PSCI 200: LIBERAL DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA

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PSCI 200: LIBERAL DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA MWF 10:10-11:00 Professor H. Abbie Erler Horowitz House, 03 Tel: 427-5733 Email: erlerh@kenyon.edu Office Hours: MW 2-4; Tuesday 1-3; and by appointment 1. Course Objectives This course is designed as a broad overview of the American political system and is suitable for both political science students as well as those from other majors. This class has three main goals. First, this course should prepare you to be an active participant in political life and an intelligent consumer of political information. Secondly, this class will help you develop the skills necessary to think critically about political problems and to develop potential solutions. Finally, this class will give you the foundation needed to pursue more advanced topics within American politics and political science. 2. Student Responsibilities and Grading This class will involve critical analysis and discussion of the assigned texts. Students are expected to complete the readings in advance and come to class prepared to discuss them. Regular attendance is necessary for your success in this class. Lectures and discussions will often contain information not found in the readings. Active and valuable contributions to class discussion are part of your final grade. To ensure that students are completing the reading assignments, periodic quizzes may be given. Grades will be determined as follows: Paper #1 (5 to 7 pages): 30% Paper #2 (5 to 7 pages): 30% Participation/Quizzes: 10% Final Exam (3 hours): 30% Papers: There will be two papers assigned during the semester. Papers should be analytical in nature and not simply summaries of the readings. Papers must be typed, double spaced, and in Times New Roman, 12 point. Papers should be wellorganized, well written, and proofread. Paper grades will be based on the originality and clarity of the thesis, the logic, persuasiveness and depth of the argument, the evidence provided, and on organization and style. Paper topics will be distributed in class. Paper #1 will be due on October 1. Paper #2 will be due on November 28.

Papers must be handed in at the start of class on the day they are due. Late papers will be marked down one letter grade for the first day they are late and one half a letter grade for each day thereafter (this includes weekends). Final Exam: The final exam will be 3 hours and will be administered on December 17, 6:30 p.m. The final will consist of IDs and two essay questions. A selection of essay questions will be distributed on the last day of class; two of them will be on the final exam. Academic Honesty: Please consult the Student Handbook for the College s policy on academic honesty. Plagiarism of any kind will not be tolerated. All papers must have proper citations. If you are unclear on when and/or how to cite a work, please see me. You are encouraged to discuss your papers with your fellow classmates and/or me while working on them. Disabilities: If you have a disability that will affect your participation in class please let me know and contact Erin Salva, Coordinator of Disability Services, at x5453 or by email. 3. Readings John Agresto, The Supreme Court and Constitutional Democracy Abramson, Aldrich, and Rohde, Change and Continuity in the 2008 and 2010 Elections Hamilton, Jay, and Madison, The Federalist Papers (any edition) Marc Landy and Sidney Milkis, American Government, 2 nd edition David Mayhew, Congress: The Electoral Connection Richard Neustadt, Presidential Power and the Modern Presidents Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, vol. 1 Additional readings will also be placed on Moodle.

4. Class Schedule AUGUST 31 Mancur Olson, The Logic of Collection Action, selection. (Moodle) I. The Political Ideas of the Founders SEPTEMBER 3 Tocqueville, Introduction (pp. 3 15) and Part 1, Chapter 2 (pp. 27 45). 5 Constitution of the United States Federalist Paper #84 7 Articles of Confederation Federalist Papers #1 6, 15, 23 10 Federalist Papers #9, #10, #14, #37 12 Federalist Papers #47, 48, 51 14 Federalist Papers #52, 54, 56, 57, 62, 63 17 Federalist Papers #39, 49, 50 19 The Federal Farmer, Letters 1 3 Brutus, Letter 1 II. Federalism 21 Landy and Milkis, Chapter 5 Federalist Papers #17, 45, 46 Tocqueville, Part 1, Chapter 5 (pp. 56 93). 24 John Kincaid. 1990. From Cooperative to Coercive Federalism. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 509: 139 152.

