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140 courses found
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This course provides students an opportunity to explore a relevant topic of finance outside of the regular business management course curriculum.
This course provides students an opportunity to explore a relevant topic of marketing outside of the regular business management course curriculum.
This course provides students an opportunity to explore a relevant topic of organizational leadership and human resources outside of the regular business management course curriculum.
This course provides students an opportunity to explore a relevant topic of supply chain, operations, and/or analytics outside of the regular business management course curriculum.
This course delves deep into the general principles essential to hospitality marketing and unveils the art of creating, branding, and marketing destinations, attractions, activities, and guest experiences. Explore dynamic marketing strategies while learning how to transform memorable experiences into lasting impressions.
This course examines cultural constructs of place, purpose, and position through the lens of tūrangawaewae. This Māori word is made up of two important ideologies (1) tūranga or place of standing, and (2) waewae, or feet. Combined, the word is often translated as "a place to stand." Tūrangawaewae are places where we feel especially empowered and connected. They are our foundation, our place in the world, our home.
This course is designed to introduce students to a variety of Pacific research methodologies (PRS), present core cultural concepts embedded in PRS, and demonstrate how to implement ethical practices in any research design. Intended for students who are interested in initiating their own research projects in the future, the course is structured to enable those with little or prior knowledge of Indigenous research methods to place, document, revise an original project and appropriate questions.
This course introduces students to the social issues impacting the Pacific diaspora in New Zealand, Australia, and the United States of America. Despite the difference in location and migration, the Pacific diaspora are experiencing similar social issues. This course examines the various cultural factors that have contributed to the social issues impacting the Pacific diaspora globally.
The causes of conflict within the Pacific archipelago are unique because the issues fueling the conflict is not singular but rather an infusion of complicated layers as the result of colonialism, cultural ethnocentrism, clash of traditional and western political institutions as well pulling effect of globalization and modernization. This class will introduce you to some of the past and current major conflicts experienced in the Pacific region. It will look at what factors contributed to these conflicts and how it impacted both the traditional and western institutions in each Pacific Island nation.