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ORG Organizational Leadership Courses at Global Campus

Businesses, big and small, rely on leadership to guide important decisions and inspire colleagues to do their best work. In your Organizational Leadership courses, you will learn effective management and leadership practices for different organizations and operating environments. These courses are part of several graduate degree programs at the University of Arizona Global Campus. Get the best out of employees as you work toward organizational goals.


ORG Organizational Leadership Class Descriptions and Credit Information

ORG 8571 Contemporary Criminological Theory

3 Credits

This course involves a critical analysis of contemporary criminological theories and current applications or revisions of traditional theories. Students will explore topics ranging from restorative justice and gender-driven theories to critical criminology and environmental criminology. The relative benefits and drawbacks of each topic will be examined, as well as the status of current research relating to them.

ORG 8572 Advanced Seminar: The Leader as Coach

3 Credits

This advanced graduate seminar explores issues and models for leveraging human resources to execute business strategy. Topics include succession planning, leadership development models, workforce staffing models, compensation models, and training and development strategies.

ORG 8573 Types & Characteristics of Crime

3 Credits

The purpose of this course is to review the classification of different crime types, and to assess the distribution of each type across an array of socio-demographic variables, including class, race/ethnicity, gender, age, and locale. Students will learn about the various causes of the different types of crimes, and the specific ways the justice system should respond to different types of offenders.

ORG 8575 Advanced Analysis of Criminal Justice Processes

3 Credits

This course examines the processing of offenders through the criminal justice system, from arrest to corrections. Issues of due process will be analyzed and critiqued, with particular emphasis placed on judicial system parameters. Recognition of the need for the three components of the justice system to process cases efficiently will lead the student to an understanding of how systems theory is integrated into an overall analysis of the justice system.

ORG 8577 Juvenile Justice

3 Credits

This course focuses on the juvenile justice system, while highlighting differences between the juvenile and the adult criminal justice system. The course will not only cover traditional topics such as juvenile delinquency and the processing of juvenile offenders, but also current concerns about juvenile behavior, such as rates of youth violence and gang participation. The legal and philosophical bases for the separate system for juveniles will also be analyzed and debated.

ORG 8580 Mental Health & Crime

3 Credits

The relationship between crime, mental health, and mental illness are covered in this course, with a focus on analyzing specific treatment and rehabilitation practices used with various types of offenders in diverse settings. Emphasis will be placed on changes in the mental health system that generated an increase in the presence of mentally ill offenders in the criminal justice system. Additionally, focus will be placed on issues such as the accurate assessment of mental illness, problems with certain therapy methods, and difficulties in treating dangerous offenders, drawbacks of utilizing personnel with limited training, and other impediments and limitations to effective treatment of offenders.

ORG 8582 Drugs, Addiction, & Crime

3 Credits

This course explores the relationships among criminality, drug use, and addiction by examining the evolution of drug policies from the following perspectives: enforcement, prosecution, and sentencing of drug users and addicts. The impact of drug laws on criminal justice processing will also be examined. Students will gain an understanding of drug use and will explore theoretical orientations that help to explain why people use drugs and how such use leads to criminal behavior. Further, the ways in which drug use and drug policies have an impact on the juvenile justice and criminal justice systems will be covered. An integral part of this course will be based on current events, policies on drug treatment, and enforcement of drug laws.

ORG 8586 Evaluating Criminal Justice Interventions

3 Credits

This course focuses on methods used to examine the effectiveness of programs developed to treat offenders, support victims, as well those concerning crime prevention schemes. Prior evaluation models will be reviewed, diversity issues will be examined and problems and appropriate methods in assessing effective models of intervention will be discussed. Evaluation concerns will not only include program effectiveness, but also issues of equity, ethics and legal requirements. Students will become familiar with how to address the need to design and evaluate programs according to such concerns. They will also have an opportunity to examine how prediction techniques and operational research methods measure the effectiveness and performance of criminal justice programs.

ORG 8615 Advanced Topics in Organizational Development & Leadership

3 Credits

This highly experiential course explores current issues and practices in the application of leadership and organizational development processes and systems. Topics include effective 21st-century leadership styles and practices, virtual leadership, leading across global cultures, transforming organizational cultures, diversity equity, inclusion, effective leadership development programs, strategic planning in uncertain times, and other current topics. This course is an experiential course during which student will analyze their leadership skills based on the core concepts of the course and will culminate in the students developing a personal leadership plan for the 21st century.

ORG 8619 Current & Global Issues in Industrial & Organizational Psychology

3 Credits

Due to the rapidly and continually changing nature of industrial and organizational (I/O) psychology, it is important for scholars, researchers, and practitioners to stay abreast of current and emerging issues in the field. Given that many of the changes occurring in the field of I/O are due to the globalization of the business would, particular emphasis will be focused on the role and practice of I/O in the complex environment of global organizations. In this advanced seminar, students explore current and global issues that attract the attention of researchers and practitioners in I/O psychology, as evidenced by the published literature, with an emphasis on learning the application and implementation of best practices and emerging theories in the field. Topics in the seminar will evolve along with the issues that appear most often in the I/O literature, issues that receive the most attention in the professional and business press, and current lines of research having the most impact on the field.

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