Future begins here

Search
Close
Search
 

교육과정

  • home
  • 교육
  • 교육과정
  • 영문

교육

교육과정

For more details on the courses, please refer to the Course Catalog

교육과정
Code Course Title Credit Learning Time Division Degree Grade Note Language Availability
GFP5037 AI and Social Science Study 3 6 Major Master/Doctor 1-4 - No
The importance of digital technologies, especially AI and big data, in social science continues to increase. AI as an automated analysis technique is becoming an essential tool for efficiently analyzing the explosively increasing amount and complexity of data. In particular, developments in the field of natural language processing are causing not only scholars but also the general public to predict the huge wave that AI will bring. It has been a mission of current social science study to appropriately accommodate the social changes and the development of digital technology in the right direction. Even in the public policy sector, the integration of digital technology is not a concern limited to related organizations or researchers, but also enables the general public to review the necessity, adequacy, and feasibility of public policy. We are at a stage where AI and big data cannot be discussed without mentioning how they are being used in the field of social science and how they are being used to explore social scientific research. This course provides an overview of emerging AI and big data to explore recent social science research questions and looks at the need for convergence research. In social science study using digital technology, issues that undermine the main purpose of the study, which is the scientific accumulation of knowledge, are also emerging as challenges, so complex research is needed to overcome the risk of arbitrary interpretation caused by these issues.
GFP5038 Cost-Benefit Analysis 3 6 Major Master/Doctor 1-4 - No
This course will address evaluating a policy or project by expressing its total costs and benefits in monetary terms. • Considering the basic mechanics of performing a CBA, including methods for valuing costs and benefits, aggregating over time, and analyzing uncertainties. • Evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of different CBAs and propose strategies to address any shortcomings. • Debating the advantages and limitations of CBA for policy analysis and compare it to other approaches. • Creating a CBA for a real-world client from start to finish, including scoping, background research, valuation of costs and benefits, uncertainty analysis, and interpretation.
GFP5039 Aging and public policy 3 6 Major Master/Doctor 1-4 - No
This course will address major social insurance programs as well as trends and policies related to a variety of topics, including health and work at older ages, living arrangements and intergenerational transfers, and the demography of aging. Throughout this study, students will understand public policies covering older-age populations and will gain skills in analyzing these policies of the social, demographic, economic, and political contexts. Critical thinking skills will be exhibited and strengthened throughout the course in a research paper and presentation, through regular written and oral discussion of class readings, and leading portions of class discus
GFP5040 Trade Norms, Present and Future 3 6 Major Master/Doctor 1-4 - No
Economy and trade are closely connected topics. The main subject of this course is development of the international trade order after GATT in 1947. In particular, the formation and integrated application of trade norms, WTO legal practices will be the main topics of this course. Regional trade agreements, CPTPP and RCEP will be addressed. Digital trade agreements and changes in the trade environment surrounding big tech are also reviewed.
GSP4001 Policy Science: Theory & Korean Smart Policy Framework 3 6 Major Bachelor/Master Public Administration English Yes
As the 21st century unfolds, we are living in a chaotic and turbulent society. Speed of thought becomes very important as information and knowledge is the most critical factor of national competitiveness. To achieve national competitiveness, thereby building a great and strong nation, effective policymaking is crucial to achieve government innovation and national transformation. How these kinds of enormous change and innovation, swirling from the high-technological environmental changes such as the SMART revolution and the INDUSTRIAL revolution, will impact the academic discipline of policy science, effective policy-making specifically? What should be the new theoretical principle and philosophy of policy science to break-away the so-called criticism of the ‘impoverished professionalism’ facing the science of public administration? And how could we then academically link the theoretical principles of the knowledge-created Smart e-Government with the traditional Policy Science? This lecture concentrates on the attempt to answer these kinds of academic as well as practical questions, searching for a new paradigm of the policy framework to presenting the most appropriate strategy facing the developing countries in this 21st century.
GSP5196 Capstone for Social Problem Solving and Policy Research 3 6 Major Master/Doctor Public Administration - No
The course aims to conduct a capstone project in the area of public policy and problem solving. An individual student or team conducts the project of a given or explored topic. Students apply what they learned from various courses in the area of public policy and problem solving to research of recent cases.
