INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
- Academic year
- 2019/2020 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- RELAZIONI INTERNAZIONALI
- Course code
- LT2240 (AF:321434 AR:166495)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 12
- Subdivision
- Surnames P-Z
- Degree level
- Bachelor's Degree Programme
- Educational sector code
- SPS/04
- Period
- Annual
- Course year
- 2
- Where
- VENEZIA
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
The course provides students with tools that will help them to understand international politics. It aims to improve their knowledge of the historical context of contemporary problems, to introduce them to the different perspectives on international issues and to the diversity of the theoretical approaches. Furthermore, it will allow students to understand better some of the main issues that are raised by contemporary international politics.
2. Ability to use acquired knowledge in order to:
- Understand better the context of contemporary events in the framework of international relations;
- Distinguish the different international relations theories and to identify the main differences between them;
- Apply the concepts and theories to the contemporary issues dealt with during the semester.
3. Autonomy of judgment:
- Ability to read with a critical mind textbooks in international relations and newspaper articles; ability to find original arguments on issues related to international politics.
4. Ability to comunicate:
Ability to structure an oral or written argumentation and to justify it in relation to the issues dealt with during the semester. In order to reach this goal, the course includes two written exercises that will be organized during the semester (cf. Assessment Methods).
5. Ability to learn:
- Ability to use the knowledge acquired through the course to interpret critically contemporary phenomena in the realm of international relations.
- Ability to collect autonomously bibliographical references to analyze the international society, in a historical and contemporary perspective. Ability to use this information in the student’s future studies related to international relations.
Learning outcomes (will be checked through the written exercises organized during the semester and through the final exam):
On the basis of the competences described above, students are expected:
- To be able to consolidate their knowledge of concepts and theories of IR and to have a general perspective on the main theories.
- To interpret critically the use of the main theories in practical cases.
Pre-requirements
Contents
2. The main schools of thought in International Relations field
3. Subjects and structures, processes and organizations: topics in International Relations
4. Global System: a view from Europe
5. Emerging subjects in European transnational relations
Referral texts
2. Mark Gilbert, Storia politica dell'integrazione europea, Roma-Bari, Laterza.
Assessment methods
The final written exam will last three hours and will check students’ understanding of the issues dealt with during the semester and their analytical skills. The exam will be in three parts.
The first part (4 points) will include four multiple-choice questions and will check the students’ reading ability and their understanding of the technical concepts of international relations.
The second part (8 points) will include four brief questions and will assess students’ ability to use synthetically the language of IR and their understanding of the fundamental concepts of the discipline.
The third part (18 points) will include three open-ended questions and aims to assess students’ ability to argue and to critically analyse the major issues related to international relations and the trends of the contemporary world, and their ability to use the textbooks studied during the semester.
During the semester: Two written exams. Duration: one hour and a half.