This course explores the contemporary politics of Indigenous Peoples and settler societies. It takes a sociological, legal, political, and anthropological approach to how politics operate within and around Indigenous Peoples. By adopting a comparative and international perspective, it examines the dynamics of critical relationships within the context of national, regional, and global political orders. We look at “standard” settler states often referred to as “neo-Britains,” such as the United States, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia, but also Indigenous Peoples and issues from Europe, Asia, and South America.

Prerequisites: Upper-division, full POLS major standing.

4

Units

Optional

Grading

1

Passtime

Upper division only

Level Limit

Letters and science

College
These majors only pols
ORR R I
No info found
Winter 2026 . Orr R I
BIOEN1001
T R
15:30 PM - 16:45 PM
POL S 106GI Orr R I Winter 2026 Total: 93
POL S 99
0 / 20 Enrolled
Introduction to Research
T B A
POL S 103
0 / 30 Enrolled
Causal Inference in Political Science
Daniel Masterson 2.8
M W
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
POL S 106PK
0 / 80 Enrolled
Special Topics in Political Science
Nomikos G G
M W
12:30 PM - 13:45 PM
POL S 106AM
0 / 66 Enrolled
Special Topics: African American Politics
Christopher Parker 1.9
T R
15:30 PM - 16:45 PM
POL S 106AI
0 / 30 Enrolled
American Indian Politics
Orr R I
T R
17:00 PM - 18:15 PM
POL S 110AN
0 / 30 Enrolled
Political Concepts: Critical Theory & Marxism
Andrew Norris 3.3
M W
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM