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Global Governance: International Politics in A Changing World.. General division of labor
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1. Global Governance: International Politics in A Changing World.
2. Global Governance: International Politics in A Changing World. General division of labor & responsibilities:
I shall provide the schedule, quizzes, lectures, and moderate discussion (dates subject to my changes)
Students shall,
Academic honesty;
Late adds ensure they’re in WebCT;
Observe office hours;
Become familiar with syllabus and policies
Come to class prepared, having read assigned readings, prepared for contributing to discussion; reasonable class decorum;
Rooster.
3. Course Syllabus:Discuss in detail on day 2
All course syllabi materials may be accessed at the following: http://courses.csusm.edu/psci350kb/ for either section. Please be aware that each student is responsible for familiarizing him-herself with the syllabus for his-her section. Similarly, note that each student will sign (electronically) the Policies Page of the syllabus by a date certain committing each student to the course policies.
In addition to the course syllabus—which should be bookmarked throughout the semester—quizzes, exams, and grades will be kept on WebCT: a separate campus server. Each student is responsible for familiarizing him-herself with WebCT as well. (I will demonstrate both in class on day 2.)
4. PSCI 350, Global GovernanceDay 1 Introductions: major; what polisc courses taken; transfer or indigenous matriculation; global courses; travel; why taking this course
Dr. Bolton: précis; problems of least-common denominator approach; advance apologies
Policies précis : name placards daily; lost credit after week 1; “contributions”; a priori preparation; academic honesty; group study encouraged.
5. Course Readings The course textbook is: G. P. Hastedt et al., International Politics in A Changing World (NY: Longman Publishers, 2003), hereafter “text”; M. K. Bolton, U.S. Foreign Policy & International Politics: George W. Bush, 9/11, & The Global-Terrorist Hydra (NY: Prentice Hall, 2005) “supplement,” Also see Course Syllabus (“Required Materials”) for additional required materials. Each student will read the Los Angeles Times.
6. Course Syllabus & WebCT Demonstration: Day 2 Demonstration of syllabus, WebCT, etc.
7. Policies, syllabus cont.; Preface of “text.”Studying Global Governance Preface & introductory materials: relevance of Cold War (CW)?
What are the post CW world’s characteristics?
Rise of IOs, non-state actors; criminal syndicates; MNCs; terrorist hydra;
Global (systemic) vs. regional perspectives
Importance of studying IR: “We seldom think about how events far away. . . Affect our lives” (pp. ). Do they? How? Politically, economically, psychologically . . . Oil, xchange rates
8. Policies, syllabus cont.; Preface of “text.” Studying Global Governance Preface & introductory materials: relevance of Cold War (CW)?
A new post CW systems whose contours we’ve scarcely begun to see; what can the past tell us? “We need to think of new possibilities without losing a sense of where we have been.”
Why? Where we’ve been (and where others have been concomitantly) affect our mythologies, ethos, shape, animate our actions—what our policymakers think-do, mental maps chosen by them
9. Policies, syllabus cont.; Preface of “text.” Studying Global Governance Three challenges Facing Students (i.e., all of us) of global governance, world politics:
1) An explosion of theoretical perspectives (and their counterpart among policymakers, viz., analogies) has occurred. (E.g., the latter: lessons of Vietnam; lessons of 9/11; lessons of “appeasement” . . . Thus, authors present CW headlines as refresher on where we’ve been & resultant concepts (theories): power, balance thereof, int’l systems, conflict & cooperation
10. Policies, syllabus cont.; Preface of “text.” Studying Global Governance 2) Many of today’s younger students have, at best, a nominal understanding of how CW affected us and others, and continues to affect us today, [What was the nat’l security bureaucracy doing in the 1990s-2001?] even as the CW is over? Thus the authors reexamine CW and its effects. What are we in now if not Cold War?
[Note: read last sentence of top paragraph dealing w/ challenge 2, p. xx]
11. Policies, syllabus cont.; Preface of “text.” Studying Global Governance 3) Today’s post CW world seemingly lacks overarching themes [therefore theories and/or analogies to understand them]. [9/11 arguably changed that. Did it?] Thus, the authors consider both global and regional perspectives, not for feely-touchy psychic benefit, but for understanding our environment.
[E.g., there longer exists 1st, 2nd, and 3rd worlds! Yet there still exist have and have-not states. The former tend to perpetuate status quo; the latter tend toward change. The result is a clash of interests! Hence for self-interested reasons alone we need to understand our global environment.]
12. Studying Global Governance Approaches:
Encyclopedic knowledge;
Thematic knowledge;
Abstractions such as theories and analogies;
Comparative . . . Ethos.
13. Policies, syllabus cont.; Preface of “text.”Days 2 and 3 Pedagogical Aids, etc.
Coming attractions: chp.1 discusses mental maps used by analysts (theorists, students of politics, etc) vs. mental maps used by policymakers
Chp. 2. The Cold War. Change and Continuity.