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The Trudeau Centre for Peace, Conflict and Justice administers the program in Peace, Conflict and Justice, in the Munk School of Global Affairs.
The Peace, Conflict and Justice program provides undergraduates with an interdisciplinary education covering three central pillars: the meanings and causes of conflict, peace, and justice; the lived experiences of living in the context of conflict and struggles for peace and justice; and approaches to resolving conflict and producing peace and/or justice. The topics of study are wide-ranging, including the study of peacemaking and peace-building, interstate war and intrastate conflicts, insurgencies, revolutions and rebellions, ethnic strife, global justice, and negotiation theory. In so doing, we address some of the world’s most urgent humanitarian problems, and train students to deeply analyze these issues across several levels of analysis, from the local through the national and the global. Students interested in this program are strongly encouraged to consider pursuing a double major in related fields, especially International Relations. Other related fields include: Political Science, Sociology, Anthropology, Geography, History, Diaspora and Transnational Studies, Nutritional Sciences, and Psychology.
Program Administrator
Munk School of Global Affairs
364S, 1 Devonshire Place (At Trinity College)
Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3K7 Canada
416-946-0326
http://munkschool.utoronto.ca/trudeaucentre/
This is a limited enrolment program that can only accommodate a limited number of students. Admission is determined by a range of criteria, including at the initial stage a student's academic background, a statement of interest in the program, and as a later stage of the process, a personal interview on invitation of the Program Director. In some cases, reference letters may be requested by the Program Director. In the past, enrolment in Peace, Conflict and Justice has proven to be extremely competitive across all these dimensions, and an applicant's success in any one of these dimensions does not necessarily guarantee admission to the program in any given year.
(12 full courses or their equivalent, including at least one 400-series course)
1. HIS103Y1/ECO100Y1/ECO105Y1; (PSY100H1 + PSY220H1)/SOC101Y1; POL208Y1. Except for POL208Y1, substitutions may be permitted for other introductory courses in relevant disciplines, based on a student’s rationale and on approval of the Program Director.
2. PCJ260Y1; PCJ360H1+PCJ361H1/PCJ361Y1; PCJ460H1; PCJ461H1
3. Three FCEs from one of Groups A, B, C, D, E or F (below), or substitutions with a rationale that must be approved by the Program Director. Students may substitute from different disciplines or with different courses from within these disciplines. At least one FCE must be at the 300+-level.
4. Three complementary FCEs with either a disciplinary, regional, or thematic focus relevant to Peace, Conflict and Justice(on approval of the Director, based on the needs of students’ interdisciplinary programs of study). At least two FCEs must be at the 300+-level. Upt to 1.0 FCEs of MUN courses may be used to fulfill this requirement, subject to approval by the Director.
Disciplinary focus:
3 FCEs from one of ANT, ECO, GGR and Environmental Studies (combined), HIS, HPS, PHL, POL, PSY, RLG, SLA, SOC, or from other units with a rationale approved by the Program Director.
(Note: The disciplinary focus in this cluster must be different from the discipline chosen in requirement 3. For instance, HIS is excluded for students who have taken 3 HIS FCEs to meet requirement 3; POL is excluded for students who have taken 3 POL FCEs, etc. )
Regional Studies focus:
3 FCEs on, for example, Canada, Southern Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, or the Slavic countries.
Thematic focus:
3 FCEs on a thematic topic proposed by the student and approved by the Program Director. Examples include negotiation and conflict resolution, diplomatic history, gender and conflict, morality of war, quantitative analysis, group-identity conflict, economic development and conflict, literature, culture, and everyday life of conflict, or environmental change and conflict.
Note: Substitutions for any of the below (Groups A through F) are allowable, if accompanied by a rationale regarding a student’s specific program of study that must be approved by the Program Director. This is not a strict list, and students may in their program rationale substitute courses from different disciplines or with different courses from within these disciplines below. Please note that not all courses may be offered in a given year, and students are responsible for checking and meeting co- and prerequisites for all courses.