GSP5226 Seminar on Policy Evaluation 3 6 Major Master/Doctor Public Administration Korean Yes
The main purpose of this seminar is to provide substantive knowledge and methods for the evaluation of public policy. We discuss not only analytical evaluation as scientific research activities but also institutionalized evaluation as an administrative control mechanism of the Korean government.
LAW5291 Data Protection Law 3 6 Major Master/Doctor 1-4 Law - No
This course examines the theme related to protection of data including state intelligence, trade secret, and personal information by exploring legislative system and legal issues about data protection.
LAW5484 Korea and International Law 3 6 Major Master/Doctor Law - No
It is a course of conducting research that can legally resolve the complexity of international relations through examination and analysis of international law issues related to Korea. In particular, this course will examine the Korea's application of international law by domestic courts, and review the 1948 UN General Assembly Resolution and its meaning of international law. Furthermore, this course examines the legal issues of unification of Korean and relevant issues that arise in Korean Peninsula in terms of international law.
PSD5035 Introduction to Comparative Politics 3 6 Major Master/Doctor 1-4 Political Science Korean Yes
Introduction to the study of western capitalist democracies, communist regimes, and authoritarian states. How do these types of state differ? What factors enhance the emergence of one type of state versus another? What factors explain the rise and collapse of democracies? What is the relationship between political development and economic development? These questions will be addressed through theoretical readings and case studies.
PSD5089 History of International Relations 3 6 Major Master/Doctor 1-4 Political Science Korean Yes
Primary purpose of this graduate course is to analyze diplomatic relations among nations based upon historical facts from the Vienna system of 1815 to the present. The history of East Asian international relations will be also studied across the ancient, modern, and contemporary era. Students will be able to grasp the essence and characteristic of Korean diplomacy, reviewing the historical contexts of international relations unfolded so far.
PSD5099 Seminar on Domestic Politics and International Relations 3 6 Major Master/Doctor 1-4 Political Science Korean Yes
This course offers a focused view on how domestic politics affect international relations, and how international relations affect domestic politics. We analyze how the political, economic, and social conditions within states affect foreign policy and international relations. We also examine how international politics affects domestic political leadership, policies, cleavages, and even institutions. To this end, we focus on several distinct substantive areas, including the use of force, international trade, and participations in international organizations. The primary assignment will be a piece of original research, which you will develop over the course of the semester with substantial input from both the class and me.
PSD5105 Seminar on Political Institutions 3 6 Major Master/Doctor Political Science - No
In this course, we will explore the literature on comparative institutions, one of the most important subjects of study in comparative politics. We first look at different approaches to studying institutions. We then take up the question of institutional design and choice, using case studies of electoral systems and government types. Following this, we will spend the majority of the semester on various institutions: presidential and parliamentary systems, coalition government, federalism, bicameralism, veto players, legislatures, and administrative politics. The readings and discussions will focus on where institutions come from, how and why they matter, and the effect they have on policy formation and outcomes for policy, voters, parties, legislators, and other actors.
PSD5112 Seminar on Global Politics of Climate Change 3 6 Major Master/Doctor Political Science - No
This advanced graduate level seminar course reviews various theoretical and practical analysis of political and economic consequences caused by global warming and climate change. Causal linkage between carbon emissions and climate change, recent development in international discussions and conflict of interest will be followed by risks and opportunities the Republic of Korea faces.
PSD5125 Energy and International Security 3 6 Major Master/Doctor 1-4 Political Science - No
This course is a graduate colloquium on energy security. It focuses on the key issues in energy security and the political economy of energy and the environment such as global energy trends and projections, an energy trilemma (i.e. the need to navigate difficult trade-offs between energy security, energy equity, and environmental sustainability), the key domestic/international institutions and regimes affecting energy policy, and competition and cooperation between states. The purpose of the course is to prepare graduate students for original, rigorous, and scientific research in the field. The course emphasizes recent empirical and theoretical research across issue areas. The class is conducted predominantly in a discussion format, although lectures are given on various topics as needed to introduce additional context beyond the immediate readings assigned.