POLI0087 Globalization and World Order
POLI0087 Globalization and World Order
POLI0087 Globalization and World Order
The University of Hong Kong Department of Politics and Public Administration POLI0087 Globalization and World Order (Second Semester, 2011-2012) Dr. Alina Sajed ([email protected]) Lectures: Wednesdays (9.30-11.25am) Venue: MW-T2 Office: Room 638, Meng Wah Complex Office hours: 2.30-4.00pm (Fridays) Telephone: 2241-5223
COURSE DESCRIPTION: Taking an historical approach, this course will introduce students to some of the dynamics of globalization. Students will learn how global systems have evolved into their current forms. The course begins by offering insights into the history of globalization, the meanings of world order, and a cursory view of the main competing views on globalization. Our discussions will then focus on some of the most pertinent processes associated with globalization and world order, such as colonialism, modernization, and neoliberalism. Some of the substantive issues studied in the course will include the structure of global economy, global governance, political processes related to the fate of the nation-state and citizenship in an age of globalization. Through an examination of various perspectives and historical traditions, students should be able to make judgment calls about both the direction that global affairs is taking and the direction that global affairs ought to take. Course Objectives: The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the main debates and to some of the basic concepts and skills used in the analysis of globalization. Learning Outcomes: Students will investigate some of the key theories used in the study of globalization, and will learn to apply them to concrete issues. Students will be able to make sense of the world around them, and pay more attention to transnational and global connections. STUDENTS EVALUATION: Tutorial attendance and participation: 20% Review essay: 40% (DEADLINE: March 26, 2012) Final exam: 40% Tutorial attendance and participation: 20%
Students will be graded on their participation in tutorials discussions and on their regular attendance. Attending class having read and thought about the assigned readings for the week will be essential to effective participation. Questions can also be a stimulus to discussion and will be counted as participation.
Turnitin.com In this course we will be using a web-based service (Turnitin.com) to reveal plagiarism. Students will be expected to submit their work electronically to Turnitin.com and in hard copy so that it can be checked for academic dishonesty. To see the Turnitin.com Policy, please go to http://lib.hku.hk/turnitin/turnitin.html
Late Papers Late papers will be accepted, but will be subject to a late penalty of 5 per cent per day to a maximum of 5 days, after which they will not be accepted and a mark of 0 will be recorded. In the interest of fairness to all students, there will be no exceptions to this unless you have arranged with me in advance for an extension. All extensions must be arranged in advance of the day on which a paper is due. Papers submitted after deadlines (including excused late papers) will be marked, but comments will NOT be provided.
COURSE READINGS: There is one required book for this course (see below). MOODLE readings to be accessed electronically via the course website on Moodle. RESERVE readings are placed on reserve at the Main Library. E-Resource/E-book journal articles or e-books to be accessed electronically via HKUs Library website. Regarding recommended readings: Most recommended readings are to be found at HKUs Main Library, unless otherwise specified. If readings are marked with HKALL they can be borrowed from other university libraries in HK via HKALL function on HKU Librarys website. REQUIRED TEXTBOOK: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization: A Critical Introduction, Palgrave Macmillan, Second Edition (Revised and Updated), 2005. OUTLINE OF THE COURSE: PART I: GLOBALIZATION AND WORLD ORDER: HISTORY AND COMPETING THEORIES Week 1 (January 18): Introduction to the course Week 2 (January 25): NO CLASS (CHINESE NEW YEAR). Week 3 (February 1): The history of globalization: some snapshots. WEEK 4 (February 8): Meanings of world order. PART II: GLOBALIZATION AND WORLD ORDER: RELATED PROCESSES Week 5 (February 15): Colonialism, modernization, and world order Week 6 (February 22): Neoliberalism and world order. PART III: GLOBAL GOVERNANCE ISSUES: Week 7 (February 29): Structuring the Global Economy Week 8 (March 7): READING WEEK Week 9 (March 14): Global governance and shifting scales Week 10 (March 21): Global political processes: the fate of the nation-state and citizenship 3
