict Research (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801. Introduction to research design, including use of theory
to define the problem; exploring research approaches; gathering, analyzing, and
interpreting data. Latter includes field observation; field experiments; lab experiments
(simulations); surveys and sampling techniques; and archival, documentary, and
literature resources. Quantitative techniques include theories of measurement
(numerical and ordinal scales); distributions; and analysis techniques (chi-square,
correlating, factor analysis). Briefly introduces philosophies of science and
its limits.
611 M.S. Research #2 (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF
501 and 610. Builds on the foundation of CONF 610. Guides students through
the design, execution, interpretation, analysis, presentation, and evaluation
of field research into conflict and conflict resolution.
642 Integration of Theory and Practice (3:3:0). Taken in the
last semester of master's students' course work. Assists students in developing
their own "generic" theory of conflict by reviewing and integrating
their prior course work. Students are expected to demonstrate a holistic comprehension
of the field by writing a major essay of publishable quality about the causes,
events, and resolution of a particular conflict of their own choosing.
690 Practicum in Conflict Analysis and Resolution (6:1:5).
Prerequisite: CONF 501 or 801 and 713; 714 or 715 recommended but not required.
Two semesters, taken 3 credits per semester. Involves students in an in-depth
field study of ongoing conflict situations and in the design and delivery of intervention
processes to manage or resolve the conflicts.
694 Internship (1-6:0:1-6). Prerequisite: 21 hours of
prior course work, including CONF 713 and 714. CONF 715 recommended. Under
direction of the clinical coordinator, students spend at least 160 hours working
on a project involving the study and/or resolution of conflict. Students are expected
to mesh theory and practice through observation and experience. The course includes
a comprehensive report analyzing the individual's experience.
695 Selected Topics (3:3:0). Topics vary from year to year.
They are announced each academic year.
697 Directed Reading (1-3:0:1-3). Independent reading at the
master's level on a specific topic related to conflict analysis and resolution
as agreed to by a student and a faculty member. This may be repeated up to 6 credits.
701 Theories of Social Harmony (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801; CONF 601 recommended but not required. Part of a series
of theory courses and the companion to CONF 601. This course explores theories
that define and explain social harmony and cooperation. Examining social institutions
that manage and mediate conflict at all levels (interpersonal to international),
the course provides a foundation for subsequent courses in peace building, peace
making, multilateral organizations, social change, and development.
702 Peace Studies (3:3:0). Traces the evolution of peace studies
since World War II with particular attention to changing definitions of "peace,"
"conflict," and "violence," and the implications for the field
of conflict analysis and resolution. Links peace keeping, peace building, and
peace making in an integrative framework.
703 Conceptions of Practice (3:3:0). Prerequisites: CONF
501, 601, 713. Provides a framework for integrating theory and practice in
conflict resolution. Reviews types of practice and theories of intervention and
change, discusses the analytic process of assessment and diagnosis before intervention.
Considers how research can be incorporated into practice and how thoughtful practice
generates research questions. Includes methods of program evaluation and action
research. Students are encouraged to identify and/or develop their own theories
of practice.
709 War, Violence, and Conflict Resolution (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801. Considers various theories of violence, its causes and conditions,
and applies them to a variety of instances: family abuse, religious and ethnic
violence; terrorism, revolution, and warfare. Insights gained from study of initiation,
escalation, management, resolution, and prevention of violence are applied to
theories about the resolution of deep-rooted conflicts.
713 Laboratory and Simulation I: Interpersonal and Intergroup Conflict
(3:0:3). Prerequisite or corequisite for all CONF majors: CONF 501
or 801. An introductory skill-building course that integrates conflict theory
and practice using a reflective practitioner model. Students learn necessary skills
for third-party facilitation and mediation including active listening, empathy,
paraphrasing, reframing, and negotiation, and analytical skills of problem solving
and creation of transformational processes. Although these skills are essential
for all levels of conflict intervention, cases for practice mainly focus on interpersonal
and intergroup conflict.
714 Laboratory and Simulation II: Organizational and Community Conflict
(3:0:3). Prerequisites: CONF 501 or 801 and 713. Moves
from conflicts that are simply described to those with multilevel components,
such as community and organizational conflicts. This course expands the skills
acquired in 713 by adding the following: recording chronology; identifying roles
played by various participants; observing turning points in the resolution process;
precisely stating the agreed-upon solution.
