Instruction offered by members of the Faculty of Arts.
Graduate Coordinator 鈥� J. Keeley
Graduate Courses
Only where appropriate to a student's program may graduate credit be received for courses numbered 500-599.
Strategic Studies601
MSS First Term Co-operative Education
Strategic Studies first term co-operative education work placement. Course Hours:(4.5 units, 4 months) Prerequisite(s):Admission to the co-operative education option of the MSS program. NOT INCLUDED IN GPA
Strategic Studies second term co-operative education work placement. Course Hours:(4.5 units, 4 months) Prerequisite(s):Admission to the co-operative education option of the MSS program.
An examination of the political parameters imposed by the Canadian government, the quality of Canadian leadership, and the "fit" between British forms of military organization and the fighting quality of Canadian soldiers, sailors and airmen. Course Hours:H(3-0)
Canadian military studies, excepting the two world wars. Topics will include the evolution of Canadian defence policy, past or present, the development and evolution of the Canadian Forces or any of its main elements (army, navy or air force), Canadian military operability with the military forces of Allied nations, and the relationship between Canadian foreign policy and the use of the Canadian military. Course Hours:H(3-0)
The development and operational achievements of the Canadian Expeditionary Force, wartime civil-military relations and conscription politics. Course Hours:H(3-0)
Strategic thought from Sun Tzu to Clausewitz, Mahan to Corbett. Analyzes the writings of classic strategic thinkers and then, by way of case studies, examines their theories as they pertain to military and political planners from the Peloponnesian War to the present. Course Hours:H(3-0) Also known as:(formerly History 655)
Intelligence; Information Operations; and "Command, Control, Communications and Computers"
An assessment of the history of intelligence, information operations, and command systems for military and diplomatic institutions as well as contemporary theory and practice related to these issues. Course Hours:H(3-0)
The meaning of sea power and an assessment of how modern states use it. An analysis of the writings of major naval strategic thinkers and case-study examination of the application of those theories from Nelson to the present. Course Hours:H(3-0)
Assessment of the security environment of the Arctic region. This seminar will assess both the differing theoretical conceptualizations of security in the Arctic and the policies of the circumpolar states as they pursue Arctic security. Course Hours:H(3S-0)