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  • Biography Suzanne Crawford O’Brien’s area of specialization is Religion and Culture, with emphases in Native American religious traditions, and comparative studies of minority religious communities in North America, including religion and healthcare, gender and ethnicity, and religion and popular culture. Her research interests address questions of healing, place, and ecology, and how religious belief and practice can work to promote ecological and social justice in Ireland and in North America. Most

  • (Criminological Theory), 494 (Gender and Violence), or 495 (Internship). 4 semester hours of a Criminal Justice Elective course. Choose a SOCI course not already used above, including SOCI 226 (Delinquency and Juvenile Justice), 287 (ST in Criminal Justice), 387 (ST in Criminal Justice), 413 (Criminological Theory), 494 (Gender and Violence), 495 (Internship), or approved courses outside SOCI, including BUSA 303 (Business Law and Ethics), PHIL 125 (Ethics and the Good Life), PHIL 128 (Politics and the Good

  • research interests include modern Jewish identity formation and political self-representations, 1881-1948; art, politics, and culture; the politics of religion in Mandate Palestine; perceptions of social deviance among Jewry from early modern times to the present; Jews and German culture; ties between charity and nationalism; and modes of understanding and misunderstanding the Holocaust. Holocaust Studies Program at PLU This past Spring, at the annual Powell and Heller Holocaust Conference it was

  • mimic natural habitat after it had been graded. Tobiason worked with Ojala-Barbour in guiding the restoration of the site.  Earth Day speaker: Former Seattle mayor Greg Nickels speak on “All Politics is Local: Even Global Warming,” from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, April 18 in the Scandinavian Cultural Center of the UC. Nickels served eight years as the 51st mayor of Seattle from 2002 to 2009. While mayor, he focused on four priorities: getting Seattle moving, keeping neighborhoods safe, creating

  • : Administrative Violence, Critical Trans-Politics and the Limits of the Law HOW TO PARTICIPATE The reading group convener should send an email to Rosemary Raynolds, raynolrl@plu.edu, at the Wang Center for Global Education, by no later than March 1, 2020. To be considered for the challenge, this email should contain: Three sentences on why the group wishes to participate A list of the reading group participants with email addresses and their PLU affiliation (use “student” for student affiliation) The date

  • nation. Not only successful on the water, Stiles takes that same energy outside of the athletic atmosphere into her daily life. As a political science major, Stiles is doing an internship at the Washington State Capitol in Olympia. “I’m getting a really deep understanding of state government, of policy, and of law making. I’m also getting to essentially “job shadow” for about four months. It has really solidified my desire to work in politics in the future,” said Stiles.More Read Previous Dr. Maria

  • , fertility, migration, and ethnicity. She conducted fieldwork research on female fertility behavior in relation to socio-cultural values and norms in rural Bangladesh. Her study results have been published in the Journal of Comparative Family Studies (2000) and the Journal of International Women’s Studies (2004). She also conducted research on the inter-generational family relationships of Germans and Turkish immigrants living in Germany. Some of the conclusions from this research have been published in

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  • (September - December) MFTH 503 MFTH 504Systems approach to MFT Contextual Foundations of Systemic Practice 4 credits 4 credits January term year 1 (month of January) MFTH 505 Research Methods3 credits Spring year 1 MFTH 507 MFTH 512 Comparative MFT Professional studies in MFT 4 credits 4 credits Summer of first year:Classes one to three times per week, typically three-hour classes held in the early afternoon. Option A “summer starters”: begin practica in summer at on-campus clinic, 20-25 hours per week

  • opportunities to do really exciting internships given the proximity to the capital and our major leads students into really interesting careers in politics as well as the law and in nonprofit works. We think studying political science at PLU makes a lot of sense thanks. (electric buzz) [video: Prof. Artime laughs.] Prof. Artime: All right let’s call it. Meet the Professors More Stories Visit About The study of political science includes the realities of politics and the exploration of how political systems

  • advocacy began in legislative politics. He spent the first four years of his career managing political campaigns throughout Western Washington and serving as a legislative assistant in Olympia. While working at the Legislature in 2007, Austin began establishing himself as a local leader in Tacoma transit advocacy, participating in local activism and making the most of an opportunity with The News Tribune of Tacoma. “I had a blog for the Tribune called ‘The Bus Stops Here,’” Austin explains. “I would