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What are the postgraduate majors of Yunnan University?

The postgraduate majors of Yunnan University are: law, sociology, French language and literature, development economics, ethnosociology, political economics, international trade, quantitative economics, statistics, regional economics and so on.

Law? Laws are formulated or recognized by the state, and enforced by the state's coercive force, reflecting the normative system of the ruling class's will determined by specific material living conditions.

Sociology? This major has a solid theoretical foundation of sociology, is proficient in social investigation and research methods, has the basic ability of scientific understanding and social research and the sense of innovation, and can work in party and government organs, education, scientific research, culture and other institutions and enterprises. ?

French language and literature? French literature includes literature from French-speaking countries and regions. It mainly studies the genre, writers, works, literary aesthetic value and social cognitive value of French literature since18th century. ?

Development economics? Development economics is a comprehensive branch of economics gradually formed in western countries in the late 1940s. It came into being to meet the needs of the times and gradually formed a new discipline in the economic system. It is an economics that mainly studies how poor and backward agricultural countries or developing countries realize industrialization and get rid of poverty and become rich.

Ethnic sociology? The study of ethnosociology can be traced back to the works of anthropologists such as British E.B. Taylor and American L.H. Morgan in the19th century. Morgan's Ancient Society studies the primitive national society of Iroquois, an American Indian, and can be regarded as an early work of ethnosociology.

Political economy? Political economy in a broad sense is a discipline that studies economic activities, economic relations and economic laws such as social production, capital, circulation, exchange, distribution and consumption. The first person to use the term "political economy" was Antoine de Montclair of France, who published the book "Political Economy of Kings and Empresses" in 16 15.