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Strukturbaum
Keine Einordnung ins Vorlesungsverzeichnis vorhanden. Veranstaltung ist aus dem Semester WiSe 2023/24 , Aktuelles Semester: SoSe 2024
  • Funktionen:
State, Democracy, and Governance    Sprache: Englisch    Belegpflicht
(Keine Nummer) Seminar     WiSe 2023/24     2 SWS     jedes 2. Semester    
   Lehreinheit: Sozialwissenschaften    
   Teilnehmer/-in  erwartet : 25   Maximal : 25  
 
      DevGov M.A., Development and Governance (Master of Arts)
  Abschlussprüfung im Development and Governance, Abschluss 96, Abschlussprüfung im Ausland Development and Governance (96B51)
  IBEP M.A., Internationale Beziehungen und Entwicklungspolitik (Master of Arts)   ( 1. Semester )
  Master of Arts Internationale Beziehungen und Entwicklungspolitik, Abschluss 86, Master of Arts Internationale Beziehungen und Entwicklungspolitik (86D96)   ( 1. Semester )
   Zugeordnete Lehrperson:   Hartmann
 
 
Zur Zeit keine Belegung möglich
   Termin: Freitag   10:00  -  17:00    EinzelT
Beginn : 12.01.2024    Ende : 12.01.2024
      Raum :   MC 231   MC  
  Freitag   10:00  -  17:00    EinzelT
Beginn : 19.01.2024    Ende : 19.01.2024
      Raum :   MC 231   MC  
  Freitag   10:00  -  17:00    EinzelT
Beginn : 26.01.2024    Ende : 26.01.2024
      Raum :   MC 231   MC  
  Freitag   10:00  -  17:00    EinzelT
Beginn : 02.02.2024    Ende : 02.02.2024
      Raum :   MC 231   MC  
 
 
   Kommentar:

Please note that this seminar will take place within 4 bloc sessions in the month of January. The sessions will take place on campus.

A preparatory meeting will take place online in the week before Christmas. Details are communicated in time.

 
   Bemerkung:

Since 1989, Western liberal democracy, historically based on a special relation between state and society became a template for the rest of the world, and its main facets have been universally promoted under the label ‘good governance’. Throughout the last decade, this liberal model has come under attack both by populist movements within core Western regimes, and through the emergence of ‘counter-hegemonic’ models of state, regime and governance in the Global South, leading to what some perceive as the emergence of a Post-Western order.

A first goal of the seminar is thus to understand the essentials of this liberal model and why Europe succeeded in establishing it as a standard to the rest of the world. We will thus start with different approaches towards analyzing the evolution and transformation of modern statehood and then deepen our understanding of the specific dimensions of the model (nation-state, accountability, democracy, equality and citizenship, rule of law, secularism). A second goal consists in understanding limits and contemporary challenges to the efforts of emulating these models across different non-Western contexts. This will include a discussion of the prospects for alternative modes of governance. Students will have opportunity to relate these debates to empirical (country) case studies.

The course focus is on domestic aspects and drivers of politics. International actors and structures obviously matter as well, whether in the West or the Global South, and we will reserve a final course bloc for understanding a variety of international-national linkages in shaping statehood, democratization and governance.

The seminar is open to students of MA Internationale Beziehungen und Entwicklungspolitik as well as MA Development and Governance. Students are required to attend regularly, to read assigned texts, to participate actively and regularly, and to prepare one oral presentation. Each section is based both on group discussions of the compulsory texts and short student presentations.

 
   Leistungsnachweis:

Students are required to hand in a seminar paper (15-20 pages excluding bibliography). Students also have to prepare an individual or group power point presentation and a handout on one of the topics discussed in class.