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Public Diplomacy (PUBD)
- http://annenberg.usc.edu/communication/public-diplomacy-MPD
- D class assignments for graduate students available in ASC140; phone (213) 740-0900.
- All graduate students (excluding PhDs) will be assessed a $150 per semester "ASCJ Technology fee. There is no technology fee charged for the summer term. Phone (213)740-5297, or email asctech@usc.edu for questions. All graduate students (excluding PhDs) will be assessed a $150 per
Introduces public diplomacy as a central feature of contemporary international relations and challenges students to locate themselves as both its target and practitioners.
Examines how the City of Los Angeles and other local actors use public diplomacy tools to strengthen ties between themselves and foreign audiences.
52809R | 001 | Lecture | 2:00-4:50pm | Wednesday | 9 of 19 | Robert Banks | ANN210 | Word (51897 KB) | |
Provides overview of formal cultural diplomacy and concentrates on ways in which non-governmental entities communicate across international boundaries and the effects of those interchanges.
In-depth examination of historical, political, economic, cultural factors that influence public diplomacy efforts within specific geographic regions.
East Asia |
52821D | 001 | Lecture | 6:00-8:50pm | Tuesday | 8 of 18 | Jay Wang | ANN309 | PDF (548741 KB) | |
Public diplomacy's role in shaping ideas about trade and development and in creating trade agreements, and the use of trade agreements as public diplomacy.
Critical examination of challenges and benefits of measuring Public Diplomacy's impact; terminology and mechanics of evaluation, the measurement community, and varying approaches for evaluation
52837D | 001 | Lecture | 2:00-4:50pm | Thursday | 11 of 19 | Robert Banks | ANN211 | Word (60518 KB) | |
Development and production of original research-based project in the area of public diplomacy. Graded CR/NC.