The allowed substitutions for POLS 206/207 by common course number can be complex because they have to satisfy specific requirements set in the Texas Education Code. Different educational institutions in the state have distributed the required material differently in their course offerings. Consequently, there are some combinations of classes that will not satisfy the requirements.
The Coordinating Board, which sets the policies implementing the requirements, says that any of the following five combinations of classes are allowed (GOVT classes are from the common course number list and POLS classes from the Texas A&M university list):
(GOVT 2306) State and Local Government . Survey of state and local government and politics with special reference to the constitution and politics of Texas; also taught at Galveston and Qatar campuses.
Prerequisite: Political science majors must have completed POLS 209 before they enroll in their last 18 hours of 300- and 400-level POLS courses. This means a student may take no more than 6 hours ...
Survey of historical and contemporary issues in Latino politics in the U.S.; race and ethnicity in the context of U.S. politics; comparisons of racial and ethnic group experiences in the U.S. with those experienced by racial and ethnic groups elsewhere ; Latino access to the political system through political participation.
Survey of African politics from pre-colonial period to contemporary era; examination of local experience of democracy, governance, economic development in light of varied colonial experiences, independence movements, international political economy, informal sources of political power.#N#Prerequisites : POLS 206 and POLS 207; junior or senior classification.
Members of Congress, state and local officials, industry, agriculture, environmental groups, scientists, and the public called on EPA and the Army to clarify which waters are protected under the Clean Water Act. With this rule, the agencies are responding to those requests and addressing the Supreme Court decisions.
Not Excluded Good. Most goods that we consume are such that the owner of that good can exclude others from enjoying or benefitting from. Take the example of a piece of bread or a glass of milk. The person who owns them can prevent everyone else from consuming these goods or benefitting from them.