2010/2011 BA-BLC_BAS2 British and American Studies 2
English Title | |
British and American Studies 2 |
Course Information | |
Language | English |
Point | 7,5 ECTS (225 SAT) |
Type | Mandatory |
Level | Bachelor |
Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Study Board |
Study Board for BSc og MSc in Business, Language and Culture, BSc |
Course Coordinator | |
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Main Category of the Course | |
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Last updated on 29 maj 2012 |
Learning Objectives | |||||
Content: At the end of the course students should be able to: • describe, analyse and discuss different trends and competing models of regional integration in Europe and the Americas, • identify and analyse critically the central issues, underlying assumptions and theoretical underpinnings of different views within UK/US discourses pertaining to relations between, respectively, Britain and Europe, and the US and Latin America, • critically relate trade theory, and theories of regional integration to processes of regionalism/regionalisation and discourses thereof, • explain policy positions on issues of regional integration in view of economic factors, institutional patterns, competing interests and ideologies, and • develop an independent, coherent, and lucid argument on topics within the content of the course, drawing upon and linking a range of sources appropriately. Language: At the end of the course students should be able to: • use a wide range of vocabulary, both general and specific to the subject matter, • use a wide range of grammatical structures correctly, • pronounce the language in a manner that facilitates communication, • present complex ideas in a coherent and cohesive manner, • employ linguistic styles appropriate to academic English, and • communicate precisely and fluently on complex topics. | |||||
Examination | |||||
British and American Studies | |||||
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Prerequisites for Attending the Exam | |||||
Students are required to submit two home assignments (maximum three pages each, where one page equals 2275 STU). Both assignments have to be passed for the student to take the written examination at the end of the course. | |||||
Course Content | |||||
This course provides students with some of the knowledge, understanding and skills necessary for working in markets or organisations in the US and the UK that engage in cross-border activities in their respective regions: the Western Hemisphere and Europe. The course focuses on the political economy of regional integration in the cases of the US and the UK, examining the development of policy coordination and regulation of trade, investment, the environment, the macroeconomy, and security issues in regional arenas, yet in the context of both regionalisation and globalisation processes. With reference to the respective roles and interests of the US and UK, competing models of regional integration are analysed. For example, in the case of the US, regional co-operation in the form of NAFTA and a possible FTAA, as well as alternative or complementary bilateral arrangements, are criticised by some for a narrow approach to integration centred on free trade and investment. This contrasts with the EU, where supranational institutions are vested with powers to coordinate a range of economic, social and environmental policy areas. The course thereby covers debates and tensions relating to the ongoing process of deepening and widening integration in the Americas and Europe. While the issues examined are mainly derived from the literature of international political economy, the course also relates secondarily to culture and identities as relevant to economic and political integration. Issues and debates are examined from multiple perspectives, such as those of business, labour, consumers and environmentalists. A critical approach is taken to the issues and concepts taught, with emphasis on how different texts relate to the systems of knowledge and belief on which they base their positions and arguments. Finally, the course has a strong emphasis on the accumulation of subject-specific concepts and vocabulary, as well as speaking and writing the English language accurately, fluently, and in a manner appropriate to discussing complex issues at a high level of abstraction. | |||||
Teaching Methods | |||||
With a total of approximately 11 double-period sessions, classes are organised around student presentations of the assigned texts. In each session, a 10-15 minute student presentation (normally two students) forms the basis of the ensuing discussion of the text(s). Presentations and class discussions are meant to complement rather than repeat the readings. Furthermore, the presentations enable the teacher to give each student individual feedback, both on his/her grasp of the content and on proficiency in English. It should be stressed that the reading load is fairly heavy and that the texts studied tend to be thematically complex and long. | |||||
Literature | |||||
Mario Telò (2006): Europe: a Civilian Power? European Union, Global Governance, World Order, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan: Ch. 2 States, New Regionalism and Interregional Cooperation in the Globalized World (pp 106-146) Steven McGuire and Michael Smith (2008): The European Union and the United States. Competition and Convergence in the Global Arena. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan Ch.7: Regionalism and Interregionalism (pp 184-199) Giandomenico Majone (2005): Dilemmas of European Integration. The Ambiguities and Pitfalls of Integration by Stealth, Oxford: OUP: Ch.1: From Community to Diverse Union (pp 1-22) Steve Wood & Wolfgang Quaisser (2008): The New European Union. Confronting the Challenges of Integration. Boulder, Lynne Rienner. Ch. 7: Considering Europe’s Future (pp 193-210) David Allen: The United Kingdom: A Europeanized Government in a non-Europeanized polity. In: Simon Bulmer and Christian Lequesne (eds.) (2005) The Member States of the European Union, Oxford: OUP (pp 119-141) Bill Cash: United States Policy on European Integration – An understandable but strategic error since 1990. The European Journal (March/April 2006) pp 3-18 Richard Conquest: Is the Euro Sustainable? The Bruges Group (2009) Stephen Wall (2008) A Stranger in Europe. Britain and the EU from Thatcher to Blair, Oxford, OUP: Ch.10: A Stranger in Europe (pp 204-220) John Dumbrell (2006) A Special Relationship. Anglo-American Relations from the Cold War to Iraq, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan: Ch. 9: Britain, the United States and European Integration (pp 216-241) Louise Fawcett: The Origins and Development of the Regional Idea in the Americas. In: Louise Fawcett and Monica Serrano (eds) (2005), Regionalism and Governance in the Americas. Continental Drift. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan (pp 27-51) Peter H. Smith (2008) Talons of the Eagle. Latin American, the United States, and the World. Third edition, New York: (OUP). Conclusion: Structure and Change in U.S.-Latin American Relations (pp 395-414) Andrew Hurrell: Hegemony and Regional Governance in the Americas. In: Louise Fawcett and Monica Serrano (eds) (2005), Regionalism and Governance in the Americas. Continental Drift. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, (pp 185-207) Flores-Macías, Gustavo A.: NAFTA’s Unfulfilled Immigration Expectations. Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice, 20: (pp 435-441), October 1, 2008 Morales, Isidro (2008), Post-NAFTA North America. Reshaping the Economic and Political Governance of a Changing Region, Basingstoke, UK; New York, USA: Palgrave Macmillan. Ch. 1: Challenges for US Economic Leadership (pp24-37 ONLY); Ch. 6: Post-NAFTA Deepening and Widening Trends: Towards the Continentalization of Energy Markets and the Enlargement of the Southern Sphere (pp 169-170 & 180-194); Conclusions (pp 195-202) Jeff Faux: Obama’s Mexican challenge. Dissent, Spring 2009, pp 41-49 Felipe Frydman: Mercosur and the US. No finishing date. In: Joseph A.McKinney and H.Stephen Gardner (eds) (2008) Economic Integration in Europe and the Americas. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge (Ch.8, pp 96-104 |