Class code POL-UA 9522 Instructor Details Class Details Prerequisites Class Description Dr. Michal Kubát majkkubat@hotmail.com +420 604 230 948 East European Government and Politics Monday, 4.30-7.30PM Location to be confirmed. None This course is an introduction to the modern politics and government of Central and Eastern Europe in the twentieth century and present. We will examine five periods in the class: 1918-1939 (between World War I and World War II), 1939-1945 (the World War II), 1944-1948 (sovietization), 1949-1989 (communist era), after 1989. All these periods will be studied through a comparative approach. You will not only learn about the most important and contemporary political events but you will also learn to apply basic theories of political science to Central and East European political practice, or more precisely analyze them by means of these periods. Teaching methodology: lectures and discussions. Desired Outcomes Upon successful completion of this course, student should be able to: Assessment Components 1) understand the fundamentals of politics and government in East-Central Europe, 2) identify the main turning points in the development of politics and government in the 20 th century and present, 3) evaluate particularities of politics and government in the region. Class participation/attendance: 10 % Midterm exam: 25 % Book review: 25 % Final exam: 40 % Midterm exam will consist of an in-class test (with open questions).
Book review is due April 29, 2013. Students hand in a hard copy of their book review to the professor in in class. Book review should be 3-5 pages long. Students are welcome to choose any relevant academic book on politics and government in East-Central Europe (available in the NYU library) but have to consult their choice with the instructor. Final exam will consist of an in-class test (with open questions). Students will receive additional information on all assessment components in the first class Failure to submit or fulfill any required course component results in failure of the class. This must include number of pages of written work and time of oral presentations. Failure to submit or fulfill any required course component results in failure of the class. Assessment Expectations Grade conversion Grading Policy Attendance Policy Grade A: Excellent performance. The student has shown originality and a deep analytical understanding of the subject. Grade B: Good work. The student has demonstrated high competence and an ability to answer the given set of problems with some insights. Grade C: Passable work. The student made significant mistakes. Makes attempt to answer the problem but in a rather mechanical way and lacking individual insights. Grade D: Poor work. Meets minimum requirements. Grade F: Fails to meet the requirements. A=94-100 A-=90-93 B+=87-89 B=84-86 B-=80-83 C+=77-79 C=74-76 C-=70-73 D+=67-69 D=65-66 F=below 65 NYU Prague aims to have grading standards and results similar to those that prevail at Washington Square. At the College of Arts and Sciences, roughly 39% of all final grades are in the B+ to B- range, and 50% in the A/A- range. We have therefore adopted the following grading guideline: in any non-stern course, class teachers should try to ensure that no more than 50% of the class receives an A or A-. A guideline is not a curve. A guideline is just that-it gives an ideal benchmark for the distribution of grades towards which we work. Each unexcused absences will result in your final grade being reduced by 3%. Absences only for medical reasons will be excused. To obtain an excused absence, you are obliged to supply either a doctor s note or corroboration of your illness by a member of the housing staff (either an RA or a Building Manager). Absences due to travel will not be excused.
Late Submission of Work Plagiarism Policy Late work will not be accepted. According to the Liberal Studies Program Student Handbook, plagiarism is defined as follows: Plagiarism is presenting someone else s work as though it were one s own. More specifically plagiarism is to present as one s own a sequence of words quoted without quotation marks from another writer, a paraphrased passage from another writer s work; facts or ideas gathered, organized and reported by someone else, orally and/or in writing. Since plagiarism is a matter of fact, not of the student s intention, it is crucial that acknowledgment of the sources be accurate and complete. Even where there is no conscious intention to deceive, the failure to make appropriate acknowledgment constitutes plagiarism. The College of Arts and Science s Academic Handbook defines plagiarism similarly and also specifies the following: presenting an oral report drawn without attribution from other sources (oral or written), writing a paragraph which, despite being in different words, expresses someone else s idea without a reference to the source of the idea, or submitting essentially the same paper in two different courses (unless both teachers have given their permission in advance). Receiving help on a take-home examination or quiz is also cheating and so is giving that help unless expressly permitted by the teacher (as in collaborative projects). While all this looks like a lot to remember, all you need to do is give credit where it is due, take credit only for original ideas, and ask your teacher or advisor when in doubt. 