Political Science/International Studies 365
International Political Economy
Summer 2007
Bill Newmann
Office
Hours: This is an online course, so
there will be no office hours. However,
e-mail as often as you like.
Phone:
828-8038
e-mail:
mailto:wnewmann@vcu.edu
home page with links to other syllabi. If you are a
blackboard use and encounter problems, you can also access this syllabus
through my home page: http://www.people.vcu.edu/~wnewmann/index.htm
Introduction:
This course is an on line course. All papers will be submitted through
e-mail. All papers will be returned with
comments through e-mail as well. There will be no class meetings. A full schedule of the class assignments and
expectations is included in this syllabus.
For any questions you may have, e-mail is the first choice. I will also be available by appointment for
face-to-face meetings. So please ask if
you’d like to meet in person.
This course is an examination of theoretical and
policy-related aspects of international economic issues. All readings and all papers explore
variations on perhaps the questions that ahs occupied policy makers in any
political system more than any other question: How do I make my nation and my
people wealthy? As you read the assigned books and write your papers keep that
question in mind. Scholars of
international relations and economics have been trying to answer that question
for as long as recorded history. Now
it’s you turn. Linked to the syllabus is
a short essay on theories of
international political economy. Read this before you read anything else
(unless of course you’ve already started reading). This is a good preliminary introduction that
will be a useful reference for you as you read and write. Please read this or you may find yourself
lost.
This is a writing intensive class. You will read six books and write six
papers. You will have an opportunity to rewrite
one paper to get a better grade. That
rewrite can be turned in at any time during the two weeks of the class, but
must be turned in by the last day of classes,
Your initial papers may be rocky, but I am looking for
your effort and indications that you are learning. Early difficulty will be
overshadowed by the quality of your papers at the end of the course. Your grade
will reflect the improvement. In other words, put the grade aspect aside for
the moment and learn. If you learn something, you will ultimately be happy with
your grades. What you have learned and your level of effort will be reflected
in your final grade. So, don’t be
discouraged if your early grades aren’t what you had hoped.
The
Papers
You will write five papers. The first four must be five full pages in
length, at minimum; more is fine (I’ll read as much as you want to write); five
full pages is right on target; fewer than five full pages would lead to a point
deduction. The final paper will be seven
full pages at least; the final paper is based on two books. You can write more on each paper, but you
will be penalized for writing less. Each
paper is worth 20% of the grade. I base
the grade on several things:
1.
Introductory
paragraph
2.
Organization of
the paper
3.
Command of the
theoretical material
4.
Command of the
supporting evidence the author introduces
5.
Analysis of the
author’s argument
In
your paper, please do not simply summarize the book. Your paper should be 40% summary and 60% your
ideas – critical comments on the author’s ideas and argument. When I say
critical, I don’t mean that you have to disagree with the author. I mean that you should assess the author’s
argument in terms of:
1.
theoretical
consistency (are there big contradictions
in the author’s argument?)
2.
theoretical logic
(does the theoretical argument make sense to you?),
3.
supporting
evidence (does the author’s evidence support the theory?)
4.
accuracy (does
the author’s argument seem realistic given what you know about the world. If so, why?
If not, why not?)
Be
creative. If you want to redesign the
author’s theories, go ahead. What a re
your ideas on the subject? What is the
author missing? Where does the argument
miss the point? What are the logical
conclusions of the author’s arguments and your ideas?
Revision You will be required to rewrite one of your papers
based on the comments I make on it after I have graded it. This is a
requirement, but it is also an opportunity. If you are unhappy with a grade,
you get the chance to fix a paper. Any one of the papers can be chosen for a
rewrite except the last paper. I will
replace the grade for the paper you rewrite.
Use my comments on the paper to fix the papers you rewrite. Please leave my comments on the paper when
you submit the rewrite.
Texts
The following books are available at the Virginia
Book Company (Franklin and
·
Daniel
Yergin and Joseph Stanislaw. The
·
Joseph
Stiglitz. Making
Globalization Work. (
·
Pietra Rivoli. The Travels of a T-Shirt in the Global
Economy. (
·
Oded Shenkar. The Chinese Century. (
·
Kimberly
Ann Elliott and Richard B. Freeman. Can
Labor Standards Improve Under Globalization? (
·
David
Vogel. The Market for Virtue: The
Potential and Limits of Corporate Social Responsibility (
The
first four papers will be based on a single book: Yergin/Stanislaw;
Stiglitz, Rivoli, and Shenkar. The fifth
paper, seven pages instead of five, is based on two books: Elliott/Freeman and
Vogel.
Yergin/Stanislaw
is a good journalistic account of global economic developments over the past 40
years or so. Its focus is the struggle
between the powers of government and the forces of the market -- the free flow
of goods and services that is generally referred to as buying and selling and
trading.
Stiglitz
is a former World Bank economist who has examined the role of the World Bank
and International Monetary Fund in helping the world economy grow and helping
nations deal with their economic problems.
He’s not very pleased with the performance of these international
economic institutions. Here he looks for
ways to m make globalization work better.
Rivoli takes
you on a tour of the globalized economy by tracing
the life and death of a t-shirt, from
Shenkar
examines the tremendous impact and huge uncertainty surrounding the growth of
the Chinese economy. The changes in
Elliott/Freeman
examine the relationship between globalization (the
opening up of most nations to world trade) and labor standards – safety, wages,
collective bargaining.
Vogel
examines the issue of corporate responsibility in labor, human rights, and the
environment.
These
last two books are to be compared and examined.
Look at the different approaches the authors take to the subjects. What are the common themes? What are the differences? What do you make of the issue after you have
seen the perspectives of these authors?
