PSCI798 - MIDDLE EAST POLITICS

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
PSCI798 - MIDDLE EAST POLITICS
Term
2011A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
301
Section ID
PSCI798301
Meeting times
W 0600PM-0900PM
Meeting location
STITELER HALL B30
Instructors
VITALIS, ROBERT
Description
Consult department for detailed descriptions. More than one section may be given in a semester. Recent titles have included: Interpreting the Canon; State, Self, & Society; U.S. Policy in Europe; and Dissertation Writing.
Course number only
798
Use local description
No

PSCI618 - INTL POLITICAL ECONOMY

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
PSCI618 - INTL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Term
2011A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
301
Section ID
PSCI618301
Meeting times
R 0300PM-0600PM
Meeting location
GODDARD LAB 102
Instructors
STEINBERG, DAVID
Description
Examination of the relationship between the international, political, and economic systems from a variety of theoretical perspectives that have emerged in the postwar period, including liberalism, transnationalism, statism, Marxism, and dependency.
Course number only
618
Use local description
No

PSCI610 - COMP POL ANALYSIS

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
PSCI610 - COMP POL ANALYSIS
Term
2011A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
301
Section ID
PSCI610301
Meeting times
M 0330PM-0630PM
Meeting location
STITELER HALL B30
Instructors
SIL, RUDRA
Description
This seminar is aimed primarily at graduate students planning to take doctoral exams in comparative politics. It provides a critical survey of the field of comparative politics, tracing the intellectual history of the field, examining shifts in conceptual frameworks and research traditions, and comparing alternative methodological approaches. The first half of the course generally examines how processes of political, economic, and social change have been theorized in the social sciences from the mid-19th century to the present. In this process, particular attention is paid to the bifurcation between theories that emphasize the "universal" (e.g. the homogenizing effects of specific processes or variables) and the "particular" (e.g. the persistence of distinctive historical legacies and trajectories). Since this bifurcation is reinforced by distinct styles and methods of research, the seminar also probes the recent battles between rational-choice, cultural, and structuralist scholars, while considering the trade-offs between varieties of formal, quantitative, and qualitative methods. In the second half, the focus shifts to the range of substantive problems investigated by scholars in the field of comparative politics. These topics cover the complex relations among nations, states and societies; the origins, consolidation, and patterns of democratic governance; political economy in relation to development processes and social policies; the intersection of international/global economy and domestic politics; the dynamics of revolutions and social movements; and alternative problematiques constructed from the point of view of real actors such as workers, women, and local communities. In all cases, As a whole, the course is designed to provide an introduction to important issues and debates that comparativists have regularly engaged in; to help you understand the assumptions behind, and differences between, particular approaches, methods, and styles of research; to examine whether current debates are spurring new or better research in a given field in light of past approaches; and to gauge whether there has been progress, fragmentation, or stagnation in the field of comparative politics as a whole.
Course number only
610
Use local description
No