海角社区

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2024-2025 University Catalog
threeColumn catalog

Department of Political Science and Public Administration

About Political Science and Public Administration programs

Political Science and Public Administration Faculty

Location: Building 51, Room 2407
Phone: (904) 620-2997

Web Address:
Dr. Nicholas Seabrook, Chair

Mission

The mission of the Department of Political Science and Public Administration is to serve the State of Florida through excellent educational opportunities involving outstanding teaching, quality research, and effective civic engagement. The department focuses its resources to provide both undergraduate and graduate students with the knowledge, skills, and abilities for understanding, participating in, and managing the institutions, processes, and behaviors characteristic of national and international politics and public affairs. With excellent instruction as the highest priority, the department also supports extensive interaction with external constituencies through local, regional, state, and national professional service, and applied and theoretical research. The department is dedicated to maintaining program effectiveness for both students and community partners through continuous self-assessment and improvement.

The Program

The Department of Political Science and Public Administration offers a bachelor's degree program in political science, a graduate certificate in nonprofit management, and Master's degrees in Public Administration (MPA), and International Affairs (MAIA).

The department offers minors in political science, public administration and political communication and advocacy (In conjunction with the School of Communication). These minors may be taken with a student's major program; students should consult with their advisor on procedures for declaring a minor. The public administration minor is a fast-track minor that allows an undergraduate to gain admission to our Masters of Public Administration upon successful completion of the minor and graduation.

Bachelor of Arts in Political Science

Political Science, the study of politics, is concerned with understanding political phenomena and developing citizens who are aware of their political rights and responsibilities. The political science major at 海角社区has three broad objectives. The first is to convey to student's knowledge about the subfields within the discipline, with an emphasis on American government and politics, comparative politics, international relations, public law, and public administration. The second is to provide students with the skills needed for active and effective participation in the democratic process.

The final objective is to prepare students for careers associated with politics. The political science major provides an excellent background for admission to law school, and is a solid foundation for graduate work in political science, public administration and urban planning. Majors also find exciting work in campaign and legislative politics. In addition to preparing students for graduate work, the conceptual and methodological skills developed in the major equip students for employment by local, state and national organizations, corporations and nonprofit groups located in the U.S. and foreign countries, international organizations such as the United Nations, the print and electronic media, and secondary education.

海角社区offers an undergraduate major in political science culminating in the Bachelor of Arts degree. Two minors, political science and public administration are available within the department. Our third minor, political communication and advocacy is offered in conjunction with the School of Communication. Majors must have a grade of "C" or better in each core course, and a minimum GPA of 2.0 in major elective courses.

Political Science majors choose one of five concentrations to organize their major elective credits. The concentrations allow students to focus on one of the subfields of political science (American Politics, International Relations/Comparative Politics, Public Administration and Public Policy, and Public Law) or to choose General Political Science. Once students choose their concentration, they choose four courses from the list of electives within each concentration. Those students choosing the General Political Science concentration may choose electives from a comprehensive list of courses including all those available under the other concentrations. The remaining electives may be selected from any concentration or any other approved political science course except the foreign culture courses.

Fast Track Options

Students in the 海角社区undergraduate Political Science Major, as well as other 海角社区majors, may apply for admission to the undergraduate Public Administration Fast Track minor. Admitted students take 12 credits of MPA classes which count both toward the undergraduate Political Science major, and toward the 42 credit MPA program.

Undergraduate Fast Track requirements are that a student: (1) must declare a Public Administration Fast Track minor prior to their senior year; (2) must have an overall GPA of 3.0 or higher in the last 60 hours of undergraduate course work; (3) must make a grade of at least B or higher in PAD 4003 (taken as part of the Fast Track minor core requirements); (4) must have a B average or above for the four courses required in the Fast Track minor. All sections of these conditions must be met in full. If the undergraduate requirements stated above are met, Fast Track students may continue into the MPA program provided they apply for the program and meet the minimum Graduate Record Exam (GRE) requirements of the program for unconditional admission. Please see the MPA Director for further information on the Fast Track option.

