Schirmer CPO 2001 Introduction to Comparative Politics Fall 2013 McCarty Hall C, 001 M, W 12:50-1:40 (Period 6)

Similar documents
Comparative Political Systems (GOVT_ 040) July 6 th -Aug. 7 th, 2015

COLGATE UNIVERSITY. POSC 153A: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS (Spring 2017)

WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

POLS 303: Democracy and Democratization

This Syllabus cannot be copied without the express consent of the Instructor. Comparative Politics: Theory & Practice CPO 3010 Fall 2014

Comparative Government and Politics POLS 568 Section 001/# Spring 2016

Social Movements, Contentious Politics, and Democracy

Comparative Government and Politics POLS 568 Section 001/# Spring 2018

WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

Instructor: Dr. Hanna Kleider Office: Candler Hall 304 Office hours: Thursday 10:45 12:45

University of International Business and Economics International Summer Sessions. PSC 130: Introduction to Comparative Politics

TR 8:30 9:20am + recitation Office Hours: TR 9:40-11:00 Weimer 1064 INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS

POL 305 Introduction to Global/Comparative Politics Course Description Course Goals and Objectives Course Requirements

PSOC002 Democracy Term 1, Prof. Riccardo Pelizzo Raffles 3-19 Tel

Authoritarian Regimes Political Science 4060

POL2101 INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL SCIENCE. Spring

Lahore University of Management Sciences. POL 320 Comparative Politics Fall

CPO 2001 Introduction to Comparative Politics (Honors)

GOVT 133 INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS George Mason University FALL 2017 TTH 1:30 2:45 p.m. Lecture Hall 1

Study Abroad Programme

Lahore University of Management Sciences

INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Political Science 21 Spring Semester 2011 Monday and Wednesday, 10:30-11:45

PAL-110C: Comparative Political Institutions and Public Policy Professor Pepper D. Culpepper Spring, 2009

CPO 2001 Introduction to Comparative Politics

Yale University Department of Political Science

Guidelines for Comprehensive Exams in Comparative Politics Department of Political Science The Pennsylvania State University December 2005

COMPARATIVE POLITICS

CPO 3103 Western European Politics. Professor Schirmer

Introduction to Comparative Politics POL 2339WA Tuesdays 7-10pm

Spring 2011; 3/4 credits

POLS 260: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Department of Political Science Northern Illinois University Tuesday & Thursday 11-12:15 pm DU 461

Teaching methodology: lectures and discussions. Upon successful completion of this course, student should be able to:

Prof. Amie Kreppel Office Hours Wednesday 2:00pm - 6:00pm and by appt. Anderson Hall Rm CPO (West) European Politics

PSC 333: The U.S. Congress 209 Graham Building Mondays & Wednesdays, 2:00-3:15 Spring Course Description

University of Toronto Department of Political Science. POL 314H1F L0101 Public Opinion and Voting. Fall 2018 Monday 10-12

INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS 790: 103 SUMMER 2014 ONLINE FORMAT

Political Science 261/261W Latin American Politics Wednesday 2:00-4:40 Harkness Hall 210

In Love with Power: Non Democratic Regimes in Central and Eastern Europe After 1945

Case Western Reserve University POSC160: Introduction to Comparative Politics (TTh 2:30-3:45)

Contemporary European Politics Political Science 136 Tufts University Spring Semester, 2011 Monday and Wednesday, 1:30-2:45

HUMANITIES 2590 The Making of the Modern World: Renaissance to the Present

Varieties of Capitalism in East Asia: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and China

PA 372 Comparative and International Administration

University of Washington Department of Political Science Winter Quarter 2014

POSC 4411: Politics, Economics, and Democracy Spring, 2016

Introduction to Latin American Politics POLS 2570

Comparative Elections (CPO 4072) Spring 2017

V1501 Introduction to Comparative Politics

LECT 01 W 8: TEL 0014 Glenn Goshulak

Spring 2013; 3/4 credits

University of Notre Dame Department of Political Science Comprehensive Examination in Comparative Politics September 2013