715 Laboratory and Simulation III: International and Intercommunal
Conflict (3:0:3). Prerequisites: CONF 501, 713, and 714, or permission
of instructor. A continuation of the study of resolution processes as applied
to highly complex systems, especially where one party denies the legitimacy of
existing political authority. Considers third-party options for intervention in
revolutionary and international conflicts, and means for building communication
and trust among parties, and implementing agreements.
720 Ethnic and Cultural Factors in Conflict Resolution (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801. Examines the role culture plays in the genesis, structuring,
and resolution of processes of conflict within and between groups. Special attention
is given to ethnicity and other subcultural markers of identity in complex social
systems as both the generators and outcomes of conflict. The relevance of these
variables to the success or failure of conflict resolution is explored.
721 Conflict and Race(3:3:0).Prerequisite: CONF 501 or
801. Cross-listed as SOCI 523. Addresses historic analyses of racial and
ethnic identity conflicts and their resolution.
722 Conflict and Religion (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF
501 or 801. Explores the role of organized religions in conflict, war, peace
making, and conflict resolution.
723 Conflict and Gender (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF 501
or 801. Examines constructs of gender and conflict as they relate to a critical
analysis of theory and practice. Feminist theories are reviewed for their contributions
to social and conflict theories. Narratives are used to explore how gender and
power dynamics interact in conflict.
724 Conflict and "-isms" (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801. "Them" and "Us." Deals with the identification
and analysis of interrelationships and similarities among the various ways human
beings bifurcate themselves into "us" and "them" based on
national, ethnic, religious, gender, and other criteria. Further, the course explores
the role these divisions play in the development and intractability of identity-based
conflicts and the implications for conflict analysis and resolution. Examples
include nationalism, racism, sexism, ageism, classism.
725 Conflict and Spirituality (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF
501 or 801. Explores the role of spirituality in the naming, framing, and
unwinding of conflict. The roles of apology, reconciliation, and forgiveness are
considered as these relate to the deconstruction of enemy images in protracted
communal and interpersonal conflicts. Relational empathy and ways of cultivating
connection across perceived deep differences is examined.
726 Moral and Philosophical Foundations of Conflict (3:3:0).
Prerequisite: CONF 501 or 801. Provides an overview of moral, philosophical,
and ethical underpinnings of conceptions of conflict and conflict resolution.
The course enhances a student's ability to engage in discourse approaching conflict
from a moral or philosophical disciplinary background.
727 Cross-Cultural Analysis of Conflict (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801. Introduces techniques of participant observation and anthropological
research. Provides insights into cross-cultural fieldwork experience, an important
skill for facilitation of working with groups outside their own "worldview."
This course is highly recommended for students interested not only in understanding
diverse groups, but in gaining first-hand insights into the wide variation in
world views and values understandings held by different people.
730 Structural Sources of Conflict (3:3:0). Prerequisites:
CONF 501 or 801, and 601 for M.S.; or 802 for Ph.D. Examines how structures
and institutions affect behavior and give rise to conflictual relationships at
all social levels, from the interpersonal to the international. Explores the role
of conflict resolution as a political process proving opportunities for nonviolent
system change.
731 Conflict in Organizations (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF
501 or 801. Explores the intersection and the dynamics of organizational
behavior and the dimensions of conflict. Theoretical perspectives and cases are
used to examine the issues involved in conflict analysis and resolution. Strategies
for prevention and intervention are practiced. Students conduct field research
in the greater metropolitan area to help integrate course content.
732 Conflict in Development (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF
501 or 801. Economic and social development cause trauma as new ideas conflict
with old ones. Particularly when development is generated or directed by forces
outside of a culture, the conflict takes on deep-rooted character. This course
explores how conflict analysis and resolution approaches can be applied to conflicts
of development and change.
733 Law and Jurisprudence in Conflict Resolution (3:3:0).
Prerequisite: CONF 501 or 801. Contrasts legal processes and institutions
with alternative approaches to dispute resolution. Defines and distinguishes among
law, "alternative dispute resolution," and problem-solving analysis
as methods for resolving rather than controlling conflict. Asks to what extent
legal procedures are truly applicable to resolving deep-rooted conflict.
