This seminar is available for both POL- and IP-students
Admission requirements
Participation in the seminar is only permitted if the propaedeutic phase has been passed (60 EC)
Description
Content: This seminar will survey recent research on the causes, dynamics and outcomes of civil wars. It provides students with a broad understanding of relevant concepts, theories, and empirical findings, and also with the tools to write their own case studies. The course is divided into three parts: (1) The causes of civil war; (2) Civil war violence and restraint; and (3) Responding to civil war violence. Topics covered include civil war onset, armed group organization and recruitment, intensity and forms of violence against civilians, rebel governance of civilians, rebel group organization and fragmentation, counterinsurgency, and peace zones. Assignments will encourage students to think creatively about issues related to civil wars, assess the relative strengths and weaknesses of theoretical and empirical approaches, and to refine their own intellectual stance.
Course objectives
Objective 1: Students develop a broad understanding of the causes, dynamics and outcomes of civil wars.
Objective 2: Students learn to apply the concepts and theories to empirical cases.
Mode of instruction
Seminar
Assessment method
Examination includes participation in class, a group presentation in which students present a case study, short written assignments, and a book review essay in which students compare a fictional with an historical account of a civil war.
Reading list
The syllabus with a reading list will be made available via Brightspace one week before the beginning of the course
Registration
See 'Practical Information'.
Timetable
See 'MyTimetable'