PA 974 (Section 02, 3 credits): Contemporary Issues in International Policy (Spring 2018)

Similar documents
Faculty of Political Science Thammasat University

Political Science (PSCI)

LSE-PKU Summer School 2018 A Complex Society: Social Issues and Social Policy in China

Political Economy of Migration LACB 3000 (3 Credits / 45 hours)

University of Florida Spring 2017 CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY SYA 6126, Section 1F83

T05P07 / International Administrative Governance: Studying the Policy Impact of International Public Administrations

Law A574 International Law

Course Schedule Spring 2009

Call for Papers. Special Issue of the Journal of Business Ethics. The Ethics of the Commons. Submission Deadline: 15 December 2018

POLS - Political Science

MA International Relations Module Catalogue (September 2017)

The Sam Nunn School of International Affairs Georgia Institute of Technology Spring 2016

July 19, 2018 DRAFT. Fall 2018 International Political Economy GOVT (#82364) LOCATION Krug Hall 5 TIME 4:30PM-7:10PM Wednesday

ECON WORLD POVERTY AND INEQUALITY ACROSS NATIONS

Globalization, Causes and Effects: The US in Comparative Perspective Gov. 312L, Spring 2013

GOVT-GOVERNMENT (GOVT)

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

Political Science. Political Science-1. Faculty: Ball, Chair; Fair, Koch, Lowi, Potter, Sullivan

Syllabus. Research Seminar, GPS, Spring 2018

Call for Papers. Special Issue of the Journal of Business Ethics. The Ethics of the Commons. Submission Deadline: 15 December 2018

POL 3: Introduction to International Relations Fall Course Website:

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLS)

INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

Seminar: Corporate Governance in a globalized economy Autumn Term 2012

TRANSATLANTIC PUBLIC DIPLOMACY. Course Overview and Goals

DEMOCRACY IN DIVIDED SOCIETIES. Central European University MA Course, Winter Semester 2015

SYLLABUS. Introduction to International Relations Yonsei International Summer School (YISS) Summer 2011

PSC-Political Science Courses

A Comparative Analysis of International Educational Cooperation in China in the 1980s and in Cambodia in the 1990s

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

The Evolution of Western Ideas and Institutions Since the Seventeenth Century History 102 Spring T, Th, 1:00pm-2:15pm Professor Suzanne Kaufman

Class Times: TTH 2:00-3:30 Meeting Place: PAR 203

Academic and Peer-reviewed Journals

Compare historical periods in terms of differing political, social, religious, and economic issues

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

IS - International Studies

March 23, 2017 DRAFT. Summer 2017 International Political Economy GOVT 743-B01 LOCATION IN 215G TIME 7:20PM-9:50PM Mondays and Wednesdays

GOV 108 Introduction to International Politics

Introduction to Latin American Politics POLS 2570

Political Science Courses, Spring 2018

SYLLABUS. Introduction to International Relations Yonsei International Summer School (YISS) Summer 2012

University of Maryland. Department of Government and Politics

UNDERSTANDING FOREIGN POLICY: THE DIPLOMACY OF WAR, PROFIT AND JUSTICE (IR105)

American Foreign Policy in the Age of Human Rights

The political economy of African development Syllabus

U.S. INSTITUTIONS AND THE POLICY PROCESS PUBP-730 Spring 2017

LATIN AMERICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT ECON 5460/ SPRING 2016 RAFAEL GUERRERO

BA International Studies Leiden University Year Two Semester Two

URBAN SOCIOLOGY: THE CITY AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN THE AMERICAS Spring 1999

Rockefeller College, University at Albany, SUNY Department of Political Science Graduate Course Descriptions Spring 2019

POL 131 Introduction to International Relations Fall

PLAN 619 Fall 2014 Cultural Diversity in Planning University of Hawai`i, Department of Urban & Regional Planning

Indigenous space, citizenry, and the cultural politics of transboundary water governance

History 3252 People on the Move: Migration in Modern Europe

New Directions for Social Policy towards socially sustainable development Key Messages By the Helsinki Global Social Policy Forum

SEMESTER AT SEA COURSE SYLLABUS University of Virginia, Academic Sponsor

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLI)

Subject Description Form

JINAN UNIVERSITY World History

HISTORY COURSE OFFERINGS FALL 2018

Spring 2019 Course Descriptions

China s Road of Peaceful Development and the Building of Communities of Interests

