International Studies Minor
Coordinator: Casey Aldrich, Ed.D.
ISM Steering Committee: G. Parati (Chair), L. V. Adams, M. B. Burkins, C. Cortez Minchillo, M. E. Greenleaf, V. K. Holt, P. Novosad, W. C. Wohlforth.
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To view information on the John Sloan Dickey Center, click here
The International Studies Minor is open to students from all majors seeking to better understand the cross-cutting global forces that shape the vital issues of our day.
The Minor is coordinated by the John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding and draws upon faculty expertise from across the College. Students graduating with a Minor in International Studies will be able to demonstrate that they are cognizant of the interplay between local and global-level processes, human and environmental interactions, and place, identity, and culture. They will further be able to apply this understanding to the complex global issues of our time in order to better understand their causes and consequences, and to assume the mantle of responsibility that comes with global citizenship. Application for the Minor should ideally be made by the student’s sixth term of study. No course in the minor may be taken under the Non-Recording Option. For the most up-to-date information on course offerings, please visit the Dickey Center’s website: https://dickey.dartmouth.edu/student-opportunities/international-studies-minor
Prerequisite: None.
Requirements: A total of six (6) courses, to include the following:
Six (6) thematic courses (one from each theme):
International Development; International Security; Global Health; Global Environment; World Language & Culture; Great Issues Seminar.
Thematic Courses / Pre-Approved Thematic Courses for 2025-26:
International Development: INTS 16 / GEOG 8.01 (Intro to International Development); ECON 24 (Development Economics); GEOG 22.02 (Global Poverty and Care); GEOG 33.01 (Geopolitics and Third World Development); GOVT 44 (Power and Development in the Global Economy); ECON 29 (International Finance and open-economy macroeconomics); ECON 39 (International Trade); ECON 64 (Topics in Developing Economics); SOCY 22 (The Sociology of International Development); ENVS55 (Ecological Economics)
International Security: INTS 15 (Violence & Security); GOVT 4 (Politics of the World); GOVT 5 (International Politics); GOVT 53 (International Security); ANTH 28 / AAAS 88.08 (Ethnography of Violence); GOVT 50.02 (Civil War, Insurgency, and the International Response); GOVT 50.04 (War and Peace in the Modern Age); GOV 50.19 (Development Under Fire); GOV 59 (Foreign Policy and Decision Making); HIST 08.10 (World War II: Ideology, experience, legacy); HIST 62 (The First World War)
Global Health: INTS 18 / GEOG 21.01 (Global Health & Society); ANTH 06 (Intro to Biological Anthropology); ANTH 55 (Anthropology of Global Health); ANTH 26 (Gender & Global Health); ENGS 16 (Biomedical Engineering for Global Health); ENVS 28 (Global Environmental Health); HIST 8 (Body Parts, Body Wholes: An introduction to the comparative history of medicine)
Global Environment: ENVS 2 (Introduction to Environmental Studies); ENVS 3 (Environment & Society); ENVS 62 (Science Policy & Diplomacy); ENVS 30 (Global Environmental Science); ENVS 15 (Environmental Issues of the Earth's Cold Regions); ENVS 60 (Environmental Law); ENVS 65 (Global Environmental Politics); EARS 18 Environmental Earth Sciences; GEOG 15.01 (Global Climate Change); GEOG 16.01 (Climate for Human Security); EARS 6 (Environmental Change); INTS 80.05 / GEOG 70.04 (Imagining Polar Geographies)
World Languages and Culture: One advanced foreign language or literature course (above 1, 2, 3 introductory sequence); INTS17.09 / COLT 49.06 (Multilingualism); SPEE 27 (Intercultural Communication); ANTH 3 (Intro to Cultural Anthropology); ANTH 9 (Language and Culture); COLT 1 (Read the World); WGSS 3 (Global Race x Global Migration); WGSS 41.06 (Transnational Feminisms); COCO 21 (What's in Your Shoebox?); COCO 26 (What's in Your Toolbox?)
Great Issues Seminar: INTS 19 (Dissent and Democracy); INTS 80.04 / GOVT 85.50 (Diplomacy in a Complex World: Meeting Challenges, Creating Opportunity, and Pushing for Peace); INTS 80.06 (Multilateralism and US Leadership)
Note: if a Great Issues Seminar is not available for your D-plan, please select a second course from one of the other five Thematic Course categories.