INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
- Anno accademico
- 2020/2021 Programmi anni precedenti
- Titolo corso in inglese
- INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
- Codice insegnamento
- LM5760 (AF:342364 AR:182148)
- Modalità
- Blended (in presenza e online)
- Crediti formativi universitari
- 6
- Partizione
- Classe 2
- Livello laurea
- Laurea magistrale (DM270)
- Settore scientifico disciplinare
- SPS/04
- Periodo
- I Semestre
- Anno corso
- 2
- Spazio Moodle
- Link allo spazio del corso
Inquadramento dell'insegnamento nel percorso del corso di studio
This course will explore how Europe and its institutional embodiment, the European Union, interact with the outside world. The EU’s foreign and security policies will be part of this enquiry, but the course will adopt a broader conception of political actorness, examine the EU from multi-disciplinary angles, and scrutinize the global environment the EU is part of. The course should be of help to all students interested in international politics including those with a background in law, economy and the humanities.
The course will reveal different theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of Europe, its policies and institutions.
Risultati di apprendimento attesi
The general purpose of this course is to develop key skills relating to: an understanding of substantive and conceptual issues, and scholarly debates; an ability to research and write essays; an ability to engage in group discussions. The specific student learning outcomes and experiences are:
• to understand the development and workings of nation states in Europe
• to understand the nature of European integration and become familiar with policy-making procedures in the European Union
• to understand the relationship between developments at the international, European, national and sub-national levels;
• to become familiar with the key literature on European integration and European external policies.
Prerequisiti
Contenuti
Part I: The nature of the beast
1. EU as an actor: unique or ordinary?
2. EU as a normative power.
3. National policies: convergence versus divergence.
4. European Neighborhood Policies: successes and failures
5. How does the EU compare with the US, China and Russia?
Part II: The rise and fall of the EU
6. Deepening and widening of European integration
7. Theories of European integration and disintegration
8. EU institutions and the limits of institutional engineering
9. Legitimizing EU policies: technocrats vs populists
10. The battle for Europe’s future: sovranisti vs federalisti
Part III: Europe in the world
1. Borders, systems and geographies in and around Europe.
2. The Commission’s external policies: trade, development and human rights
3. European Union Foreign Policy and the External Action Service
4. European Security and Defense Policy: origins, structure, strategy and record
5. Europe’s global agenda: empire by example?
Part I: The nature of the beast
1. EU as an actor: unique or ordinary?
2. National policies: convergence versus divergence.
3. Borders, systems and geographies in and around Europe.
4. How does the EU compare with the US, China and Russia?
5. EU as a normative power.
Part II: The rise and fall of the EU
6. Deepening and widening of European integration
7. Theories of European integration and disintegration
8. EU institutions and the limits of institutional engineering
9. Legitimizing EU policies: technocrats vs populists
10. The battle for Europe’s future: sovranisti vs federalisti
Part III: Europe in the world
11. The Commission’s external policies: trade, development and human rights
12. European Union Foreign Policy and the External Action Service
13. European Security and Defense Policy: origins, structure, strategy and record
14. European Neighborhood Policies: successes and failures
15. Europe’s global agenda: empire by example?
Testi di riferimento
There is no textbook assigned to this course, but students are recommended to read Hill, Christopher, Michael Smith & Sophie Vanhoonacker (eds.), International Relations and the European Union, Oxford University Press 2017. However, this book is not available in the library of Ca Foscari.
Because this is an area of rapid change, it is important to keep abreast of current developments. The easiest way to do this is to read online editions of newspapers such as the Financial Times, Le Monde, Die Zeit or La Repubblica. More detailed daily information is to be found in Agence Europe. For a guide to the institutions of and recent developments in the EU, see the Europa site: http://europa.eu.int . (Various ministries of European member states have their own sites.) See also The European Security Strategy (December 2003); The European Union Global Strategy (2016), including its implementation reports; EU trade strategy “trade for all (2015).
Recommended General Academic Journals with regular coverage on EU Foreign Policy
• Journal of Common Market Studies: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/loi/14685965
• Journal of European Public Policy: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjpp20/current
• Journal of European Integration: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/geui20/current
• Journal of Contemporary European Research (JCER): http://www.jcer.net/index.php/jcer
• International Organization: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=INO
• European Foreign Affairs Review: http://www.kluwerlawonline.com/toc.php?pubcode=EERR
• European Security: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/feus20/current
• The Hague Journal of Diplomacy: http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/1871191x
• Foreign Affairs: http://foreignaffairs.com
• European Union Politics: http://eup.sagepub.com/
• West European Politics: http://www.standfonline.com/toc/fwep20/current