In addition to shorter assignments, a course research paper will be required.

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Natural Resource and World Politics, POSC 371/471 MW 12:45-2:00pm Professor Pete W. Moore Office phone: 368-5265 pete.moore@case.edu Office hours: MW 2-4pm, Mather House 222 This course examines a central concern of socio-economic development: to what extent do natural resources shape political and social dynamics? Are natural resources a curse? On the one hand, exploitation of resources is associated with bad governance, civil strife, and general underdevelopment. Therefore, some conclude that easy money is bad for you. On the other hand, a number of countries have successfully exploited their own natural resources while still achieving productive economic growth and stable governance. This course will begin by historically and politically unpacking the evolution of the global oil industry. The focus this semester will be on the relationship between flag (states) and commerce (profits from resources). It will range from Cleveland to Saudi Arabia. A second theme will investigate the interaction between control of resources and violent conflict. Cotton, minerals, and other resources have historically been linked to violent conflict. What is this relationship? Finally, we will examine debates about how resource dependence shapes the fate of democracy. In addition to shorter assignments, a course research paper will be required. Requirements: This is a seminar course dependent upon student participation. It is emphatically not a lecture based course. Please bring copies of the readings to class each week (beginning week 3 until week 14). To facilitate participation, each student will write a 1 page reaction paper to that week s readings. The point of these papers is NOT TO SUMMARIZE the readings but raise a question or discussion point to think about. Papers are due by each Monday 9am and should be up loaded to the appropriate forum on the Blackboard classroom site. There will be on in-class exam week 9. The principle assignment for the semester is a research paper (20 pages minimum) which can focus on one country or one case. We will meet to discuss your paper. A 3 page outline and bibliography for your paper is due 10/14. During the last week of the semester, each student will present (5-7 minutes) their main findings to the class. 1

Grading and responsibilities Reaction papers 15% Individual Class Presentation 15% Midterm Exam 30% Final Paper and Presentation 40% Required Texts Robert Vitalis, America s Kingdom: Mythmaking on the Saudi Oil Frontier (Verso Books, 2009) Sven Beckert, Empire of Cotton: A Global History (Vintage Books, 2014) Themes and Readings Week 1 Introduction: Markets, States, and Societies 8/29 Charles E. Lindblom, 1982. The Market as Prison, Journal of Politics 44:2 (May), pp. 324-336 8/31 No Class Please read in preparation for next week: Timothy Mitchell, Carbon Democracy: Political Power in the Age of Oil, (London: Verso, 2011), pp. 1-42, skim the Introduction focus on Chapter 1 Week 2 The Global Oil Market 9/5 LABOR DAY 9/7 Watch short Interview with Mitchell Week 3 The Modern Oil Industry: It all started in Cleveland 9/12-14 Daniel Yergin, The Prize, Chapters 1-5 Francisco Parra, Oil Politics, pp. 6-54 Week 4 Oil Industry Politics and History 9/19-21 Daniel Yergin, The Prize, Chapters 9-10 2

Francisco Parra, Oil Politics, pp. 89-145 (focus on chapter 5) IEA, Oil Supply Security (skim and contrast with Adelman/Jones approach) Toby Jones, Energy Security: Genealogy of a Term, Middle East Report, Summer 2014 Robert Adelman, The Real Oil Problem, Regulation, Spring 2004 John McPhee, Coal Train, in Uncommon Carriers Week 5 From Cleveland to Saudi Arabia: America s Colony 9/26-28 Robert Vitalis 2009, America s Kingdom: Mythmaking on the Saudi Oil Frontier (New York: Verso), Forward and pp.1-125 Week 6 ARAMCO and American Exceptionalism 10/3-5 Robert Vitalis 2009, America s Kingdom: Mythmaking on the Saudi Oil Frontier (New York: Verso), pp. 127-227, (skim 228-264) pp. 265-275 Timothy Mitchell, 2009. McJihad: Islam and the US Global Order, Social Text, 73;4 (Winter 2002), pp. 1-18 Toby Jones, America, Oil, and War in the Middle East, The Journal of American History, (June 2012). Roger Stern, United States costs of force projection in the Persian gulf, 1976-2007 Energy Policy (skim) Week 7: Resources and Conflict 10/10-12 Film: The Ambassador 10/14 Research Paper Precis Due Week 8 Resources and Conflict: Africa and the Middle East 10/17-19 Paul Collier and Anke Hoeffler, 2002. Greed and Grievance in Civil War, World Bank Occasional Paper. (skim and focus on the main findings) Mary Kaldor et. al, 2007. Introduction: Oil Wars, in Oil Wars, edited by Mary Kaldor, Terry Lynn Karl and Yahia Said (Pluto Press) 3

Philip Le Billon, The political ecology of war: natural resources and armed conflict, Political Geography (2001) Jeannie Sowers, Water, Energy and Human Insecurity in the Middle East, Middle East Report, Summer 2014 Mahmood Mamdani, Beyond Native and Settler as Political Identities: Overcoming the Political Legacy of Colonialism Society for Comparative of Society and History (2001) Week 9 Break and Exam 10/24 Fall Break 10/26 Exam Week 10 Resource Imperialism 10/31-11/2 Patrick Wolfe, History and Imperialism: A Century of Theory, American Historical Review (April 1997) Sven Beckert, Empire of Cotton, Introduction and Chapters, 1 and 2 Week 11 Cotton, Slavery, and Profits 11/7-9 Andre Gunder Frank, The Development of Underdevelopment Sven Beckert, Empire of Cotton, Chapters 3-11 Week 12 Global Cotton Today 11/14-16 Sven Beckert, Empire of Cotton, Introduction and Chapters 12-14 Week 13 Resource Curses: Resources and Democracy 11/21-23 Michael Ross, 2001. Does Oil Hinder Democracy? World Politics 53 no.3, pp.325-361 Ellis Goldberg, Erik Wibbels, and Eric Mvukiyehe, 2008. Lessons from Strange Cases: Democracy, Development, and the Resource Curse in the U.S. States, Comparative Political Studies, 41, 4/5 (April/May), pp. 477-514. 4

Week 14 Critiquing the Curse Arguments 11/28-30 Marcus Kurtz, 2009. The Social Foundations of Institutional Order: Reconsidering War and the Resource Curse in Third World State Building, Politics and Society 37 (4), pp. 479-520. Timothy Mitchell, 2009. Carbon Democracy, Economy and Society, 38:3 (August). Stephen Hertog 2010, Defying the Resource Curse: Explaining Successful State-owned Enterprises in Rentier States, World Politics, 62:2 (April). Week 15 Paper Presentation Week 1/30-12/2 5