College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences > Academics > Applied Diplomacy > Undergraduate > Applied Diplomacy Minor

Applied Diplomacy Minor

Applied Diplomacy

The Minor in Applied Diplomacy is designed to equip students with an understanding of the transprofessional nature of modern diplomacy, which holds that while diplomacy is practiced by nation-state diplomatic corps representatives, it is also practiced by businesspeople, scientists, artists, educators, religious leaders, community organizers and activists, among others. This perspective is the hallmark of the Grace School of Applied Diplomacy and is the lens through which we aim to inspire minors to see the work they are doing in their respective majors as a vital source of diplomatic knowledge and practice.

The core courses required for a Minor in Applied Diplomacy have been chosen to give the students a strong foundation upon which to build a bridge between their own major and the discipline of diplomatic studies.

The Minor in Applied Diplomacy consists of six courses. Three of these courses must be drawn from among DPL 200 , DPL 201, DPL 202 and DPL 203.  Students taking the Minor may also take a fourth course from this group.

Course Title Quarter Hours
Choose 3 of the following:12
DPL 200
DIPLOMACY: ITS PAST AND PRESENT
DPL 201
DIPLOMACY: ITS PRESENT AND FUTURE
DPL 202
TRANSPROFESSIONAL MEDIATION AND NEGOTIATION
DPL 203
CITIZEN DIPLOMACY IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Select 3 additional courses from Applied Diplomacy concentration courses12

The three remaining courses a student must take to fulfill the requirements of the Minor can be drawn from no more than two of the eleven concentrations offered in the BA program. One of the three remaining courses may be fulfilled by the fourth course from "DPL 200-201-202-203" group above.  Students who minor in Applied Diplomacy will be encouraged to work with an advisor to select concentration courses which best reflect their field of interest.

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