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Dec 22, 2024
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2017-18 Academic Calendar Mount Royal University [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Peace and Conflict Studies Minor
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Return to: Academic Faculties
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Minors
Choosing a minor allows students to focus on a secondary area of interest to their major. Students should consider a minor if they have more than one main interest or if they want to connect two areas of study (for example, a major in Spanish with a minor in Linguistics, or a major in Business with a minor in Economics).
- A minor is recorded on the transcript but does not appear on the parchment.
- The number of required courses for a minor can vary between six and ten courses.
- Double minors are possible.
- Students can complete a minor outside of their faculty (e.g., Biology major with an Anthropology minor).
- Students may not graduate with a major and a minor in the same discipline (e.g., English major with an English minor).
- Normally, a student cannot use a core requirement for a major to satisfy the requirement for a minor. The only exception is within an interdisciplinary degree (e.g., Business or Science).
- Students can use courses that satisfy General Education and/or elective requirements to complete a minor or double minor.
- Graduating with a minor requires a cumulative GPA of 2.00.
- Students must declare their intention to complete a minor. The form is available at the Office of the Registrar or online at mtroyal.ca/AcademicSupport/StudentRegistrationRecords/StudentForms
Students planning to complete a minor should check with an Advisor early in their studies, so that they can ensure that they meet all requirements before graduation. Most courses at the 3000 and 4000 level have prerequisites, so students should consider those prerequisites when selecting their 1000 and 2000 level courses.
Peace and Conflict Studies Minor
Peace and Conflict Studies asks questions about inter/intra state warfare, gender dynamics and gender justice in conflict zones, colonial violence, Indigenous resistance/resurgence, and grassroots initiatives for peace and justice. Focusing on local and global contexts, Peace and Conflict Studies critically examines the political, social, economic and cultural structures and forces underpinning war and violence, and it investigates paths towards establishing and building peace. Peace and Conflict Studies courses are explicitly often interdisciplinary, intersectional, and global, reflecting the rich interdisciplinary frameworks of postcolonialism, feminism, international political sociology, history, and international relations.
Note
There are some courses in the Minor that may have one or more prerequisites required outside the Minor and these courses are noted by an asterisk.
Six additional courses from the following list
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Return to: Academic Faculties
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