734 Crime and Conflict Resolution (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801 or permission of instructor. Explores the usefulness of conflict
analysis and resolution perspectives in analyzing the causes, nature, and consequences
of criminal behavior, and alternative approaches to the crime problem.
735 Global Context of Conflict (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF
501 or 801. Advances students' skills and expands their knowledge base in critical
analysis and creative problem solving. The root causes of conflict in a global
context are examined in terms of gender inequality, cultural differences, unequal
North/South relations, militarism, economic oppression, genocide, maldevelopment,
religious and ethnic struggle, and environmental scarcity. Students are expected
to develop their own conceptual tool boxes needed to analyze conflicts in different
parts of the world.
738/HSCI 635 Research Seminar in Health and Conflict Analysis (3:3:0).
This capstone seminar is the final course in the graduate certificate
program in conflict resolution for health professionals. It involves conducting
research and analyzing a specific conflict situation in depth. The course builds
on theory, research, and practice learned in previous courses for this certificate.
740 Conflict Roles, Resources, and Ethics (3:3:0). Prerequisites:
CONF 501 or 801, 713. Analyzes and critique the nature and roles in conflicts.
Theoretical perspectives and case histories are used to understand how settings
affect roles. Includes ethical assessment of interventions in a variety of conflict
settings.
741 Negotiations (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF 501 or 801
or permission of the instructor. Student's negotiating experiences are used
to construct a framework for thinking about and analyzing negotiation processes.
The framework is then used to organize a review of the research literature on
the "rhythms" and "patterns" of negotiation as well as to
analyze a variety of actual cases. Exercises and class projects are interwoven
with state-of-the-art concepts and findings as described in Professor Druckman's
article in the October 1996 issue of The Negotiation Journal ("Bridging the
Gap between Negotiating Experience and Analysis").
742 Mediating Policy Conflict (3:3:0). Prerequisite:CONF
501 or 801 or permission of the instructor. Analyzes disputes involving the
formation, implementation, and reform of social policy. Development and assessment
of the roles of mediation and other intervention approaches in policy conflicts
in the public, private, and citizens sectors.
743 Dynamics of Conflict Termination (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801 or permission of the instructor. Analytically studies the
nature of the "peace process" in terminating international, transnational,
and civil conflicts. Includes analysis of parties' decision-making procedures
during processes of de-escalation, pre-bargaining, and negotiation. Examines impact
of various third-party roles (mediator, conciliator, facilitator) on the overall
process, including implementation and monitoring of agreements. Takes as exemplary
case studies efforts to terminate such conflicts of the Iran-Iraq war, the Cyprus
dispute, and the Eritrean conflict.
744 Peace Keeping (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF 501 or 801.
Designed to answer questions as: To what degree do international "peace-keeping"
forces embrace conflict resolution and peace-building as part of their mission?
To what degree could conflict resolution be integrated? What are the roles conflict
resolvers can play in peace-keeping environments?
745 Leadership Roles in Conflict and Conflict Resolution (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801 or permission of the instructor. Working premise for the
course is that leadership responses to conflict are affected by several variables,
among them race, ethnicity, and gender. Explores roles of leadership decision-making
styles as agents of conflict across a range of conflict scenarios at the interpersonal,
community, organizational, and international levels.
746 Peace Building (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF 501 or
801. Building on initiatives of the United Nations and other multilateral
organizations, this course explores the dynamics of post-conflict peace building.
Further, it prepares students of conflict resolution to play innovative roles
in the reconstruction of civil societies.
747 Reconciliation (3:3:0). Prerequisite: CONF
501 or 801. Explores processes of acknowledgment, reconciliation, forgiveness,
and restitution. Literature, case studies, and other research are reviewed to
assess the applicability and impact of these efforts.
795 Professional Development Seminars (1-3:1-3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 501 or 801. These one- and two-credit courses will be scheduled nonconventionally
using weekends, concentrated presentations, and intersession periods to give students
advanced professional skills. Possible topics include Marketing Conflict Resolution
Services, Academic Course Design, Training Design, Mediation, Facilitation, Family
Practice, Fundraising, Writing for Publication, Advanced Field Research Techniques,
Grassroots Applications of Conflict Resolution. May be repeated.