Instructor: Benjamin C. Brower Office: Garrison Office Hours: WF 9-10:00, and by appointment Telephone:

Old and New Europe, 1914 to the Present

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

BOSTON COLLEGE EC 374: Economic Reform in China and Latin America

The Black Power Movement Dr. Peniel E. Joseph Fall 2018 PA 388K (unique# 60710)/HIS 389 (unique# 39445) GAR Thu 9:30AM-12:30PM

ECON WORLD POVERTY AND INEQUALITY ACROSS NATIONS

UNIVERISTY OF DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

A Correlation of United States History, 2018, to the Virginia Standards of Learning for Virginia and United States History

POLITICS AND MARKETS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY SOCIOLOGY 166 SPRING 2012

Democracy and economic development

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY BEYOND BORDERS

Testimony of Susan Rockwell Johnson President, American Foreign Service Association

CIEE Global Institute Berlin

International. Development. Issues and Challenges. Third edition. Damien Kingsbury. John McKay. Janet Hunt. Mark McGillivray.

22. POLITICAL SCIENCE (Code No. 028)

Business and Politics (POL 229) Davidson College. Spring 2017 Class Times: Tuesday and Thursday, 3:05 pm 4:20 pm Class Location: Chambers 1062

CENTRAL TEXAS COLLEGE SYLLABUS FOR HIST 1302 United States History II Semester Hours Credit: 3

Rockefeller College, University at Albany, SUNY Department of Political Science Graduate Course Descriptions Fall 2016

Introduction to Economics and World Issues

Yale University Department of Political Science

HST 411: Political Economy of Health

CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GOOD GOVERNANCE - short syllabus (full version available on e-learning) -

Standards Social Studies Grades 4-12 History Center

CIEE Global Institute Berlin

Asia-Pacific Regional Preparatory Meeting for the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

Master of Letters Strategic Studies

JOSÉ A. ALEMÁN. Cornell University, College of Arts and Sciences, B.A. 1997

Teaching Notes The Third Revolution: Xi Jinping and the New Chinese State

DAVID L. NIXON, PhD. EDUCATION 1991 NEH Fellowship Center for International Studies Duke University Durham, NC

Course Objectives: 1) To understand the relationship between religion and immigration in U.S. history and society

History 001 Spring 2019 MAKING OF A MODERN WORLD [PROVISIONAL SYLLABUS SUBJECT TO CHANGE]

U.S. INSTITUTIONS AND THE POLICY PROCESS PUBP-730 Spring 2018

EXECUTIVE MSc IN THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF EUROPE

Spring 2018 Courses Security Studies Masters and Certificate

Sociology 120 Spring 2017 ECONOMY AND SOCIETY. Lecture instructor Christoph Hermann,

International Affairs Program Research Report

STANDING COMMITTEE ON PROGRAMMES AND FINANCE THIRD SESSION. 4-5 November 2008

Programme Specification

Transcription:

1 Mark S. Johnson University of Wisconsin-Madison (mark.s.johnson@wisc.edu) PA 974 (Section 02, 3 credits): Contemporary Issues in International Policy (Spring 2018) Thursdays, 8:50-10:45, Van Hise 374. There will also be required small-group and individual meetings to develop students assignments. Individual meetings will be in Education Room 244 (1000 Bascom). The credit standard for this course will be met by an expectation of a total of 135 hours of student engagement with the course learning outcomes and activities (at least 45 hours per credit), which will include regularly scheduled class sessions; required individual and small-group meetings to discuss research projects and draft assignments; assigned readings; and required in-class presentations. This course is designed to complement other course offerings in the La Follette School of Public Affairs, especially PA 850: International Governance, as well as another section of PA 974: International Development Policy. This section of PA 974 will focus on historical perspectives and more qualitative approaches to international policy. We will analyze the evolution of policy regimes in various topical areas, charting these issues through the cycle from ideas, through struggles over enactment, to attempts to implement policy innovations. The course will be grounded in contemporary world history and comparative studies, and the various topical areas will be used to explore diverse theoretical approaches that will complement core theories in public policy, as detailed in the course s learning outcomes. We will also consider the emergence and evolution of major international organizations such as the League of Nations, the United Nations, the World Bank, the OECD, and the European Union. Topical areas will include international governance; the role of international organizations (IOs) and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in shaping international policy; comparative perspectives on public diplomacy and soft power ; and the rapidly growing global trade in services as regulated by the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), especially as it applies to the global market in higher education and professional training. We will also examine various facets of the contemporary migration crisis, including the effects of climate change and conflict in driving mass migration as well as the related policy debates about skilled migration and the globalization of labor markets. This in turn leads into policy discussions around national innovation systems, regional innovation ecosystems, and global policies for cooperation in research and science. Finally, we will also examine policy processes that seek to deal with the impacts of climate change and to plan for adaptation and global sustainability. Required readings (additional readings and resources will be available on Learn@UW): Copies of these books will also be on reserve, location TBA: Mazower, M. (2013). Governing the world: The history of an idea, 1815 to the present. NY: Penguin. Kingsley, P. (2017). The new odyssey: The story of the Twenty-First century refugee crisis. NY: Liveright. Dill, D. & Van Vught, F. (2010). National innovation and the academic research enterprise: Public policy in global perspective. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Bulkeley, H. et al. (2014). Transnational climate change governance. NY: Cambridge University Press.

