Description
Objective: Over 2 blocks, students prepare their research proposal and write their master thesis.
Content: The seminar focuses on the multitude of institutions and actors operating at the international or transnational level. This includes but is not limited to international organizations (EU, ASEAN, UN, NATO, BRICs, WTO, etc.), the members (or member states) of these international organizations, as well as non-governmental actors (corporations, banks, NGOs, transnational activists and social movements, religious organizations, epistemic communities, lobbyists, etc.). A series of questions define the scope of this seminar: How do these actors interact at the global level and what “rules” (formal and/or informal) regulate their interactions? What governance patterns emerge out of interactions between these actors? How has nation-state sovereignty and power been undercut by IOs and non-governmental actors? Who controls decisions and policies at the international level? To what extent are IOs “agents” of their members? Can these actors be considered “legitimate” and/or “democratic”? What type of “power” do these actors wield and to what effect? How can we understand the external dimension or foreign policy of international organisations like the EU, ASEAN or BRICs?
Methods of Instruction
Lectures and working groups (block 3), individual meetings (block 4)
Literature
Karns and Mingst (2010), International Organizations. The Politics and Processes of Global Governance, second edition. London: Lynne Rienner.
Examination
The final grade will be based on the thesis.
Schedule
Monday 4 Feb till 27 May, 15.00 – 17.00 hrs in 1A03 (except 1 Apr Easter Monday and 20 May Pinksteren) and
Thursday 7 Feb, till 30 May, 15.00 – 17.00 hrs in 1A03 (except 9 May Hemelvaartsdag)