Week 3 (February 8): Meanings of world order. Tutorial questions: Is the cosmopolitan vision of world order attainable? What would the political pre-conditions be for the establishment of a cosmopolitan world order? What is the distinction between world system and world order? Hedley Bull, The Concept of Order in World Politics in The Anarchical Society: a Study of Order in World Politics, New York: Columbia University Press, 2002 [1977], pp. 3-21. (Moodle) David Held, "Restructuring Global Governance: Cosmopolitanism, Democracy and the Global Order," Millennium: Journal of International Studies Vol. 37, No.3 (2009), pp. 535547. (e-resource) Recommended: Fernand Braudel, Civilization and Capitalism, vol. 1-3, Harper & Row, 1981-1984. Kenneth Pomeranz, The great divergence: Europe, China, and the making of the modern world economy, Princeton University Press, 2001.(e-book) Andre Gunder Frank, ReOrient: global economy in the Asian Age, University of California Press, 1998. (e-book) Philip D. Curtin, Cross-cultural trade in world history, Cambridge University Press, 1984. Jerry H. Bentley, Old world encounters: cross-cultural contacts and exchanges in premodern times, Oxford University Press, 1993. Immanuel Wallerstein, World-systems Analysis: an Introduction, Duke University Press, 2004. Robert W. Cox, "Towards a post-hegemonic conceptualization of world order: reflections on the relevancy of Ibn Khaldun" in James N. Rosenau and Ernst-Otto Czempiel (eds.) Governance without government: order and change in world politics. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1992. Richard Falk, The Future of the State and State-System (ch.1) in The Declining World Order: Americas Imperial Geopolitics, Routledge, 2004, pp. 2-38. PART II: GLOBALIZATION AND WORLD ORDER: RELATED PROCESSES WEEK 4 (February 15): Colonialism, modernization, and world order Tutorial questions: What is the relationship between colonialism and globalization? Is the current world order beholden to the European colonial project? Can there be modernization without European colonialism? Jan Scholte, Chapter 4: Explaining globalization. A.G. Hopkins, Globalization with and without Empires: from Bali to Labrador in A.G. Hopkins (ed.), Globalization in World History, WW Norton, 2002, 221-243. (Moodle) 5
PART III: GLOBAL GOVERNANCE ISSUES: Week 6 (February 29): Structuring the Global Economy Tutorial questions: What is hypercapitalism? How has the rise of BRICs challenged the global governance of trade? Is the Chinese model of economic development sustainable? Jan Scholte, ch. 5: Globalization and Production: From Capitalism to Hypercapitalism. Dani Rodrik, Governance of Economic Globalization in One Economics, Many Recipes: Globalization, Institutions, and Economic Growth, Princeton University Press, pp. 195-212. (Moodle) Amrita Narlikar, New Powers in the Club: The Challenges of New Trade Governance International Affairs 86: 3 (2010), 717-28. (e-resource) Recommended: John Maynard Keynes, The End of Laissez-Faire: The Economic Consequences of the Peace, Prometheus Books, 2004 [1919]. Karl Polanyi, The Great Transformation, Beacon Press, 1957. Pamela Sparr (ed.), Mortgaging Womens Lives: Feminist Critiques of Structural Adjustment, London: Zed Books, 1994. William Greider, One World, ready or not? The Manic logic of global capitalism. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1997. Dani Rodrik, Has Globalization Gone Too Far? Washington: Institute for International Economics, 1997. James Mittelman, Rethinking the International Division of Labor in The Globalization Syndrome, Princeton University Press, 2000. (e-book) Robert Gilpin, Global Political Economy: Understanding the International Political Economic Order, Princeton University Press, 2001. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Globalization and Its Discontents, WW Norton, 2003. Robert W. Cox, Global Restructuring: Making Sense of the Changing International Political Economy in Richard Stubbs and Geoffrey Underhill (eds), Political Economy and the Changing Global Order, Oxford University Press, 2006. Rorden Wilkinson, The World Trade Organization and the Regulation of International Trade, in Dominic Kelly and Wyn Grant, eds., The Politics of International Trade in the Twenty-First Century, Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2005, pp. 13-29. MARCH 7: READING WEEK NO CLASS! 7