American Politics Political Science 101 (Fall 2009) (Course # 35366) Class Meeting: MWF 2:30PM - 3:20PM Mahar, Room 108

POS 4931 Politics and the Armed Forces

The Policymaking Process (CAS PO331) Boston University Spring Last revised: January 14, 2014

Iv. Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University. Fall Comparative Party politics and Party Systems

Varieties of Capitalism in East Asia: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and China

PIA 2434/3434: Civil-Military Relations. Spring Thursdays, 12-3pm, 3431 Posvar Hall

University of Virginia Department of Politics Fall 2002 PLCP 101: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS MW: 12-12: Wilson Hall

POSC 4931 Topics in Political Science: The Politics of Inequality Spring, 2016

Political Science. Federal State Autonomous Educational Institution of Higher Education National Research University "Higher School of Economics"

Democracy and economic development

GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Sam Nunn School of International Affairs. Ethics in International Affairs INTA 2030 Spring Dr.

Geography 320H1 Geographies of Transnationalism, Migration, and Gender Fall Term, 2015

Government 157: Democracy and Dictatorship

Introduction to Comparative Politics

GVPT 170 American Government Fall 2017

POLITICAL SCIENCE 526 Winter 2011 DRAFT SYLLABUS. The New Religious Politics: Politics and Religion in the Contemporary World

POLS 455: Democratization

GOVT 102 Introduction to International Politics Spring 2011 Section 01: Tues/Thurs 9:30-10:45am Section 02: Tues/Thurs 11:00am-12:15pm Kirby 107

SOSC The World of Politics

Political Science 362 Nationalism and Nation-Building State University of New York at Albany Spring 2016

Introduction to Comparative Politics

Understanding Comparative Politics Understanding Comparative Politics

POL 10a: Introduction to Political Theory Spring 2017 Room: Golding 101 T, Th 2:00 3:20 PM

Urban Government and Politics Political Science 213

Grading. Shair-Rosenfield 1

231 INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Fall 2008 Department of Political Science Muskingum College POLS MWF: 3:00 3:50 pm 15 Cambridge Hall

The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies Johns Hopkins University. Course Syllabus: Comparative National Systems

216 Anderson Office Hours: R 9:00-11:00. POS6933: Comparative Historical Analysis

POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY Sociology 920:290 Paul McLean. Department of Sociology Rutgers University Fall 2007

Temple University Department of Political Science. Political Science 3102: The Legislative Process. Spring 2015 Semester

PSC 305: Judicial Politics

History 3252 People on the Move: Migration in Modern Europe

Political Science 2245E. Introduction to Comparative Politics. First Term, Fall 2014

POL SCI Congressional Politics. Fall 2018 Mon & Wed 11:00AM 12:15PM Location TBA

POLS 327: Congress and the Legislative Process (Fall 2014)

Fall 2014 TR 11:00-12:15 2TH 100. TR 8:30-9:30, 12:30-1:30 and by appnt. Ph

SSB Winter 2011 Office hours: Tuesday, 2-4 pm FUNDAMENTALS OF POLITICAL ECONOMY: MODERN CAPITALISM

POSC 4411: Politics, Economics, and Democracy Spring,

Comparative Politics PSCI 3600 University of North Texas Fall 2013

Strategic Models of Politics

Northwestern University Department of Political Science Political Science 353: Latin American Politics Spring Quarter 2012

Introduction to International Relations

COMPARATIVE POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS Political Science 4063

Office hours: Wednesdays and Thursdays 10:00-11:30 and by appointment 226 Bay State Road, Room 209, tel

Introduction to Political Science

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy Department of Political Science

POLI SCI 426: United States Congress. Syllabus, Spring 2017

INTERNATIONAL POLITICS Govt 006, Section 4, Spring Class Hours: T, R 5:40-6:55 Office Hours: T, R 11:40-12:30 REQUIREMENTS

Transcription:

Schirmer CPO 2001 Introduction to Comparative Politics Fall 2013 McCarty Hall C, 001 M, W 12:501:40 (Period 6) Prof. Schirmer 205 Anderson Hall 352.273.2381 schirmer@ufl.edu Office Hours M 1011, T 1012 Teaching Assistants: Sections 7331 and 7337: Ross Cotton (rdcotton@ufl.edu) Sections 7184 and 7386: Buket Oztas (buket@ufl.edu) Sections 7305 and 7333: Dragana Svraka (dragana.svraka@ufl.edu) Sections 7360 and 7583: Ryan Whittingham (ryanpwhittingham@ufl.edu) Course Content and Objectives: The objective of this course is twofold: First, to introduce students to the rationale, research strategies, and methods of Comparative Politics as an academic (sub) discipline; and second to provide students with substantive knowledge of the main themes in Comparative Politics today. It should be noted that the course does not provide a country survey; instead, it is organized systematically around a series of concepts, categories, and themes. The main topics of the course are, first, the state as the institutional site of political authority; second, political systems, both democratic and nondemocratic, and systemic change; and third, political economy, i.e. the ways in which the political system and government policies influence (facilitate, prohibit, regulate, coordinate, etc.) economic transactions. This course is intended to provide students with analytical skills and cognitive frames that allow them to be more astute and less parochial observers of and participants in political processes. Democracy, in the end, is about broad political empowerment, which requires that citizens are able to formulate and express their political preferences. By default, most of us live our political lives as provincials: We may have fairly good knowledge of our own political system and domestic political discourses. But this is a limited universe that can be greatly broadened and enriched by inquiring into political arrangements and processes elsewhere. This is where Comparative Politics comes in.

Reading Materials: Our main reference is C.A. Drogus and St. Orvis, Introducing Comparative Politics: Concepts and Cases in Context, Sage/CQ Press, 2 nd edition. The book is available at the usual outlets. See the syllabus for additional readings. Texts that are marked as electronic resource are part of UF Library s electronic holdings. Students are expected to obtain these texts in time. Readings that are neither drawn from the textbook nor marked as electronic resource will be provided electronically via Sakai. Students are expected to have completed each week s readings before Section. It is up to students own decision whether they do readings prior to or after lecture, depending on personal learning style. Grading: Midterm Exam 30 % Final Exam 30 % Attendance Record 10 % Section Performance 20 % Conduct: Regular attendance in lecture and section is expected. Please make sure to be on time; this is a large class, and hordes of latecomers streaming into the lecture hall after lecture has begun are extremely disruptive. Feel free to use a notebook or tablet in class. However, do not use electronic devices for unrelated purposes. Social networking during class not only subverts your learning, it also is rude in the extreme. Please remeber to switch cell phones to silent. Plagiarism: Unfortunately, plagiarism continues to be a concern. If you are uncertain about what constitutes or does not constitute plagiarism, approach your professor or TA, or seek out another source to bring yourself up to date. The basic rule is simple enough: There is nothing wrong in academia with making use of other peoples work as long as you fully disclose your sources and give credit where credit is due. Be aware that it doesn t take undisclosed verbatim quotations to commit plagiarism. Paraphrases, too, constitute plagiarism if they remain undocumented. Plagiarism charges are an extremely serious affair in the academic world. Please keep in mind that plagiarism may bring your academic education to a sudden end.

Week 1 Introduction W, 8/21 What Is, and to What End Should We Study Comparative Politics? Week 2 Still: Introduction M, 8/26 Class Themes, Class Format, and Course Mechanics W, 8/28 What Comparativists Do Readings: Textbook chapter 1; Peter Hall, Beyond the Comparative Method, APSA CP vol. 15, issue 2; Pippa Norris, The Proliferation of Comparative Survey Research, APSACP, vol. 15, issue 2. Week 3 The Modern State M, 9/2 no class (Labor Day) The State W, 9/4 The Origin and Spread of the Form State Readings: Textbook, chapter 4, 3851; Charles Tilly, War Making and State Making as Organized Crime, in: Evans, Rueschemeyer, Skocpol, Bringing the State Back In (Cambridge, UK, and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985), 169187. Week 4 Still: The Modern State M, 9/9 The NationState and the Expansion of State Capacity W, 9/11 Strong States, Weak States, Failed States Hendrik Spruyt, The Origins, Development, and Possible Decline of the Modern State, Annual Review of Political Science 5 (2002), 127149 (electronic resource); Textbook, chapter 4, 5193; Jeffrey Herbst, War and the State in Africa, International Security 14/4 (Spring 1990), 117139 (electronic resource). Week 5 Nationalism Against the State M, 9/16 Dynamics of Nationalism and State BreakUp I: Yugoslavia W, 9/18 Dynamics of Nationalism and State BreakUp II: Soviet Union Readings: Textbook, chapter 4; Rogers Brubaker, National Minorities, Nationalizing States, and External National Homelands, Daedalus 124/2 (1995), 107132 (electronic resource); Mark R. Beissinger, Nationalist Mobilization and the Collapse of the Soviet State (Cambridge UP 2002), chapter 2.