Graduate Programs

The Master of Public Administration

The Master of Public Administration

The Masters of Public Administration program at the 海角社区 is committed to providing graduate professional education in northeast Florida, in the administration and management of public and nonprofit agencies.In the fulfillment of this mission, the program focuses on six key competencies: the ability
  • to lead and manage in public governance;
  • to participate in and contribute to the policy process;
  • to analyze, synthesize, think critically, solve problems and make decisions;
  • to articulate and apply a public service perspective;
  • to communicate and interact productively with a diverse and changing workforce and citizenry; and
  • to understand local governance in a global context.

The MPA curriculum is intended to enrich student understanding of the complex arrangements that constitute modern governance, and to enable students to develop the skills and attitudes that contribute to effective program administration. For the student who already possesses significant government or not-for-profit experience, the program provides opportunities to gain new skills and to develop an enlarged perspective on public sector management. The department now has three in-house concentrations: Local Government Policy and Administration, Nonprofit Management, and Public Policy. A Health Administration concentration can also be taken through the Brooks College of Health. The program has a combination of late afternoon classes and online/hybrid classes.

Accreditation

The MPA program has been accredited by the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration since 1999. The program has completed the process for accreditation through 2027.

The Master of Arts in International Affairs Program

The mission of the MAIA is to educate students about our world today, our country's interactions with other countries, and individual awareness of the many ways we interact with other countries, cultures, and peoples at home or abroad. More specifically, the program concentrates on educating our students about: the global context for US domestic and foreign policy making; contemporary global issues; the US role in the world and other countries' reactions to that role; globalization and the global economy; and the cultures and societies of other countries. Each of these goals fits with expectations of potential employers. A report by the Association of American Colleges and Universities noted the following knowledge and skills were desired by employers: the ability to understand the global context of situations and decisions, knowledge of global issues and development and their implications for the future, understanding of the role of the United States in the world, understandings of cultural diversity in America and other countries, and proficiency in a foreign language.

The Master of Arts in International Affairs (MAIA) is an interdisciplinary degree offered jointly by eight departments across two colleges. The Departments of Political Science and Public Administration; Economics and Geography; History; and Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work offer the common core courses; the Departments of Economics and Geography; English; History; Languages, Literatures, and Cultures; Philosophy and Religious Studies; Political Science; Public Health; and Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work will contribute elective courses.The MAIA program consists of a minimum of 36 credit hours, 15 of which are earned through an interdisciplinary common core of required courses: International Relations Theory, Public Administration Research Methods, Globalization and Development, International Economics, and US in World Affairs. Eighteen (18) credit hours are major electives. The final 3 credit hours are earned through a thesis or non-thesis option, the latter of which would involve an internship or study abroad component. Students will have to demonstrate intermediate-level foreign language proficiency either upon admission or graduation.The MAIA is meant to prepare our graduates for a variety of careers that demand knowledge of and engagement with the wider world. Examples include: the US government (Foreign Service, and other State Department positions, Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs, etc.), intergovernmental organizations such as the UN and international nongovernmental organizations such as Human Rights Watch or International Crisis Group; international and development consulting; international business; and education. Locally, employment opportunities exist with banks, educational institutions, international moving and logistics companies, law enforcement, non-profit organizations, refugee assistance programs and other internationally-focused entities in the Northeast Florida region.

Department of Political Science & Public Administration Faculty

Nicholas Seabrook, Professor & Chair

Michael M. Binder, Professor and PORL Director

Mary O. Borg, Professor

Gaylord G. Candler, Professor

Natasha V. Christie, Associate Professor and Associate Dean

Georgette E. Dumont, Associate Professor and MPA Director

James Fahey, Assistant Professor

Sean Freeder, Assistant Professor

Josh Gellers, Associate Professor and MAIA Director

Adrienne Lerner, Instructor and Pre-Law Director

Emily Maiden, Assistant Professor

Nancy E. Soderberg, Faculty Administrator

Seth Warner, Assistant Professor

Pamela A. Zeiser, Professor

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