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Highlighted Course for Winter Quarter 2010
 

Political Science 211    Introduction to Political Theory: Approaches

MW      9:30-11:18         BE 0285                                                Professor MacGilvray

Description:  This course provides an introduction to some of the leading approaches to the normative (ethical or moral) study of politics.  We will focus in particular on three kinds of authority that political thinkers have appealed to in defending their views:  the authority of nature, especially of human nature; the authority of contracts, or rational agreements between free agents; and the authority of history, understood as a process with a certain logic or structure.  Topics considered will include the role of virtue in public life, the nature and limits of political obligation, and the limits of human agency and freedom.  Readings by Plato, Aristotle, Hobbes, Locke, Marx, Nietzsche, and others.

 

Political Science 294.04                   Human Rights                             

TR        1:30-3:18           BO 0318                                               Professor Amadae

Description:  This course covers the topic of human rights.  After an introductory week, and a week looking at the history of human rights in the form of the United Nations Declaration on Human Rights, we will discuss the concerns of cultural relativism and tolerance.  Following this, we will discuss the practical need for coercive enforcement of human rights through the United Nations and through regional authorities.  Next we will address the domain areas of hunger, violence and persecution, economic rights, and challenges of globalization.  So far the course as been outward looking, and has rested hopes for human rights on laws and institutions with coercive power.  In the latter part of the course we will discuss failures of legally mandated power to enforce human rights in the form of National Socialism.  We continue this soul-searching voyage in considering evidence that many of us may carry the seeds of violence within in the form of the Milgram and Stanford Prison experiments.

 

Political Science 527              The Canadian Political System

TR        2:30-4:18           SO N0048                                             Professor Ripley

Description:  The purpose of the course is to analyze and understand the political system of Canada, often in comparison with the political system of the United States.  Political systems contain institutional, behavioral, socio-economic, cultural, and ideological components.  Students should have some knowledge of the political system of the United States.  No prior knowledge of Canadian politics is assumed.  Work for the course includes preparation for frequent class discussions through reading and following Canadian politics online, a midterm exam [essay and short identifications], a research paper, and a final exam [essays and short identifications].

 

Political Science 540.02      Special Topics in Latin American Politics

TR        9:30-11:18         CL 0171                                      Professor Brooks

Description:  The course examines the social, economic and historical foundations of Brazilian politics. Brazil is the world’s eighth largest economy and seventh largest nation by population; and it is an economic and political leader among middle income countries that has achieved energy independence in recent years. The nation boasts vast natural resources, significant innovations in technology, the arts, industry and sports (including the opportunity to host the 2016 Summer Olympics). However, Brazil is also riven by sharp inequalities and entrenched problems of poverty, violence and deprivation for many citizens. The course explores the foundations of Brazil’s unique social, institutional and economic landscapes and the contemporary challenges that these structures present for Brazil’s modern political economy. We pay special attention to the problems associated with the rule of law, inequality of income and land distribution, and race relations. We conclude the quarter by examining some of the fundamental political challenges of the 21st century, including poverty, violence and social exclusion, and assess the policy innovations through which Brazil’s government has sought to address them.

 

Political Science 543             The Politics of Immigration

MW      1:30-3:18           ML 0115                                               Professor Mughan         

Description:  This course examines one of the most contentious political issues in the contemporary world, immigration.  Broadly speaking, it starts with an historical perspective on patterns of international migration, proceeds to the question of why people move to live in other countries and finishes with consideration of how they are received there by both governments and the native population.

 

Department of Political Science 2140 Derby Hall,154 N Oval Mall,Columbus, Ohio 43210-1373 
Phone: (614) 292-2880  FAX: (614) 292-1146

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