Admission requirements
Since 1989, one of the main questions about developments in China has been whether China will democratize and how this might happen. This course investigates how the Chinese people actually participate in politics and will provide theoretical tools to analyse how this participation relates to popular voice, political stability, regime legitimacy, and governance. The course takes seriously not only the forms of participation first developed in Western countries, but also the possibility that there can be other culturally or ideologically shaped ways to influence policy. It examines critically actual experiences of democratization outside China and takes into account various traditions of democracy
Course objectives
Students will use their personal diary and their participation in discussions in the class to form their own analytical, informed and well-articulated view about what to expect of the Chinese political system and its future developments. Their skills to consider various approaches and alternatives and to present their case orally and in writing will be appreciated.
Description & Goals
Timetable Check the timetable on the departmental website.
Mode of instruction
Lecture
Seminar
Course load
A brief calculation of the course load, broken down by:
- Total course load for the course (number of EC x 28 hours): 10 EC = 280 hours. – Hours spent on attending lectures and seminars: 24 hours – Time for studying the compulsory literature and writing course diaries: 140 hours – Time to write a paper (including reading / research): 116 hours
Assessment
35% course diaries
30% class participation
35% final essay
Blackboard
Reading List
Registration
uSis h3. Registration Studeren à la carte and Contractonderwijs ### Contact