30196 - INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Department of Social and Political Sciences
PAOLO MAGRI
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
Provisional course summary (to be updated before and during lectures):
- Introduction to IR Theories.
- US: The reluctant superpower.
- China: The rising superpower.
- Russia: The hollow superpower.
- A divided world: The Middle East.
- The United Nations:
- Decision-making and power distribution.
- Development.
- Funding.
- Peace and security.
- The European Union:
- Decision-making and power distribution.
- EU: Political cleaveges and future integration.
- EU in action: Foreign policy and common defense.
- EU in action: Migration.
The course also includes a case study (e.g. on the 1994 Rwandan genocide), and a number of seminars (one-hour lectures) with specific experts on relevant topics in international relations. For instance, the 2021 iteration of the course hosted seminars on the Middle East, Sub-Saharan Africa, East and South East Asia, Latin America, Migration, Global Health, Cybersecurity, and Climate Change.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Identify and analyse the key issues in current international politics.
- Describe developments in today's main big powers, both domestically and in their foreign policy, and the interplay between each of them.
- Assess the effectiveness and efficiency of the United Nations and the European Union in today's global predicament.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Evaluate the potential evolution of the international system, and of the foreign policies of the main big powers.
- Speculate on potential solutions to long-standing problems in international politics (e.g. the role of UN peacekeepers in conflict prevention and resolution).
- Discuss and criticize the policy options on the future of the UN and the EU.
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Case studies /Incidents (traditional, online)
DETAILS
- Classes consist of face-to-face lectures (100% in presence, if the pandemic situation will allow this).
- The course includes a number of guest speaker's talks. For example, last year the course featured 9 different such talks, with experts joining online (on the Middle East - two talks -, Sub-Saharan Africa, East and South East Asia, Latin America, Migration, Global Health, Cybersecurity, and Climate change).
- The course includes 1 case study (e.g. on the 1994 Rwandan genocide).
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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x | x |
ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students have the option to sit a written partial exam for two-thirds (67%) of the class grade, after the first two Modules of the course. In case they pass the written partial exam, they are able to sit a second written partial exam at the end of the course for the remaining third (33%) of the grade. Students that do not pass or do not sit the written partial exam are able to sit the written general exam for 100% of their grade.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students are only able to attend the written general exam for 100% of their grade (no partial exams planned).
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
- Teaching materials (slides and readings) are provided to students both in advance of the start of the course, and during the course itself, through Bboard.
- Almost all teaching materials provided are compulsory, but no course manual is recommended.