Political Science Graduate Program Class Schedule Spring 2014

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Political Science Graduate Program Class Schedule Spring 2014 American Politics 28580 60015 Political Parties and Interest Groups Christina Wolbrecht M 3:30 6:15p In the United States, as in most democracies, political parties and interest groups are central mediating institutions linking citizens and the political decision makers who govern them. In an effort to understand the role of political parties and interest organizations in the American political system, we will examine issues of historical development, membership, organization, tactics, competition, and representation, among others. While the primary focus is the American case, the questions and concepts addressed in this course are applicable to other democratic systems. 28581 60036 Immigration and Ethnicity Ricardo Ramirez T 6:30 9:15p The newest wave of immigration has not only transformed the demographic composition of the United States, but has also reshaped the nature of politics and policy. This course explores key questions and themes in the politics of immigration and ethnicity. Drawing on a variety of perspectives and readings in American and Comparative Politics, we will focus on immigration politics and policy, but also on the political behavior of immigrants and ethnic minorities. International Relations 29070 60233 Great Books in International Relations Dan Lindley T 3:30 6:15p We read a foundational book in international relations each week, with subjects ranging from security to political economy, and with approaches drawn from most major paradigms, theories, and levels of analysis. Focusing on one book a week focuses discussion, and helps students grapple with IR theory in depth. At the same time, discussion of each work s arguments and strengths and weaknesses means that the course also serves as a survey of many of the main debates in IR. After a few weeks, students will take turns presenting/teaching each book. Grades are based on participation and a term paper. For more information on my teaching and scholarship, as well as on this and related courses, please visit my website: http://www3.nd.edu/~dlindley/ 1

29072 60235 International Institutions, Norms and Organizations Gary Goertz R 6:30 9:15p This seminar will devote itself to the analysis of international institutions, norms, and organizations. The literature on these three tends to be segregated, but we shall discuss them as variations on the same theme. Much of the course will be survey of various approaches to institutions, norms, and organizations, with particular attention to (1) rational design, (2) international norms, (3) legalization, and (4) IGOs. Substantively we shall focus on the areas of security (e.g., alliances), conflict management, peacekeeping, and democratization. The major requirement of the course is a research paper. In addition, a 5 7 page research proposal will be presented in the middle of the semester. The subject of the research paper must involve international institutions, norms, or organizations. 29866 60236 Climate Change Policy and International Conflict Pat Regan R 3:30 6:15p This course will explore the implications for peace and conflict that result from global climatic changes. The course will require a reading of climate science literature along with that from the social sciences on the causes of armed conflict. Our goal will be to develop an understanding of the way that pressures resulting from human generated global processes can impact the way humans coexist on the planet. Armed conflict is one of the adaptive strategies that humans can undertake, albeit one that might provide the most debilitating consequences. Comparative Politics 28582 60453 Comparative Field Seminar Michael Coppedge M 6:30 9:15p This course surveys the major approaches to the comparative study of politics and evaluates the great variety of methods employed. Many of the most important books and articles are used as examples. This course is designed to be helpful to those preparing to take the comprehensive examination in comparative politics. 2