43 Penalties for plagiarism range from failure for a paper, failure for the course or dismissal from the university. (Liberal Studies Program Student Handbook) Required Text(s) Supplemental Texts(s) (not required to purchase as copies are in NYU-L Library) Required reading is assigned for each week. Students are required to read all assigned readings and actively participate in class discussions. Students will be given occasional handouts that will be discussed in class. N/A Internet Research N/A
Guidelines Additional Required Equipment N/A Session 1 February 11 Introduction Session Course Overview Introduction, overview of the course: syllabus reading Session 2 Friday, February 15 (make up for Monday classes) Politics and Government in Central and Eastern Europe Before 1918 I. Ian D. Armour, A History of Eastern Europe 1740-1918. London: Hodder, 2006, pp. 193-213, 229-238. Politics and Government in Central and Eastern Europe Before 1918 II. Ian D. Armour, A History of Eastern Europe 1740-1918. London: Hodder, 2006, pp. 193-213, 229-238. Session 3 February 18 Politics and Government in Central Europe 1918-1939 (Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland) Routledge, 1994, pp. 39-94. Politics and Government in the Baltic States, 1918-1940 Routledge, 1994, pp. 95-106. Session 4 February 25 Politics and Government in the Balkans 1918-1939 (Albania, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia)
Routledge, 1994, pp. 107-151. Politics and government in the Soviet Union until the World War II Thomas Skallerup, James P. Nichol, Soviet Union until the World War II, pp. 1-9, http://memory.loc.gov/frd/cs/sutoc.html Session 5 March 4 Politics and Government in Central and Eastern Europe During World War II Routledge, 1994, pp. 179-209. The communist takeovers sovietization in Central and Eastern Europe 1944-1948 Routledge, 1994, pp. 211-239. George Schöpflin, Politics in Eastern Europe 1945-1992. Oxford-Malden: Blackwell, 1993, pp. 57-74. Session 6 March 11 Politics and Government in Central Europe 1944-1989 (Czechoslovakia, East Germany) Sharon L. Wolchik, Czechoslovakia. In: Joseph Held (ed.). The Columbia History of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. New York: Columbia University Press, 1992, pp. 129-145. Melvin Croan, Germany and Eastern Europe. In: Joseph Held (ed.). The Columbia History of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. New York: Columbia University Press, 1992, pp. 350-368, 376-382. Politics and Government in Central Europe 1944-1989 (Hungary, Poland) Andrzej Korbonami, Poland: 1918-1990. In: Joseph Held (ed.). The Columbia History of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. New York: Columbia University Press, 1992, pp. 256-273. Péter Hanák, Joseph Held, Hungary on a Fixed Course: An Outline of Hungarian
History. In: Joseph Held (ed.). The Columbia History of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. New York: Columbia University Press, 1992, pp. 205-226. Session 7 March 18 Politics and Government in the USSR and Yugoslavia, 1944-1990 Dimitrije Djordjevic, The Yugoslav Phenomenon In: Joseph Held (ed.). The Columbia History of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. New York: Columbia University Press, 1992, pp. 328-342. Thomas Skallerup, James P. Nichol, Soviet Union since the World War II, pp. 1-17, http://memory.loc.gov/frd/cs/sutoc.html Politics and Government in the Balkans 1944-1990 (Albania, Bulgaria, Romania) Nicholas C. Pano, Albania. In: Joseph Held (ed.). The Columbia History of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. New York: Columbia University Press, 1992, pp. 34-53. Marin Pundeff, Bulgaria. In: Joseph Held (ed.). The Columbia History of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. New York: Columbia University Press, 1992, pp. 98-112. Routledge, 1994, pp. 311-314, 354-356, 385-386. Session 8 March 25 Midterm exam Fall Break April 1 5 Session 9 April 8 Totalitarianism and Authoritarianism in Central and Eastern Europe Michal Kubát, Theories of non-democratic regimes and Eastern Europe, 1945-1989, pp. 1-15 (This text is a translation of the article Michal Kubát, Teorie nedemokratických režimů a východní Evropa 1944-1989. (Theory of Undemocratic Regimes and Eastern Europe 1944-1989) Politologický časopis (Czech Journal of Political Science), Vol. 13, 2006, No. 2, pp. 139-157.) The Breakdown of Communist Regimes Transition to Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe
