Peace Studies (PCS)

  • Loramy Gerstbauer, Program Director

Peace Studies is an interdisciplinary field of study that addresses the problems of war, social oppression, and violence, and the challenges of implementing nonviolent conflict resolution and social justice. Peace Studies serves to focus knowledge from diverse disciplines to converge on the problems of violence and the challenges of finding peaceful solutions.

The Peace Studies program strongly recommends study or work abroad for its students to gain international awareness and experience. Many institutions with which Gustavus has an official affiliation offer courses in the areas of peace and conflict resolution studies which could be substituted for Gustavus courses (up to two) and applied toward the Peace Studies minor.

Students are encouraged to consult with the following faculty who serve as resource persons and advisers in the various disciplines that contribute to the minor in Peace Studies: Loramy Gerstbauer, Director (Political Science), Karen Larson (Interdisciplinary Studies), Richard Leitch (Political Science), and Suzanne Wilson (Sociology/Anthropology).

Peace Studies Minor:

Five courses chosen in consultation with an adviser in Peace Studies. No more than two of the five courses may be from the same department.

They are to be distributed as follows:

  1. PCS-211, Introduction to Peace Studies
  2. At least one course must be selected from each of the following three tracks. When possible, students wanting any of these courses to count toward the minor should notify the instructor at the start of the course.
    1. Track I: Global Justice: International Norms, Institutions, and States
      • E/M-284 Economic Development POL-130 International Relations
      • GEG-102 World Regional Geography POL-250 Politics of Developing Nations
      • HIS-322 Nationalism in the Balkans POL-335 International Organizations
      • HIS-343 America and the Vietnam War POL-340 U.S. Foreign Policy
      • S/A-243 Globalization
    2. Track II: Theology, Philosophy and Ethics
      • ENG-126 Ethnic American Literature PSY-336 Humanistic Psychology
      • PHI-102 Racism and Sexism REL-115 World Religions
      • PHI-109 Philosophies of Environment REL-233 Christian Social Ethics
      • PHI-243 Ethics of Int’l. Development REL-273 Religion and Politics in
      • Latin America
      • PHI-248 Feminist Philosophy REL-373 The Holocaust and Theolog
    3. Track III: Social and Historical Issues
      • COM-257 Intercultural Communication S/A-111 Cultural Anthropology
      • HIS-232 African American History S/A-113 Social Problems
      • HIS-236 American Radicalism S/A-235 Social Inequality
      • HIS-264 Mexican Revolution S/A-237 American Minorities
      • PHI-105 School and Society S/A-273 Social Welfare
      • T/D-236 Theatre and Society GWS-236 Women and the Holocaust
  3. One course credit selected in consultation with an adviser from the following choices: independent study, study abroad, senior thesis.

PCS-211 Introduction to Peace Studies (1 course) This course is about violence and its alternatives. We examine the causes and nature of violence and aggression among individuals, groups and nations. We consider whether there are appropriate uses of violence by weighing the competing claims of just war versus pacifist theories. We explore the meaning of peace, including concepts of negative and positive peace and structural violence as they relate to issues of societal oppression, human rights, and culture. We investigate possibilities of peace, introducing students to conflict resolution literature and skills. SOSCI, Spring semester.