Group A
HIS103Y1, HIS106Y1, HIS202H1, HIS241H1, HIS242H1, HIS243H1, HIS244H1, HIS250Y1, HIS251Y1, HIS271Y1, HIS296Y1, HIS303Y1, HIS311Y1, HIS317H1, HIS319H1, HIS325H1, HIS329H1, HIS333Y1, HIS334Y1, HIS338Y1, HIS343Y1, HIS344Y1, HIS347H1, HIS351H1, HIS355Y1, HIS356H1, HIS359H1, HIS364H1, HIS370H1, HIS376H1, HIS377H1, HIS386Y1, HIS390Y1, HIS396H1, HIS401Y1, HIS405Y1, HIS407H1, HIS408Y1, HIS412Y1, HIS414H1, HIS415H1, HIS421Y1, HIS424Y1, HIS436Y1, HIS445H1, HIS451H1, HIS453H1, HIS458Y1, HIS461H1, HIS473H1, HIS475H1, HIS480H1, HIS488H1, HIS491Y1, HIS492Y1; JHP435Y1, JHP440Y1; NMC278H1, NMC474H1; TRN421Y1
Group B
JHP440Y1, JMC301Y1; NEW250Y1; NMC476H1, NMC477H1; POL108Y1, POL201Y1, POL242Y1, POL300Y1, POL301Y1, POL304H1, POL305Y1, POL312Y1, POL313Y1, POL321H1, POL323H1, POL324Y1, POL330H1, POL326Y1, POL340Y1, POL342H1, POL343Y1, POL345H1, POL354H1, POL358Y1, POL364H1, POL370Y, POL405Y1, POL412Y1, POL416Y1, POL417Y1, POL419Y1, POL422Y1, POL428H1, POL429Y1, POL432H1, POL435H1, POL442H1, POL447Y1, POL448H1, POL459Y1, POL463Y1, POL464H1, POL465H1, POL467H1, POL468H1, POL469H1, POL476H1, POL479H1, POL480H1, POL486H1, POL487H1
Group C
JLP374H1, JLP471H1; PSY100H1, PSY201H1, PSY210H1, PSY220H1, PSY270H1, PSY280H1, PSY300H1, PSY311H1, PSY312H1, PSY314H1, PSY320H1, PSY321H1, PSY322H1, PSY324H1, PSY326H1, PSY328H1, PSY331H1, PSY334H1, PSY370H1, PSY372H1, PSY420H1, PSY471H1
Group D
ENV200H1, ENV234Y1, ENV235Y1, GGR107H1, GGR124Y1, GGR203H1, GGR220H1, GGR314H1, GGR331H1, GGR333H1, GGR338H1, GGR343H1, GGR368H1, GGR393H1, GGR398H0/GGR399Y0, GGR409H1, GGR415H1, GGR418H1, GGR435H1, GGR439H1, GGR452H1, GGR494H1; PHL273H1, PHL373H1
Group E
ANT100Y1, ANT204H1, ANT329H1, ANT343H1, ANT357H1 ANT358H1, ANT364Y1, ANT366H1, ANT395Y0/ANT396Y0, ANT425H1, ANT426H1, ANT427H1, ANT440H1, ANT448H1, ANT450H1, ANT452H1; RLG250H1, RLG333H1; SOC205Y1,SOC210Y1, SOC212Y1, SOC213Y1, SOC215Y1, SOC220Y1, SOC250Y1, SOC301Y1, SOC306Y1, SOC312Y1, SOC320Y1,SOC330Y1, SOC336H1, SOC344Y1, SOC355Y1, SOC356Y1, SOC360Y1, SOC365Y1, SOC367H1, SOC386Y1
Group F
COG250Y1; JPP343Y1; PHL232H1, PHL235H1, PHL240H1, PHL244H1, PHL247H1, PHL271H1, PHL273H1,PHL275H1, PHL317H1, PHL340H1, PHL341H1, PHL351H1, PHL357H1, PHL365H1, PHL370H1, PHL373H1, PHL375H1, PHL378H1, PHL380H1,PHL394H1
Peace, Conflict, and Justice Major (Arts program)This is a limited enrolment program that can only accommodate a limited number of students. Admission is determined by a range of criteria, including at the initial stage a student's academic background, a statement of interest in the program, and as a later stage of the process, a personal interview on invitation of the Program Director. In some cases, reference letters may be requested by the Program Director. In the past, enrolment in Peace, Conflict and Justice has proven to be extremely competitive across all these dimensions, and an applicant's success in any one of these dimensions does not necessarily guarantee admission to the program in any given year.
(7.5 full courses or their equivalent)
1. HIS103Y1/ECO100Y1/ECO105Y1; (PSY100H1 + PSY220H1)/SOC101Y1; POL208Y1. Except for POL208Y1, substitutions will be considered for other introductory courses in relevant disciplines, based on a student’s rationale and on approval of the Program Director.