Routledge, 1994, pp. 391-415. George Schöpflin, Politics in Eastern Europe 1945-1992. Oxford-Malden: Blackwell, 1993, pp. 224-255. Session 10 April 15 Politics and Government in Central Europe After 1989 (Czechoslovakia, Czech Republic, Slovakia) Constitution of the Czech Republic http://www.psp.cz/cgi-bin/eng/docs/laws/1993/1.html Charter of Fundamental Rights and Basic Freedoms http://www.psp.cz/cgi-bin/eng/docs/laws/1993/2.html Constitution of the Slovak Republic http://www.nrsr.sk/default.aspx?sectionid=124 Politics and government in Central Europe after 1989 (Hungary, Poland) Central and South-Eastern Europe 2007. London and New York: Routledge, 2006, pp. 302-313, 444-455. The Constitution of the Republic of Hungary (1949-2011) http://www.mkab.hu/index.php?id=constitution The Constitution of the Republic of Hungary (2012) http://www.euractiv.com/sites/all/euractiv/files/brneda224_004970.pdf http://www.euractiv.com/sites/all/euractiv/files/constitution_in_english DRAFT.pdf Small Constitution of Poland 1992 http://www.servat.unibe.ch/icl/pl02000_.html The Constitution of the Republic of Poland 1997 http://www.sejm.gov.pl/prawo/konst/angielski/kon1.htm Session 11 Politics and Government in Central Europe After 1989 (Slovenia, Croatia)
April 22 Constitution of the Republic of Slovenia http://www.us-rs.si/o-sodiscu/pravna-podlaga/ustava/?lang=1 Constitution of the Republic of Croatia http://www.sabor.hr/default.aspx?art=2405 Politics and Government in the Baltic States after 1990 The Constitution of the Republic of Estonia http://www.legaltext.ee/text/en/x0000k1.htm Constitution of the Republic of Latvia http://www.humanrights.lv/doc/latlik/satver~1.htm Constitution of the Republic of Lithuania http://www3.lrs.lt/home/konstitucija/constitution.htm Session 12 April 29 Politics and Government in Russia After 1990 The Constitution of the Russian Federation http://www.constitution.ru/en/10003000-01.htm Politics and Government in Post-Soviet States After 1990 (Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova) Constitution of the Republic of Belarus (2004) http://www.law.by/work/englportal.nsf/6e1a652fbefce34ac2256d910056d559/d93bc5159 0cf7f49c2256dc0004601db?OpenDocument Constitution of the Republic of Belarus (1996) http://www.uta.edu/cpsees/belacon2.htm Constitution of the Republic of Belarus (1994) http://www.law.by/work/englportal.nsf/6e1a652fbefce34ac2256d910056d559/d93bc5159 0cf7f49c2256dc0004601db?OpenDocument
Constitution of the Republic of Ukraine http://gska2.rada.gov.ua/site/const_eng/constitution_eng.htm The Constitution of the Republic of Moldova http://www.president.md/const.php?lang=eng Book review due. Session 13 May 6 Politics and Government in the former Yugoslavia After 1989 (Except Slovenia and Croatia) Constitution of the Republic of Serbia http://www.predsednik.rs/mwc/epic/doc/constitutionofserbia.pdf Constitution of the Republic of Montenegro http://www.skupstina.me/cms/site_data/16122009/ustav%20cg-engleska%20verzija.pdf Constitution of the Republic of Macedonia http://www.sobranie.mk/en/defaulten.asp?itemid=9f7452bf44ee814b8db897c1858b71ff Constitution of Bosnia and Hercegovina http://www.ccbh.ba/public/down/ustav_bosne_i_hercegovine_engl.pdf Constitution of Kosovo http://www.kushtetutakosoves.info/?cid=2,245 Politics and Government in the Balkans After 1989 (Albania, Bulgaria, Romania) Constitution of the Republic of Albania http://www.president.al/english/pub/kushtetuta.asp Constitution of the Republic of Bulgaria http://www.parliament.bg/en/const
Constitution of the Republic of Romania http://www.cdep.ro/pdfs/constitutie_en.pdf Law for the revision of the Constitution 2003 http://www.cdep.ro/pdfs/reviz_constitutie_en.pdf Session 14 May 13 (last day of classes) Conclusion: Consolidation of Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe After 1989 Juan J. Linz, Alfred Stepan, Problems of Democratic Transition and Consolidation. Southern Europe, South America, and Post-Communist Europe. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996, pp. 3-15. Session 15 May 20 Final exam Classroom Etiquette Final exam Mobile phones should be put on silent, no calling or texting during class. Required Cocurricular Activities N/A Suggested Cocurricular Activities N/A