Week 6 Political Systems and Systems Change Democratic Regimes: The Basics M, 9/23 What Is Democracy? W, 9/25 Institutions of Democratic Governance Readings: Textbook, chapter 6; Robert A. Dahl, Polyarchy: Participation and Opposition (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1971), chapters 1 and 2 (131). Week 7 Democratic Regimes: Parties and Elections M, 9/30 Electoral Systems W, 10/2 Party Systems Readings: Textbook, chapter 7; Lijphart Week 8 The Structure of Political Space M, 10/7 Midterm Exam W, 10/9 Cleavages Readings: Lijphart Week 9 Non-Democratic Regimes M, 10/14 Types of Contemporary NonDemocratic Regimes W, 10/16 Competitive Authoritarianism Readings: Textbook chapter 8 (369421), Linz and Stepan, Problems of Democratic Transition and Consolidation (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996), chapter 3 (3854); Levitsky and Way, The Rise of Competitive Authoritarianism, Journal of Democracy 13/2 (April 2002), 5165 (electronic resource). Week 10 Regime Change M, 10/21 Democratic Transition W, 10/23 Democratization and DeDemocratization Readings: Textbook, chapter 9; Samuel P. Huntington, Democracy s Third Wave, Journal of Democracy, vol. 2, no. 3, Spring 1991, pp. 1234 (electronic resource). Comparative Political Economy Week 11 The Basics M, 10/28 The State and the Economy

W, 10/30 Globalization: Great Transformation Or Old Wine in New Bottles? Readings: Textbook, chapter 5. Week 12 Prosperity vs. Equality? M, 11/4 Types of Welfare State W, 11/6 Welfare Statism and Economic Performance Readings: G. EspingAndersen, Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism, in: Ch. Piersons and F.G. Castles, eds., The Welfare State Reader (Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 2000), 154169. J. Pontusson, Inequality and Prosperity (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2005), chapters 1 and 7 (114 and 142181). Week 13 Varieties of Capitalism M, 11/11 no class (Veterans Day) W, 11/13 Liberal and Coordinated Market Economies Readings: Peter Hall and David Soskice, eds., Varieties of Capitalism: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2001), chapter 1. Week 14 Economic Development M, 11/18 The First World and the Rise of China: Why are Americans So Worried About China s Economic Muscle, and Europeans Aren t? W, 11/20 Models of Development Policy Readings: Textbook, chapter 10. Week 16 M, 11/25 Developed, Developing, and Underdeveloped Nations: Convergence or Divergence? W, 11/27 no class (Thanksgiving) Readings: Lant Prichett, Divergence, Big Time, Journal of Economic Perspectives 11/3 (Summer 1997), 317 (electronic resource); t.b.a. Week 17 Current Issues M, 12/2 Arab Spring (and Arab Fall?) Reading: Roland Flamini, Turmoil in the Arab World, CQ Researcher, May 2011; t.b.a. W, 12/4 Inequality in the US and Europe Readings: J. Linz and A. Stepan, Comparative Perspectives on Inequality and the Quality of Democracy in the United States, Perspectives on Politics 9/4 (Dec 2011), 841856 (electronic resource); Sarah Glazer, Social Welfare in Europe, CQ Researcher, August 2010.