The
Papers:
On
Writing a Good Analytical Paper
For
example, someone might say "
The
introduction of your paper (Important!!!)
Make sure that the reader of
your paper knows: (1) what is your theme or argument; (2) how you are going to
go about supporting that theme or argument -- all within the first couple of paragraphs
of the paper. In other words, these first paragraphs or first paragraph should
provide your reader with a "road map" that explains exactly what you
will say during the paper. This is not as difficult as it sounds. Basically,
what you need to do is write the outline you have for your paper in complete
sentences in the first few paragraphs of the paper.
Your opening paragraph (or
couple of opening paragraphs) should also give the reader some reason to be
interested in your topic and in your argument. Tell the reader why this subject
is important. Here is an example of an opening paragraph. I’ve used an example
that will not overlap with your papers
The growing threat from
al-Qaeda may be the major challenge for
So,
this paragraph tells me what you think summarizes why you think that is true
and why I should care. The paper might then proceed to give a meatier
introduction with a bit of history. The bulk of the paper will give detail on
the support for the argument. The three arguments given in that opening
paragraph provide the organization; a concluding section might once again
summarize the main argument, and perhaps speculate a bit on the implications of
the argument.
You can use lots of topic
headings and subheadings to correspond to the points on your "road
map" -- they'll help you organize your thoughts, and they'll help your
reader clearly identify where he is on the "road map." The above
paper might have five main sections:
As you make the points that
support your argument, you'll probably be aware of the places in which your
argument is controversial or in which a reasonable person might disagree with
you. Preempt those controversies in your text. Point out what those opposing
arguments might be, and why you think your point of view is more accurate or
reasonable. Going back to the above example, a good paper would point out that some
people think that al-Qaeda is not that big a threat and US actions that treat
al-Qaeda as a global threat enhance its power and reputation; explain why those
people think that's the case, and show why the author thinks they're wrong.
Some stylistic issues
Plagiarism
The VCU honor system covers
plagiarism. It is not a fine line. Either ideas are yours, or they are not. But
just because someone else has already written an idea that you agree with 100%
doesn't mean you can't discuss it in your paper. Just point out whose idea it
is; paraphrase it in your own words, cite the source of the idea, and expand
upon it. Generally, that is how Political Science works. 90% of all Political
Science articles and books do the following:
There are various
analyses of al-Qaeda’s power. Stan says al-Qaeda is a
nuisance, but has no real ability to achieve any of its regional and global
goals. (Stan 2004). Kyle, disagrees, arguing that
al-Qaeda can use its passive support to instigate the overthrow of many
governments in the
The
article would then outline the theories of Stan, Kyle and Cartman,
analyze each one, and then develop the fourth theory. There is no problem as
long as Stan, Kyle, and Cartman get credited with
developing their theories, and the fourth theory is new. If the fourth theory
belongs to a fourth author (Kenny? Timmy?), the reader must be told that the
fourth theory is Kenny's or Timmy’s and your article will show why his theory
is superior to the other three.
I will catch any
plagiarism. It takes me less than ten
seconds to take any sentence from your paper and cut and paste it into a google search engine.
If you have taken the paper from a document on the web, google will identify the source in under a second. I know none of you would ever try this, so
tell your friends.
Have you read the VCU Honor
Code sections on plagiarism? http://www.vcu.edu/provost/univ_policies/honor.htm
My Comments
I will
try to mark up your papers pretty heavily in this regard, but the grade will
reflect more of the substance. But this
is a writing intensive class, so expect to work on the writing style. Even if your first papers are a bit ragged,
your last papers will be sharply analytical and organizationally elegant.
You
might think to yourself. I’ll never keep
up. I’ll never be able to read and write
all this in such a short time. Here are
a couple tips. A good non-fiction author
(and I think I’ve picked good authors) has a definite structure to his/her
book. There is a theory chapter that
explains the purpose of the book, the theory being examined, the questions
being asked, the answers being tested, and a summary of the evidence. In a good book, you should know what’s in the
entire book from reading the first chapter.
The rest of the book is filled with case studies that prove the
point. Then there is a concluding
chapter which re-summarizes the case studies and addresses some of the
theoretical issues raised in the introductory chapter. So the question is this: how do I read a book
like that. Read the introduction and the
concluding chapters carefully. Read the
introductions and conclusions of each case study chapter carefully. Read at least one case study chapters very
carefully. For the other case studies,
skim the chapters, picking and choosing sections to read carefully and sections
to read more lightly. Feel free to read
the whole thing carefully, if you want, of course. Only you know how much time you have and how
fast you read. But you don’t have to
highlight every line in every book. I’ll
let you know if you’re not getting enough depth. After reading the book, you should be able to
tell me, with a significant amount of depth what is in the introductory and
concluding chapters. You should also
understand how the theories apply to each case study, but, you don’t need to
know the small details of every case study.
I
will get your papers back to you as soon as I can. I will try to get them back before the next
paper is due, so that you can use my comments to improve your next paper.
Last points
Class Schedule
This
is a tight schedule. Don’t fall behind because
you may not be able to catch up.
Before
you read anything else, read the small essay called “A Brief
Introduction to Theories of International Political Economy” linked to
the syllabus above.
June
12: Begin reading Yergin and Stanislaw
June
22: Yergin and Stanislaw paper due at
June
23: Begin reading Stiglitz
July
2: Stiglitz paper due at
July
3: Begin reading Rivoli
July
10: Rivoli paper due at
July
11: Begin reading Shenkar
July
19: Shenkar paper due at
July
20: Begin reading Elliott and Freeman and Vogel. Read them in whatever order you want.
August
3
·
Elliott/Freeman
and Vogel paper due
·
Rewrite due (although
you can turn this in at any earlier time if you choose)