Paul Posner. 2007. The Politics of Coercive Federalism in the Bush Era. Publius: The Journal of Federalism 37(3): 390 412. III. Public Opinion and Political Participation 26 Landy and Milkis, Chapter 12 Tocqueville, Part 2, Chapter 7 & 8 (pp. 235 264). 28 Verba, Scholzman, Brady, and Nie. 1993. Citizen Activity: Who Participates? What Do They Say? American Political Science Review 87(2): 303 318. (Moodle) OCTOBER V.O. Key. 1961. Public Opinion and the Decay of Democracy. Virginia Quarterly Review 37(4): 481 494. (Moodle) 1 Benjamin Page and Martin Shapiro, 1992. The Rational Public, selections (Moodle) John Zaller, 1992. The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion, selections (Moodle) 3 Morris P. Fiorina and Samuel Abrams. 2008. Political Polarization in the American Public. Annual Review of Political Science 11: 563 588. Alan Abramowitz and Kyle Saunders. 2008. Is Polarization a Myth? The Journal of Politics 70(2): 542 555. (Moodle) IV. Political Parties 5 Milkis and Landy, Chapter 11 John Aldrich, Why Parties?, selections (Moodle) Tocqueville, Part 2, Chapters 2 4 (pp. 166 186). 8 Sarah Binder. 2001. Can the Parties Govern? (Moodle) Morris P. Fiorina. 2006. Parties as Problem Solvers. (Moodle) V. Campaigns and Elections

10 Abramson, Aldrich, and Rohde, Chapters 1 and 2 12 Fall Break 15 Abramson, Aldrich, and Rohde, Chapters 5 and 6 17 Abramson, Aldrich, and Rohde, Chapter 7 19 Abramson, Aldrich, and Rohde, Chapter 8 22 Abramson, Aldrich, and Rohde, Chapters 10 and 11 VI. Congress 24, 26 Mayhew, Congress: The Electoral Connection, Introduction and Chapter 1 29, 31 Mayhew, Congress: The Electoral Connection, Chapter 2 NOVEMBER 2 Mayhew, Observations on Congress: The Electoral Connection a Quarter Century After Writing It. 2001. (Moodle). Alan Abramowitz, Mr. Mayhew, Meet Mr. Delay. 2001. (Moodle) Aldrich and Rohde, The Logic of Conditional Party Government: Revisiting the Electoral Connection. (Moodle) 5 Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein, Is Congress Still A Broken Branch?, 2009. (Moodle) Milkis and Landy, Chapter 7 7 Election Wrap up VII. The Presidency 9 The Federalist Papers #70, 71, 72, 73 Milkis and Landy, Chapter 8 12 Neustadt, Presidential Power, Prefaces and pp. 3 28 14 Neustadt, Presidential Power, pp. 29 72.

16 Neustadt, Presidential Power, pp. 73 90. 19, 21, 23 Thanksgiving Break 26 Skowronek, The Politics Presidents Make, selections. (Moodle). VIII. Bureaucracy 28 Landy and Milkis, Chapter 10. Terry Moe, 1989. The Politics of Bureaucratic Structure. (Moodle). 30 John P. Burke, 2010, The Institutional Presidency. (Moodle). IX. Courts DECEMBER McNollGast, 1987. Administrative Procedures as Instruments of Political Control, Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization. (Moodle). 3 Tocqueville, Part 1, Chapter 6 (pp. 93 99). Federalist Papers #78, 81 Milkis and Landy, Chapter 9 5 Agresto, The Supreme Court and Constitutional Democracy, pp. 9 40; pp. 51 5. 7 Agresto, The Supreme Court and Constitutional Democracy, pp. 84 107; pp. 125 67. X. American s Liberal Democracy in Perspective 10 Robert A. Dahl, 1956. A Preface to Democratic Theory, selections. (Moodle). 12 Tocqueville, Part 2, Chapter 6 (pp. 220 235) and pp. 348 384. Robert Putnam, 1995. Tuning In, Tuning Out: The Strange Disappearance of Social Capital in America. (Moodle). 14 Conclusion