30670 - POLITICS & PUBLIC SECTOR
Department of Social and Political Sciences
PIERO STANIG
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
The State
1.1) what is a state: some theory
1.2) state capacity and governance: measurement
Regimes
2.1) political regimes; democracy and autocracy: some theory and empirical results
2.2) political regimes: measurement issues
2.3) political regimes and economic development
2.4) culture and democracy; on the measurement of "culture"
Democracy
3.1) varieties of democracy: majority control vs proportionate influence
3.2) electoral systems
3.3) political parties
3.4) measuring ideological positions of parties
Institutions in Democracy
4.1) veto players
4.2) presidential vs parliamentary democracies
4.3) prime ministers and the parliament
4.4) presidents
4.5) measuring ideological positions of citizens, individual representatives, supreme court justices, etc.
4.6) common ideological spaces; text analysis of social and legacy media
Special Topics
5.1) accountability and corruption
5.2) federalism
5.3) the politics of the bureacracy
5.4) ethnicity, identity, and non-economic dimensions of conflict
5.5) polarization, inequality, and their measurement
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
At the end of the course students will be able to
- define concepts such as democracy, autocracy, presidentialism, parliamentary system, proportional representation vs. majority control, and federalism
- understand general "nuts and bolts" of the social sciences like collective action, commitment problems, principal-agent relationships
- explain the main approaches in political science to the study of
i) state formation, state building, and the bureaucracy
ii) regime types and regime transitions
iii) electoral rules and their relationship to party systems
iv) executives and legislatures
v) federalism
vi) ethnic, religious, and other social identities
- summarize the empirical approaches used in the social sciences to measure
i) state capacity
ii) regime type and quality of democracy
iii) the "civic culture"
iv) ideological positions of voters, political parties, and other actors, and ideological media bias
v) polarization and inequality
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- deploy the toolbox introduced in the course to, among others,
i) assess whether a given country can be classified as democratic according to the conventional views in political science
ii) provide arguments in favor or against a given institutional reform, e.g., of electoral rules or the rules to select the executive
- examine whether a given proposal to measure an important political concept (e.g., "press freedom") can be considered valid and useful
- propose empirical approaches to measure, in specific contexts, concepts such as ideological polarization, extremism in social media, or ethnic inequality
Teaching methods
- Lectures
DETAILS
Face to face lectures. In the context of the lectures, a significant portion of the time is reserved to general discussion: students are invited, and required, to provide their insights on the materials presented, using critical thinking. In the data- and measurement-oriented sessions, part of the time is reserved for group workshop-style discussions: students, divided in small groups, discuss, criticize, and propose, approaches to measure the political science concepts that are under consideration, and then report to the class plenary some of the ideas they came up with.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
Attendance is mandatory. Attending every lecture ---except special motivated cases--- is a requirement to sit the two non-cumulative partial exams. Non-attending students will have to take the general exam, that covers the entire program.
Class Participation: 10%
Midterm Exam: 45%
Second Partial Exam: 45%
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Non-attending students will have to take the general exam, that covers the entire program.
Final General Exam: 100%
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
The main textbook is
Clark, Golder and Golder, Principles of Comparative Politics, THIRD EDITION, Sage.
Additional materials, in the form of articles and book chapters, will be specified by the start of the course, and distributed using the digital learning platform.