2 There are a number of additional books that might also be useful depending on students interests, although assigned sections from these sources will also be made available on Learn@UW: Nye, J.S. (2011). The future of power. NY: Public Affairs. Pamment, J. (2014). New public diplomacy in the 21 st century: A comparative study of policy and practice. NY: Routledge. Rust, V. & Portnoi, L. (2014). Higher education, policy, and the global competition phenomenon. NY: Palgrave. Czaika, M. (2018). High-skilled migration: Drivers and policies. NY: Oxford University Press. Requirements: Attendance and constructive participation in group discussions: 10% Individual or small-group presentations (three at 10% each): 30% Three analytical essays (6-8 pages or more, 20% each): 60% These essays can also be combined together into an article-length draft publication. Office hours: Thursdays, 11:00 AM to 3:00 PM or as scheduled (in Education 244, 1000 Bascom). Learning outcomes: By the end of this course, students will be better able to: Consider new historical and theoretical approaches that will complement the traditional focus on economics and political science in the theory and practice of international policy and public affairs. Examine historical and non-western perspectives on the origins and purposes of international organizations such as the United Nations, the World Bank, the OECD, the European Union, and others. Analyze the influence of modernization theory and other quantitative social and behavioral sciences on international policy in the mid-20 th century, as well as subsequent critiques of modernization theory. Compare various theories of globalization as they emerged in the 1970s and especially after 1989-1991, and consider those economic, social, and cultural frameworks as they apply to international policy. Understand the interests behind the emergence of neoliberal approaches to globalization in the 1990s and after, as well as regional and national responses or alternatives to dominant policy paradigms. Use these theories and conceptual frameworks to deepen your understanding of the core thematic issues of the course such as international governance, public diplomacy, the global trade in services and higher education, migration, international cooperation in science and research, and climate policy. Accommodations and disability issues: The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and other legislative requirements provide comprehensive civil-rights protections for people with learning and other disabilities. Please let me know if you need any accommodations to ensure an equal environment.

3 Honor code and ethical issues: It should go without saying that all work must be entirely your own, all sources consulted or quoted should be acknowledged with full references as appropriate, and any plagiarism or inappropriate use of on-line or other resources will result in reduced grades or failure. Week 1: January 25: Introduction and mapping of students research and career interests Week 2: February 1: Historical perspectives and mapping of conceptual frameworks Preliminary discussion questions: What historical forces have shaped the international organizations (such as the United Nations, The World Bank, the OECD, the European Union, and others) that influence contemporary international public policies? What roles have states, market forces, social movements, and international civil society groups played in the shaping of these policy processes in recent decades? Nye, J. S. (2008). Public diplomacy and soft power. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences 616, 94-109; DOI: Mazower, M. (2012). Governing the world, pp. 1-188. Davies, T. R. (2012). A great experiment of the League of Nations era: International nongovernmental organizations, global governance, and democracy beyond the state. Global governance 18, 405-423. Jolly, R. (2014). Western pessimism, Asian optimism: Three perspectives on global governance. Ethics & international affairs 28(3), 383-396 (review essay including analysis of Mazower 2012). Optional individual meetings to discuss students research and career interests in Education 244 Week 3: February 8: NO CLASS submit personal/career essay (guidelines posted in week/module 3) Week 4: February 15: Historical perspectives and the rise and fall (?) of modernization theory For Mazower, what are the lessons of the efforts before and after 1945 to develop international institutions and mechanisms for global policymaking? What role did developmental colonialism play in the 1920s-1930s? What role did modernization theory and Western social science play in the 1930s- 1960s, and what was positive or negative about those influences? Why did increasingly sharp critiques emerge in the 1960s-1970s, and how did those struggles play out in international institutions such as UNESCO and other UN agencies? How and perhaps more importantly why -- was modernization theory reconceived or recast in subsequent decades within the framework of international policy formation? Mazower, M. (2012). Governing the world, pp. 191-427. Rostow, W. W. (1959). The stages of economic growth. The economic history review XII(1), 1-16.