2. PCJ260Y1; PCJ360H1+PCJ361H1/PCJ361Y1; PCJ460H1
3. 2.0 FCE of complementary courses, at least 1.0 FCE of which must be at the 300+ series level, from: MUN101H1; MUN102H1; ECO230Y1; GGR439H1; HIS241H1, HIS242H1, HIS343Y1, HIS344Y1, HIS377Y1, HIS401Y1, HIS412Y1, HIS445H1; HPS306H1; PHL378H1; POL201Y1, POL304H1, POL313Y1, POL321H1, POL323H1, POL326Y1, POL340Y1, POL417Y1;PSY270H1, PSY322H1; SOC210Y1, SOC330Y1; or alternative courses on the approval of the Program Director, based on the needs of students’ interdisciplinary programs of study.
International Relations/Peace and Conflict Studies Specialist (Arts program)
The joint international relations/peace, conflict and justice program has closed.
Students interested in International Relations or Peace, Conflict and Justice may wish to consider a combination of majors or specialists in the individual programs.
The program description that follows applies only to those students who were enrolled in this subject POSt prior to 1 April 2013.
Questions about this program should be directed to:
(13 full courses or their equivalent, including at least two 400-series courses)
First Year:
ECO100Y1/ECO105Y1; HIS103Y1; PSY100H1 + PSY220H1/SOC101Y1
Second Year:
ECO230Y1; POL208Y1; PCS260Y1
Third Year:
HIS311Y1/HIS344Y1; PCS360Y1/PCS361Y1
Fourth Year:
PCS460H1 + PCS461H1 plus
One full course equivalent from the following: HIS458H1, HIS473Y1, HIS479H1, HIS482H1, HIS488H1, 497Y1, HIS498H1; TRN421Y1
Note: In addition, students must meet the Peace and Conflict Studies Program requirement of completing a cluster of 3 full course equivalents to be chosen in consultation with the Peace and Conflict Studies Program Director.
A review of the full range of theories explaining the nature and causes of conflict and possibilities for its resolution; provides students with a set of theoretical tools for effective analysis of interpersonal, civil, and international conflict.
Prerequisite: Only for current PCJ program students in second year and higher/permission of the Program DirectorAn in-depth exploration of selected issues in the field of Peace, Conflict, and Justice. Topics may include: negotiation theory, ethnic and inter-group identity conflict, feminist perspectives on peace, war, and justice; mathematical modeling of arms races, war, and peacemaking; decision-making theory and conflict; environmental change and conflict; global justice institutions; and traditional perspectives on statecraft.
Prerequisite: PCJ260Y1 or permission of the Program Director.An exploration of selected issues in the field of Peace and Conflict Studies involving an overseas and/or practicum component.
Exclusion: PCS361H1, UNI361Y1An exploration of selected issues in the field of Peace and Conflict Studies involving an overseas and/or practicum component.
Prerequisite: PCJ260Y1 or permission from the Program DirectorAn in-depth exploration of seleted issues in the field of Peace, Conflict, and Justice. Topics may include: negotiation theory, ethnic and inter-group identity conflict, feminist perspectives on peace, war, and justice; mathematical modeling of arms races, war, and peacemaking; decision-making theory and conflict; environmental change and conflict; global justice institutions; and traditional perspectives on statecraft.
Prerequisite: PCJ260Y1 or permission of the Program DirectorTopics vary annually. The objective of the course is to explore emerging issues in Peace and Conflict Studies. The focus of the course will be on a specific topic, rather than a broad survey of the field.
Prerequisite: PCJ260Y1, PCJ360Y1 or permission of the instructorA colloquium (fall term) on selected issues in the field of Peace and Conflict Studies. Topics to be considered include planetary, ecospheric, state, societal, and human security.
Prerequisite: PCJ360Y1, or PCJ360H1 and PCJ362H1, or permission of the Program Director; enrolment restricted to students enrolled in Peace, Conflict and Justice Specialist programA research seminar (spring term) on selected issues in the field of Peace and Conflict Studies. Topics to be considered include planetary, ecospheric, state, societal, and human security.
Prerequisite: PCJ360Y1 and PCJ460H1; enrolment restricted to students enrolled in the Peace, Conflict and Justice Specialist programIndependent study in the area of Peace and Conflict Studies. It is designed to provide students with the opportunity to explore topics not covered in the curriculum, or to develop a more detailed focus on topics covered. Approval of the Program Director is required. The student must obtain the written agreement of the instructor who will supervise the independent study. Not eligible for CR/NCR option.
Prerequisite: PCJ260Y1