ID:
SKA
Tipo Insegnamento:
Obbligatorio
Durata (ore):
48
CFU:
6
SSD:
SCIENZA POLITICA
Url:
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS/BASE Anno: 1
Anno:
2023
Dati Generali
Periodo di attività
Primo Semestre (11/09/2023 - 02/12/2023)
Syllabus
Obiettivi Formativi
The first objective of the course is to investigate why some societies, and their respective governments have managed to produce public goods and prosperity and others have not, and what accounts for these differences. Using some fundamental texts from the field of comparative politics, both theoretical and empirical, and canvassing contemporary indexes, the class discusses the different theories, which explain the performance of various political and constitutional regimes and weights the evidence in their favor.
The second objective of this course is to understand how states acquire one or another set of such political institutions with a view to identify theories of change grounded in the political economy of specific historical contexts. We also aim to understand how these individual trajectories converge or diverge in an interdependent world, and what are the consequences for the present and future world order. The empirical evidence is drawn from a variety of cases across all over the world, discussed in the comparative framework of their continent or income group, individually or in pairs (i.e. Russia and Ukraine, Estonia and Finland, Mexico and United States, Italy and France, North and South Korea, Botswana and Zimbabwe).
The third objective of the course is to make students familiar with the comparative method, both using a large number of countries (N) and just a few (n), by using a variety of indicators, constitutional, sociological, economical, etc. and the logic of inference at the basis of comparative research.
The second objective of this course is to understand how states acquire one or another set of such political institutions with a view to identify theories of change grounded in the political economy of specific historical contexts. We also aim to understand how these individual trajectories converge or diverge in an interdependent world, and what are the consequences for the present and future world order. The empirical evidence is drawn from a variety of cases across all over the world, discussed in the comparative framework of their continent or income group, individually or in pairs (i.e. Russia and Ukraine, Estonia and Finland, Mexico and United States, Italy and France, North and South Korea, Botswana and Zimbabwe).
The third objective of the course is to make students familiar with the comparative method, both using a large number of countries (N) and just a few (n), by using a variety of indicators, constitutional, sociological, economical, etc. and the logic of inference at the basis of comparative research.
Prerequisiti
No prerequisites apply, although some background in political science, comparative politics or international relations might be helpful.
Metodi didattici
One per week initial on-site lecture followed by a discussion totalling 90 minutes. Students should cover the assigned readings and be prepared to answer questions if quizzed – based on the readings and their knowledge of political institutions of their own country.
One per week online 6o minutes seminar on comparative politics methodology where workgroups are expected to deliver every week. Students will be assigned to group to cover continents or regions. The contribution of every group to the seminar will be to present the indicator featured that week (in relation with the lecture) on their continent of study, retrieving the data, pasting it in a xls table and drawing a chart to highlight the regional average, the negative and positive outliers, and sharing it with the class, which would allow comparisons across countries and continents. Group should meet at least twice outside class to coordinate their internal labor division until the end of the division and the final group assignment.
Verifica Apprendimento
The grade for the course will be determined equally on the basis of 4 components each graded as 25% of the final grade.
1) Participation grade class presentation oral and ppts – All groups will have to scrutinise a region assigned to them. Every week each group will give a short, single-slide presentation to discuss a specific indicator related to their assigned region, to evaluate its performance.
2) The group peer learning exercise will cumulatively build on the group presentations. Each group will have to compile a database of 11 indicators based on the weekly online class presentations. If work is completed continuously week by week, the final task should smoothly follow from the presentations. Therefore, students are strongly encouraged to take the presentations seriously and prepare well. The deadline for submitting the database is 14th December 2023.
3) Group collective writing exercise – Groups will have to answer to the main comparative research question on performance of countries in producing public goods in the groups’ assigned region (achievers, backsliders, average, explanatory factors) in maximum 8000 words inclusive of figures, exclusive of references. The essay is due at the end of the semester on 14th December, together with the spreadsheet.
4) Final individual exam based on multiple choice questions, including text and figures.
Attending students, provided they completed the previous continuous assessments, can sign up for an end of year exam (component 4 of the grade). Students have the chance to attend only a single appello in the winter exam season, either the first or the second. If a student remains discontented with the grade of the first appello, they will not be able to sign up for the second winter appello. All attending students, who rejected their grades from the winter exam season or have not attended any of them, can sign up for the third appello (retake session) in May/June 2024 and can decide whether to be considered attending or non-attending student. After the third appello, all students will be considered non-attending.
Please note that non-attending students will be assessed differently. They will have to sit a 3-hour written, in-person exam and produce answers to 3-4 questions in comprehensive short essays. More details will follow soon. For non-attending students the written end of year exam will make up 100% of the grade. Furthermore, non-attending students will not be able to sign up for the first two winter appelli.
Testi
Caramani, D. (Ed.) Comparative Politics. 5th edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
King, G., Keohane, R. O. & Verba, S. (2021) Designing Social Inquiry Scientific Inference in Qualitative Research. New edition. Princeton: Princeton University. (available via Perlego)
Contenuti
This course addresses the core themes, theories and methods within the field of comparative politics. Its focus is on comparative political development at a global level.
Risultati di Apprendimento Attesi
Knowledge and understanding:
By the end of the course, students will acquire:
- Capacity to compare states, nations, regimes and markets across the current world both as regime outputs and causes
- Knowledge of main indicators used in comparative politics and governance and ability to summon them for political analysis
- Knowledge of how democracies and autocracies, on one hand, and how nation states and empires, on the other, interact on the global stage
Applying knowledge and understanding: Students will be able to apply the acquired knowledge in their future professional activities, in several ways. In particular, they will be trained in:
- Collecting and engaging with relevant academic as well as non-academic literature and grasping the key content; discussing topics and readings in class with the instructor and with colleagues;
- Summoning evidence to diagnose a country’s political regime and governance
- Carrying out research (either academic or for professional purposes) on the content of the course, also applying the relevant methodologies of the discipline; writing academic papers.
Making judgements:
Due to the emphasis placed on re-elaboration and discussion of the readings, students will be able to:
- Understand and practice inferential analysis and evidence based on comparisons across cases
- Develop knowledge of main databases in comparative politics and the ability to work as a team;
- Thanks to the understanding of the course’s key topics and debates, develop an autonomous and critical judgement about current affairs from a comparative perspective.
Communication skills: During the course students will be asked to contribute to the discussion as part of their permanent research group. Due to this they will:
- Improve the control of course-related terminology in English but at the same time be able to present complex content in a easy accessible form;
- Become acquainted with engaging in critical discussion in front of a larger audience, communicating questions or comments in a clear way to the rest of the class, thus stimulating a general debate;
- Learn from each other.
Learning skills: By the end of the course students are expected to acquire the following skills:
- Capacity to autonomously carry out comparative research work on different topics related to the course; ability to present the results of the research in oral and written form, particularly through academic papers;
- Capacity to engage with opposite arguments and to develop one’s own position in a well-organized and clear way based on facts or data;
- Capacity to compare complex phenomena and develop a broad perspective on assessing problems.
Criteri Necessari per l'Assegnazione del Lavoro Finale
No specific criteria, except the salience of the topic and the effective interest of the student.
Corsi
Corsi
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Laurea Magistrale
2 anni
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Persone
Persone (2)
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