799 Master's Thesis (1-6:0:1-6). Prerequisites:
CONF 501, 713, 610. Two semesters, normally taken as 3 credits per semester.
Original research or analysis under the direction of a thesis committee.
801 Introduction to Conflict Analysis and Resolution (3:3:0).
Prerequisite or corequisite for all Ph.D. CONF students. Introduction
to the field of conflict analysis and resolution for doctoral students. Examines
definitions of conflict and diverse views of its "resolution." Explores
thinking about human behavior and social systems as they relate to the origins
of conflict and the role of conflict in violent and peaceful social change. Considers
appropriate responses to conflict at interpersonal, intergroup, industrial, communal,
and international levels.
802 Micro Theories (3:3:0). Prerequisites: CONF 801, and acceptance
in the doctoral program, or permission of instructor. Understanding human conflict
requires knowledge of human behavior, motivation and perception. This course reviews
and critically analyzes several psychological theories for their application to
conflict analysis and resolution. The work of major personality theorists is surveyed
as well as material on cognition, creativity, and change.
803 Macro Theories (3:3:0). Prerequisites: CONF 801, 802
and acceptance in the doctoral program, or permission of instructor. Understanding
social conflict and the potential for conflict resolution requires that both conflict
and cooperation be perceived in relationship to patterns of social change. This
course reviews and critiques significant theories of social change to establish
a basis for creative conflict analysis and resolution.
810 Philosophy of the Social Sciences (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 801 or permission of instructor. A philosophical inquiry into the history
and structure of ideas and the building of scientific hypotheses. This course
assumes that the ways we think, as human beings, and the ways we build and test
our theories about the world are closely linked. Explores and critiques the thinking
of major 20th century thinkers from the social sciences on this topic, thus forming
an introduction to research methodology.
811 Advanced Research Methods I (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 801, 810, or permission of instructor. (Note: A prior course such as STAT
510 in intermediate statistics is presumed). Building on the logic of inquiry,
this course introduces students to the steps in the research process needed to
prepare a dissertation and implement published research. The course covers a wide
array of quantitative and qualitative research approaches used in the social sciences
with an emphasis on conflict analysis.
812 Advanced Research Methods II (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
CONF 811 or permission of instructor. A continuation of steps in the research
process needed to prepare a dissertation and implement published research. It
builds on CONF 811 by extending the coverage of quantitative and qualitative research
approaches used in the social sciences with an emphasis on conflict analysis.
890 Practicum in Conflict Analysis and Resolution (6:1:5).
Prerequisite: CONF 801 and 713 (714 or 715 recommended but not required).
Two semesters. Involves students in an in-depth field study of ongoing conflict
situations and in the design and delivery of intervention processes to manage
or resolve the conflicts.
897 Directed Reading (3:3:0). Independent reading at the doctoral
level on a specific topic related to conflict and conflict resolution as agreed
to by a student and faculty member.
900 Integrating Theory, Practice, and Method in Conflict Analysis (3:3:0).
Prerequisites: CONF 801, 802, and at least nine further credits in
the doctoral core program. Analyzes the theoretical basis undergirding the
methods of research in conflict resolution. Exploration of how theory is built
through the reciprocal influence of research and practice.
901 Theory Development (3:3:0). Prerequisites: CONF 801
and 802 or permission of instructor. Examines recent developments in theory
and research in conflict analysis, with particular emphasis on project and dissertation
work recently undertaken and completed. Its purpose is to link ongoing research
in this and parallel fields to students' own plans for dissertation work, and
examine methodological approaches currently being used as well as the direction
and focus of current substantive research.
998 Doctoral Dissertation Proposal (1-6:1-6:0). Prerequisite:
successful completion of all course work and doctoral qualifying examinations.
Work on a research proposal that forms the basis for a doctoral dissertation.
May be repeated for up to six total credits toward degree.
999 Doctoral Dissertation Research (1-12:0:1-12). (Credits
vary. At least six credits must be taken toward the degree.) Research on an approved
dissertation topic under the direction of a committee. (NOTE: At least 12 credits
of 998 and 999 must be accumulated toward the degree).
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