4 Haskell, T. (2005). Modernization on trial. Modern intellectual history 2(2), 235-263. Higgott, R. A. (1980). From modernization theory to public policy: Continuity and change in the political science of political development. Studies in comparative international development, X 26-58. OPTIONAL: Held, D. (2016). Elements of a theory of global governance. Philosophy and social criticism 42(9): 837-846. OPTIONAL: Rostow, W. W. (1960). The stages of economic growth: A non-communist manifesto. NY: Cambridge University Press. OPTIONAL: Gilman, N. (2004). Mandarins of the future: Modernization theory in Cold War America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Week 5: February 22: Theoretical alternatives and market failures in international policy Preliminary discussion questions: what alternative theories or explanations have been offered regarding the politics of postwar international development, and of the forces driving Western-led modernization and neoliberal globalization? How have U.S. policies changed in the postwar decades and why? What role has the U.S. played in the formation of international organizations and global policies? Where do you situate yourself in these debates and why? What are the practical implications of these debates? Leys, C. (1996). Rational choice or Hobson s choice? The new political economy as development theory. Studies in political economy 49, 37-69. Harvey, D. (2007). Neoliberalism as creative destruction. Annals of the AAPSS 610 (March), 22-44. Carruthers, B. G. (2012). Review Symposium: On Colin Crouch s The strange non-death of neoliberalism. Socio-Economic review 10, 605-623. Amsden, A. (2007). Escape from empire: The developing world s journey through heaven and hell (Chapter 1, full e-book available through UW Libraries). Cambridge: MIT Press. OPTIONAL: Leys, C. (1996). The rise and fall of development theory. Bloomington: Indiana UP and EAEP. OPTIONAL: Harvey, D. (2007). A brief history of neoliberalism (Excerpt TBA). NY: Oxford University Press. OPTIONAL: Crouch, C. (2011). The strange non-death of neoliberalism. Cambridge, UK: Polity. Plus informal student presentations on selected topic(s) from weeks 2-5 (as drafts of first writing assignment). First writing assignment will be due Thursday, March 1 (detailed guidelines will be posted on Canvas). You can pick one or more of the questions in the italicized sections for each week, which are expanded upon in the weekly discussion guides (posted on Canvas for each module). Week 6: March 1: Diplomacy, defense and development in contemporary U.S. policy Preliminary discussion questions: What historical forces have shaped the interactions between the various instruments of international policymaking in the United States? How and why have the roles of

5 the DOS, USAID, USIA (closed in 1999), DOD, and the intelligence agencies evolved over time? How do interagency policy processes work (or not)? Our consideration of these issues will necessarily be highly selective, with a special focus on how various agencies engage in international development, as well as recent debates about reorganization (for example, media accounts of restructuring within the DOS). Williams, W. A. (1959). The tragedy of American public diplomacy (excerpt TBA). Cleveland: World PC. Glain, S. (2011). State vs. Defense: The battle to define America s empire (excerpt TBA). NY: Crown (?). US Department of State (2015). Quadrennial diplomacy and development review. Washington, DC: Author. https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/267396.pdf Hill, T. M. (2017). Secretary Tillerson s effort to reorganize the State Department. https://www.brookings.edu/blog/unpacked/2017/10/18/secretary-tillersons-effort-to-reorganize-thestate-department/ Week 7: March 8: Historical perspectives on migration crises and policy responses Preliminary discussion questions: What are the forces behind the current refugee crisis, and how are international organizations seeking to shape policy responses? How successful have they been in dealing with this crisis? What are the deeper forces driving these mass migrations, and what role have climate change impacts and other social changes played in driving population movements and conflicts? Kingsley, P. (2016). The new odyssey, pp. 1-170. Marrus, M. (1986). The unwanted: European refugees in the twentieth century (Excerpt TBA) NY: Oxford University Press. Greenhill, K. M. (2016). Open arms behind barred doors: Fear, hypocrisy and policy schizophrenia in the European migration crisis. European law journal 22(3), 317-332. Wright, K. & Black, R. (2011). International migration and the downturn: Assessing the impacts of the global financial downturn on migration, poverty, and human well-being. Journal of international development 23, 555-564. Week 8: March 15: Climate change and other drivers of violent conflict and mass migration Kingsley, P. (2016). The new odyssey, pp. 171-326. Center for Climate and Security, https://climateandsecurity.org/tag/syria/ US Department of Defense (2015). National security implications of climate-related risks and changing climate. Washington, DC: Author, https://www.defense.gov/news/article/article/612710/ McLeman, R. (2013). Developments in the modelling of climate change-related migration. Climatic change 117, 599-611..