29073 60458 Legislatures* Monika Nalepa F 3:30 6:15p This is a course for PhD students specializing in American Politics and in Comparative Politics that focuses on legislative institutions. We will cover the US Congress, where most of the literature on legislatures originated, but also expand our analysis beyond the United States to legislative assemblies around the world. We will be using formal modeling and ideal point estimation to address fundamental questions about parliaments and assemblies around the world: What makes legislatures powerful and independent? Why are some assemblies run by cohesive parties, while others seem to be controlled by independentminded MPs? Who sets the legislative agenda? In this seminar, we will survey how parliaments around the world are created and how they govern. We will focus on (1)how electoral institutions affect the functioning of legislatures, (2)how legislatures organize their work of law making, and (3) how legislatures shape, and are influenced by party systems, government coalitions, presidents and supreme courts. This course will incorporate a two day workshop, taught by an external guest speaker, on multidimensional scaling techniques and their applications to the study of legislatures. We will also cover a fair deal formal modeling. Having completed an introductory course to game theory is not a prerequisite for this course. Please contact the instructor if you have never been exposed to game theory before and have concerns about understanding the game theoretic literature. *Also counts toward Methods and American Politics. 29074 60459 Democracy and Violence Guillermo Trejo M 3:30 6:15p We typically associate democracy with peace and prosperity. But countries that transition from authoritarian rule to democracy often experience major outbreaks of violence during the course of regime change or after democracy has been established. This graduate seminar explores conditions under which democratization and democratic institutions stimulate rather than reduce violence. The course is divided into three sections. We first explore two mechanisms that link democratization with violence: (1) the retraction of fundamental civic, political, or ethnic rights granted during the course of authoritarian liberalization can lead to the outbreak of civil war and (2) the absence of transitional justice mechanisms and reforms of authoritarian security forces can lead to the outbreak of criminal wars in new democracies. In the second part we assess the conditions that allow state and non state actors to use violence for electoral purposes in democracies, including (1) state elites outsourcing violence to criminal gangs and paramilitary forces to influence electoral outcomes; (2) terrorists, criminal syndicates and paramilitary forces coercing voters and politicians to influence state policy; and (3) rival political parties and ethnic groups resorting to violence to contest electoral outcomes. In the final section we discuss how democratic institutions can contribute to suppress incentives for violence and create peaceful social equilibria, even in contexts marked by poverty, inequality, or religious and ethnic diversity. The course covers readings from different methodological persuasions, including formal models, statistical analyses, field experiments, and case studies. We will actively pursue a systematic comparison of cross national quantitative studies with subnational studies of a wide range of countries from Latin America, Europe, South Asia, Northern and Sub Saharan Africa, and the Middle East. 3

29075 60460 Civil Wars Sarah Daly TR 11:00a 12:15p This course explores the causes, dynamics and outcomes of civil wars and insurgencies. It addresses when and why is violence employed in place of peaceful solutions to conflict and what accounts for individual and mass recruitment into armed organizations. It aims to understand variation in armed groups repertoires of violence, civilian agency during war, state counterinsurgency and counternarcotics methods, and the political economy of conflict. The course concludes by examining war termination. Students will be pushed to grapple with research written in many traditions including philosophical, statistical, game theoretic, and qualitative materials. Political Theory 29076 60663 Strauss Michael Zuckert R 6:30 9:15p The leading theme of Strauss's political philosophy is... Political philosophy. But he also speaks regularly of " the problem of political philosophy" at the same time that he speaks of it as "first philosophy." We will explore what these claims can mean and how his thought emerges as a rejoinder Heidegger. 29077 60664 Tocqueville Patrick Deneen W 3:30 6:15p Tocqueville's Democracy in America has been described as at once the best book ever written about America and the best book written about democracy. Over the course of the semester we will read the entirety of Tocqueville's Democracy in America as well as several other selections of other writing. We will conclude the semester by reading the work of several contemporary "Tocquevillian" thinkers. Constitutional Studies 29079 61005 Law of Nations* Emilia Powell TR 12:30 1:45p The purpose of this course is to introduce students to international law, as portrayed by international law scholars as well as political scientists. In the beginning of the semester, we will focus on general characteristics of international law, such as its nature, historical development, main thinkers, subjects, and sources of law. Second, we will study several substantive areas of international law, such as international criminal law, or the law of the sea. Next, we will examine international courts and other means for peaceful resolution of international disputes (mediation, conciliation, arbitration, etc). We will conclude the course with analyzing international law through the lenses of domestic legal systems. This course brings together theories and approaches to "law among nations" present in the international legal literature and international relations scholarship. *Also counts toward International Relations. 4

