Course Information

Schedule Your Courses

The first thing to consider when scheduling your first semester is to factor in coursework that does not count towards your credit total, but must be completed, in case you have been accepted with conditions. Some of you must take our undergraduate statistics course, STA250. STA250 will not count towards your GPA and thus it is recommended that you take it pass/no credit (you must file a form with Jay Express Services at the beginning of the semester to do this: https://jstop.jjay.cuny.edu/forms/Pass-%20No%20Credit.pdf) OR email your Academic Advisor to obtain the form. If you receive benefits from the Office of Military and Veterans Services and are required to take STA 250 as a condition of your acceptance, you MUST additionally file the Veteran Graduate Student Authorization for Undergraduate Courses and submit it to the veteran certifying official in the Office of Military and Veterans Services. Please email your advisor to obtain the form.

Elective courses may be selected from the themed lists below or from any of the graduate courses offered at John Jay and CUNY, subject to the approval of the graduate program director. Electives offerings will vary every semester and new electives may be developed. Graduate courses not on the list below (whether offered at John Jay, other CUNY colleges, or at other universities) MUST be approved by the graduate program director on a case-by-case basis as electives. ALL non-prefixed ICJ courses are subject to spacing and the approval of the respective program director (Criminal Justice/Psychology/Public Administration, etc.) for registration approval - even if it is an approved elective.

 

In addition, students may use their 12 elective credits to complete courses toward the Advanced Certificate in Transnational Organized Crime Studies (ACTOCS) or Terrorism Studies or take a combination of different electives chosen from the list of approved electives below. Students who have completed 15 credits and have a GPA of 3.5 or above are eligible to take the following electives: Internship (6 credits) and Thesis I/Thesis II (6 credits). The thesis elective is taken over a two semester sequence as ICJ 791 and ICJ 792.

The internship course (ICJ 780) is an online course that is accompanied by a mandatory 280 hours in an internship site. Placements in internship sites are arranged at the initiative of the student in consultation with the Center for Career and Professional Development and the program director. Students interested in the internship elective should start their search for an internship site at least one semester in advance. Students are encouraged to pursue one or more internships during their graduate studies, even if they are not taking the internship elective course, potentially as an Independent Study (3 credits).

 

Required Courses

The Master of Arts in International Criminal Justice requires 36 credits consisting of eight required core courses (24 credits) and four electives (12 credits; see the list of courses below).

  • ICJ 700    International Crime and Justice Theory    
  • ICJ 701    Illegal Markets and Economic Justice    
  • ICJ 702    Comparative CRJ Systems    
  • ICJ 703    International Criminal Law    
  • ICJ 704    Crime, Justice and Cultural Struggles    
  • ICJ 706    Transnational Crime    
  • ICJ 715    Applied Research Methods in International Crime and Justice    
  • ICJ 770    Capstone Course in International Crime and Justice

Electives may be selected from the list below or from any of the graduate courses offered at John Jay and CUNY, subject to the approval of the graduate program director

Approved Electives

Current List of ICJ Electives (updated September 1, 2024)


ICJ 705                   Human Rights and Counterterrorism   

ICJ 720                   Crime and Justice in the Balkans

ICJ 721                   International Perspectives on Women in Criminal Justice

ICJ 725                   Environmental Crime   

ICJ 726                   Drug Trafficking                 

ICJ 728                   History of Genocide      

ICJ 729                   Organized Crime: An International Perspective                

ICJ 730                   Human Trafficking          

ICJ 735                   Gender Justice for Conflict Related Sexual and Gender-Based Violence             

ICJ 750                   Special Topics in International Crime and Justice           

ICJ 755                   Terrorism and Transnational Crime        

ICJ 760/SEC 760    Information Technology and Cybercrime             

ICJ 762                   Corruption and the Global Economy    

ICJ 765                   Intelligence in National Security and Policing  

ICJ 780                   Internship Course (6 credits)    

ICJ 791                   International Crime and Justice Thesis I               

ICJ 792                   International Crime and Justice Thesis II             

ICJ 794                   International Crime and Justice Independent Study

ICJ 798                   Faculty-Mentored Research in International Crime and Justice


CRJ 713                 White-Collar Crime       

CRJ 727/FCM 727 Cybercriminology           

CRJ 739                 Crime Mapping                 

CRJ 744                 Terrorism and Politics  

CRJ 746                 Terrorism and Apocalyptic Violence      

CRJ 759                 Comparative Police Administration       

CRJ 784                 Organized Crime              

CRJ 789                 Violence Across the Globe         

CRJ 797                 Homeland Security and International Relations               

CRJ 798                 Homeland Security and Terrorism          


HR 701                   International Human Rights: Organizations and Institutions     

HR 711                   Human Rights and Humanitarianism   

HR 712                   Civil and Political Rights and Civil Liberties       

HR 713                   Economic, Social and Cultural Rights  


PAD 718                International Public Policy and Administration

PAD 746                Comparative Public Administration       

PAD 772                International Inspection and Oversight              


PSY 705                 Victimology       

PSY 729                 Terrorism             

PSY 746                 Empirical Profiling Methods      


Want to learn more course information in our program, please click here.

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