6 Week 9: March 22: Climate change impacts and international policy responses Preliminary discussion questions: How and why are nations cooperating to shape international policies around climate change, mitigation, and adaptation and preparing for resiliency and sustainability? Which nations are helping to advance such processes and which nations are blocking such cooperation? Weart, S. (2008). The discovery of global warming, revised ed. (Excerpt TBA). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Howe, J., ed. (2017). Making climate change history: Primary sources from global warming s past (Excerpt TBA). Seattle: University of Washington Press. Bulkeley, H. et al. (2014). Transnational climate change governance. Stern, N. (2017). Why are we waiting? The logic, urgency and promise of tackling climate change (excerpt TBA). Cambridge: MIT Press. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2014). U.S. National Climate Assessment (2017). Student presentations on national case studies of engagement in UNFCC and COP 21-22-23 policies Week 10: March 29: SPRING BREAK Week 11: April 5: Comparative perspectives on research policies and national innovation systems Preliminary discussion questions: How are international policy regimes shaping academic research enterprises and encouraging nations to focus on their innovation ecosystems? How do international policies regarding research cooperation, intellectual property rights and patents shape such interactions? Dill, D. & Van Vught, F. (2010). National innovation and the academic research enterprise. Balzer, H. & Askonas, J. (2016). The triple helix after communism: Russia and China compared. Triple helix xx. Frenkel, A. & Maital, S. (2014). Mapping national innovation ecosystems: Foundations for policy consensus (excerpt TBA). Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar. Plus student presentations on national and regional case studies of AREs and innovation systems. Week 12: April 12: Drivers of skilled migration and global competition in science and innovation

7 Preliminary discussion questions: how are developed nations dealing with the tension between skilled and unskilled migration? How are nations working to shape global higher education policies and academic mobility? How successful have national scholarship and academic mobility programs been in shaping such processes? What are the interests facilitating or blocking global cooperation in these areas? What role has the GATS process (Global Agreement on Trade in Services) played in this arena? Portnoi, L. & Bagley, S. (2014). Critical perspectives on global competition in higher education. New directions for higher education 168, 1-100 (Excerpts TBA). Czaika, M. (2018). High-skilled migration: Drivers and policies (Excerpt TBA). NY: Oxford University Press. Additional readings TBA. Week 13: April 19: Historical and comparative perspectives on soft power and public diplomacy Preliminary discussion questions: how are leading nations such as the USA, China, Russia, Brazil, Germany, France and others seeking to project their soft power, and to support public diplomacy programs (such as scholarships, funding or global research, and public affairs or outreach)? How do such programs relate to strategic communications, information policies and cyber-security efforts? Rosenberg, E. (1982). Spreading the American dream: American economic and cultural expansion, 1890-1945 (excerpt TBA). NY: Hill and Wang. Cull, N. (2008). The Cold War and the United States Information Agency: American propaganda and public diplomacy (excerpt TBA). NY: Cambridge University Press. De Grazia, V. (2005). Irresistible empire: America s advance through 20 th century Europe (excerpt TBA). Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. Pamment, N. (2013), New public diplomacy in the 21 st century. Cross, M. & Melissen, J., eds. (2013). European public diplomacy: Soft power at work. NY: Palgrave. Week 14: April 24: Comparative perspectives on information operations and strategic communications Readings TBA Week 15: May 3: Final reflections on course themes and future prospects in international policy. Third writing assignment due no later than Thursday, May 10 (guidelines posted in week/module 15).