Methods 20286 60810 Quantitative Methods I David Nickerson MW 11:00a 12:15p This course provides an introduction to quantitative research methods in political science. After a brief discussion of the basics of statistical analysis and hypothesis testing, the first part of the course will focus on ordinary least squares (OLS) regression, its assumptions, and its extensions. In the second part of the course, we will focus on widely used methods that are appropriate when the assumptions of OLS are violated, and especially on limited dependent variable models. We will try to strike a balance between theory and mathematics on the one hand and the practical application and interpretation of statistics on the other hand. We will discuss the theoretical rationale behind and mathematical underpinnings of various statistical methods, how to apply those methods to real political questions, and how to conduct and interpret analyses using a standard statistical package. 29078 60836 Qualitative Methods II Gary Goertz W 6:30 9:15p This course explores the QCA methodology, both Boolean and fuzzy logic. This includes basic topics such as measurement, the procedures for analyzing data, and measures of fit and significance. Important topics such as the robustness of QCA and multimethod QCA are also included. Students will be expected to learn the software (R version) and do a research paper using QCA on real data (of their choice). While the course does not absolutely require a previous qualitative methods course, such a course wil be assumed. Non substantive 23636 98701 The Academic Career Christina Wolbrecht TBA TBA This class is designed to prepare Ph.D. students for success in finding a tenure track position in academia. 28604 98702 Dissertation Writing Workshop Michael Zuckert TBA TBA A workshop for dissertation writers. Each participant shares some of his or her writing with the group and critiques the writing of others. 5

The following undergraduate course can be taken for graduate course by registering for a graduate level directed reading with the professor. Students will attend the undergraduate course, as well as fulfill other requirements at the direction of the instructor, in order to receive graduate level credit. Students must consult with Professor Barber before enrolling for this course. His approval is necessary to take this course as graduate readings. 26455 30067 Federalism and the Constitution Sotirios Barber TR 11:00a 12:15p This course takes up our oldest and perhaps our most pervasive constitutional problem: the proper relationship between the powers of the national government and the powers of the states. The root of this problem lies in the kind of country and people the Constitution commits us to be. Its many branches include political and legal questions relating to the regulation of the economy, federal power over the nation?s morals, race relations in America, the nature of community in America and the nation?s obligation to the poor. This course is designed for undergraduates with a background in American national government and an introductory course in constitutional studies. Main text for the course is A. J. Bellia, Federalism. Course grade based on mid term and final exams, with optional term paper. Political Science Graduate Students also may enroll in the following course. 29812 LAW73449 Comparative Constitutional Law TBA W 3:00 6:00p Comparative constitutional law will focus primarily on the United States and Germany. Where important and relevant, however, constitutional cases from Canada, Africa, and the European Court of Human Rights, particularly as they relate to free speech, church state relations, and right to life issues, will also be discussed. Three reasons explain the seminar's particular focus on Germany during the spring semester. First, Germany's Basic Law (i.e., its Constitution) and its Federal Constitutional Court (FCC) have replaced the U.S. Constitution and Supreme Court as the leading models of constitutional governance around the world. Second, and relatedly, other leading constitutional courts, from Eastern Europe to Asia, have been heavily influenced by the FCC's constitutional case law. Finally, the instructor is revising The Constitutional Jurisprudence of the Federal Republic of Germany (2nd ed., 1997), this time with a coauthor and would like to share with the seminar several new and updated chapters currently in preparation. The seminar's limited geographical focus during the semester also allows the class to spend more time on various contextual factors, e.g., the political system, judicial organization, legal culture, and constitutional history, that may illuminate the work product of the German and American courts. The seminar will be limited to 12 students. Course materials will consist of The Constitutional Jurisprudence of the Federal Republic of Germany (2nd ed.) and distributed materials consisting of revised and updated chapters of Constitutional Jurisprudence along with full English translations of selected FCC decisions handed down since 1997. A major seminar paper, which members of the seminar will present toward the end of the semester, will be required in lieu of a final examination. 6