Week 9 (March 28): Global flows of people: migration, borders, security Tutorial questions: What is the relationship between refugees and the nation-state? Why are refugees and migrants perceived as security concerns? How do contemporary global flows of migration and mobility alter our conception of political belonging? UNHCR, Introduction and Current Dynamics of Displacement (ch.1) in The State of the Worlds Refugees. Human Displacement in the New Millennium, 2006. To be retrieved from: http://www.unhcr.org/4a4dc1a89.html (e-resource) Ayse Ceyhan and Anastassia Tsoukala, The Securitization of Migration in Western Societies: Ambivalent Discourses and Policies, Alternatives 27 (2002), pp. 21-39. (Moodle) Recommended: Hannah Arendt, The Decline of the Nation-State and the End of the Rights of Man in The Origins of Totalitarianism (Schocken Books, 2004). Gil Loescher, Beyond Charity: International Cooperation and the Global Refugee Crisis, Oxford University Press, 1993. William Walters, Deportation, Expulsion, and the International Police of Aliens in Citizenship Studies 6:3, 2002. (e-resource) Mark B. Salter, Passports, Mobility, and Security: How smart can the border be? International Studies Perspectives 5:1 (2004), 71-91. (e-resource) Mark Duffield, Racism, migration and development: the foundations of planetary order in Progress in Development Studies 6:1 (2006), 68-79. (e-resource) Jef Huysmans, The Politics of Insecurity: Fear, Migration, and Asylum in the EU, Routledge, 2006. Peter Nyers, Rethinking Refugees: Beyond States of Emergency, Routledge, 2006. Nick Vaughan-Williams, Border Politics: The Limits of Sovereign Power (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2009), 1-64. (e-book) David Lyon, Globalizing Surveillance, International Sociology, 19:2 (2004): 135-149. (e-resource) APRIL 4: PUBLIC HOLIDAY NO CLASS! Week 10 (April 11): The changing nature of war? Conflict in a global age Tutorial questions: What are the main causes of insecurity in an age of globalization? Is the new doctrine of humanitarian intervention justifiable? What is new about war and conflict in a globalized world? 9
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Student deploys theoretical arguments well using their own voice and substantive arguments in a sophisticated way.
Student deploys theoretical arguments well although voice, style and substantive critiques are similar to the source.
Student rehearses theories and bits of argumentation from others and not in a way suggesting understanding at a graduate level.
Student fails to attempt argumentation or use of theoretical tools from the course.
Creativity
Persuasiveness
Students choice of topic, sources, assignment completion modality, arguments, and solutions show sophistication and critical thinking at a high level. Student makes an argument using appropriate language and rhetorical style necessary to persuade the reader to accept or
Students choice of topic, sources, assignment completion modality, arguments, and solutions show critical thinking skills.
Student shows no more creativity than what is required to complete the task.
Student makes an argument using appropriate language and rhetorical style necessary to complete the assignment.
Student makes an argument using either inappropriate language and/or rhetorical style. Ranting or editorializing.
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Student brings factual evidence to bear upon some arguments and supports factual claims with support from limited or questionable sources. Students writing is grammatically correct in most instances and there are few spelling errors.
Students writing is fluid, fluent, and in an appropriate style for the task. Student accurately and completely cites all sources, whether factual, argumentative, or theoretical claims according to the appropriate citation scheme.
Students writing is fluent but stilted and/ or is an odd style for the task. Student accurately cites all sources, whether factual, argumentative, or theoretical claims, but does not provide complete citations or uses an inappropriate citation scheme. Students choice of sources indicates a
Citations
Student brings some facts into their arguments but fails to provide support consistently for factual claims and uses trite or prohibited sources as support (e.g., Wikipedia). Students writing is grammatically correct in many instances but spelling errors are found throughout the document, consonant with ESL students. Students writing is halting and imbalanced and may be inappropriate for the task. Student cites most expected sources, but does not provide accurate or complete citations.
Students factual claims are questionable or unsupported. Student rehearses facts from unacceptable sources (e.g., Yahoo answers). Grammatical infelicities and spelling errors appear frequently in the document, but these are errors common to ESL students.
Factual claims, if any are incorrect, ill supported, or incoherent within the argument.
Grammar and spelling are unacceptable for university level writing for any student.
Students writing is only marginally acceptable for university level courses. Students citations are incomplete and inconsistent throughout the paper.
Students writing needs significant remediation by outside sources. Student fails to cite at all.
Sources
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