Washington Center

Fall Quarter & Semester 2025

Economics of Public Policy

Credits: 
4
Instructor: 
Term or Semester: 
Day and Time: 
Thursdays, 6:30pm - 9:30pm
Quarter Dates: 
September 25, 2025 - December 4, 2025
Campus: 
UCDC
Category: 
Core Seminar
Description: 

How does political and social protest bring about change? What strategies and techniques do social movements and protests use to take on entrenched and established powers in the nation’s capital? Achieving real change is difficult. Yet, there are several examples of successful social movements in American history and politics that came to Washington and effectively changed the course of the nation's politics and history. This class will explore the dynamics of mass mobilization and advocacy on the national stage. By discussing protests and other advocacy events and interacting with guest speakers, students will learn about the successes—and failures—of social groups’ efforts to make change in American politics and society.

Course ID: 
UCDC191K01F25

Reducing Poverty and Inequity: Lessons from International Development

Credits: 
4
Instructor: 
Term or Semester: 
Day and Time: 
Tuesdays, 2:00pm - 5:00pm
Quarter Dates: 
September 23, 2025 - December 2, 2025
Campus: 
UCDC
Category: 
Core Seminar
Description: 

This course introduces students to the role of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) as agents of advocacy and socio-political, economic and cultural change. The emphasis is on a) examining ways in which the NGO sector operates at the local, national and international levels, b) understanding the range of issues NGOs promote and advocate for; c) examining the tools and strategies they use in their advocacy; and, d) assessing the impact NGOs have on the policy making process as well as the targted communities.

The course is designed for students interested in questions of advocay, activism and nongovernmental interventions, all of which are central to the dynamic cultural and political landscapes where NGOs operate. Some of the NGOs we will explore focus their advocacy on promoting political rights, gender equality and minority rights, while others focus on ending poverty, violence, human trafficking, exploitative labor, health problems and environmental degradation.

Course ID: 
UCDC191E01F25

Immigration Law and Policy

Credits: 
4
Term or Semester: 
Day and Time: 
Thursdays, 2:00pm - 5:00pm
Quarter Dates: 
September 25, 2025 - December 4, 2025
Campus: 
UCDC
Category: 
Core Seminar
Description: 

This course examines the history of immigration law and policy in the U.S., with a particular focus on the historical, political, and cultural conditions shaping immigration law and policy. In addition, the course looks at the history of the immigrant rights movement and immigrant community organizing, and explores the diversity of immigrant communities in the Washington, D.C. area. Students will develop their capacities for civic engagement by writing letters to elected officials about immigration law and policy and developing policy proposals of their own. 

Course ID: 
UCDC191E03F25

The U.S. Supreme Court: Conflict, Change and the Court

Credits: 
4
Instructor: 
Term or Semester: 
Day and Time: 
Wednesdays, 8:00am - 11:00am
Quarter Dates: 
September 24, 2025 - December 3, 2025
Campus: 
UCDC
Category: 
Core Seminar
Description: 

Immigration. LGBT rights. Healthcare. Abortion. The death penalty. Cell phone privacy. The U.S. Supreme Court has decided cases on all of these topics in recent years, and its decisions ultimately touch the lives of all Americans. In this class we will study the Supreme Court's place in the U.S. legal system. Topics we will cover include: how a case gets to the court, the justices, the role of lawyers before the court, the purpose of oral argument, the court building and its symbolism, and media coverage of the court.

In addition, students will listen to the arguments in current Supreme Court cases and spend class time discussing them. In papers, students will be asked to rigorously explain why the justices likely took those cases and how they will come out based on what they hear at oral argument. This class is geared not only toward anyone who is interested in the law or government service but also toward anyone interested in working on or being informed about the biggest issues of the day.

 

Course ID: 
UCDC191I01F25

Polarizer-in-Chief: Presidential Leadership in the 21st Century

Credits: 
4
Instructor: 
Term or Semester: 
Day and Time: 
Tuesdays, 6:30pm - 9:30pm
Quarter Dates: 
September 23, 2025 - December 2, 2025
Campus: 
UCDC
Category: 
Core Seminar
Description: 

Many Americans can name several presidents and even have opinions on “good” versus “bad” presidents. But what do presidents actually do, what resources and limitations do they have in their ability to act, and how do we measure their performance and our expectations for their leadership? With a divided Congress and record polarization, what can we expect during the next year and a half of a Biden/Harris administration? This course will put the modern presidency in historical and theoretical context, drawing on a variety of readings and approaches to determine which framework best explains presidential (in)action. At its core, this class is about the question of executive power in democratic government and how we understand what we see happening just down the street from the UC Washington Center. In addition to studying and reflecting on the theme of presidential power, we will also consider the limits to this power and how presidents achieve their goals. Ultimately, we aim to understand the work of the presidency and some of the different perspectives by which we might analyze or assess presidents and their administrations. 

Course ID: 
UCDC191C01F25

4-Week Module *Required for Semester Students*

Credits: 
4
Instructor: 
Term or Semester: 
Day and Time: 
Wednesdays, 6:30p.m - 9:30p.m.
Semester Dates: 
August 27 - September 17, 2025
Campus: 
UCDC
Category: 
Core Seminar
Description: 

The first four weeks of the semester (August 27 - September 17) will be spent in a special topics module taught by Professor Tim Kumfer on Wednesdays from 6:30-9:30p.m. This module will account for 15% of the core seminar final course grade. Your selected seminar course will begin the week of September 22 and your seminar instructor will officially be your instructor of record for the term, responsible for computing and submitting final course grades at the end of the term.

Semester students are automatically enrolled in the course.  No action prior to the start of the course is required.  Professor Kumfer will reach out before the start of the course.  

Course ID: 
UCDCSEM01F25

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