2015/2016 BA-BHAAI1047U Politics and Economics of Globalization
English Title | |
Politics and Economics of Globalization |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Bachelor |
Duration | Summer |
Start time of the course | Summer |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Max. participants | 120 |
Study board |
Study Board for BSc in Economics and Business
Administration
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Course coordinator | |
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In case of any academic questions related to the course, please contact the course instructor or the academic director, Sven Bislev at sb.ikl@cbs.dk | |
Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 12-05-2016 |
Learning objectives | |||||||||||||||||||||||
To achieve the grade 12, students
should meet the following learning objectives with no or only minor
mistakes or errors: To achieve the grade 12, students should meet
the following learning objectives with no or only minor mistakes or
errors:
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Course prerequisites | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Familiarity with basic international macroeconomic concepts is welcomed. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Examination | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Economic globalization comes in many colors, and it never comes
in a linear way. Rather then creating a ‘flat world’ as
business analysts preferred for a while to interpret this
mega-trend, globalization is a uneven and also unequal process. The
global financial crisis from 2008 can be seen as the most recent
watershed in a trend that started with a strong surge of
cross-border exports of goods and then services, followed by a
surge of foreign direct investment. Only after the demise of the
international currency regime in the early 1970s and then triggered
by the Fall of the Wall the world saw a rush of global financial
and capital flows. In the last few years we experience a
restructuring of the globalization mega-trend. World trade in goods
slows down, the number of people moving between nation-states
increases, political protest against the new generation of trade
agreements increases, previously globalized value chains are
getting regionalized, relocation of manufacturing processes are
becoming prominent,
Class 1: International Macroeconomic Approaches towards globalization
Class 2: Political Economy Approaches towards globalization
Class 3: Looking back: Embedded Liberalism
Class 4: Looking back": Bretton Woods and Wall Street Regime
Class 5: Mobility of Money, Goods and Capital
Class 6: feedback activity
Class 7: Case Study 1: Middle Income Trap: China
Class 8: Case Study 2: Small Economies and World Market Niches
Class 9: Case Study 3: Industrial Policies and Disruptive Innovation
Class 10: Case Study 4: Towards a global Sharing Economy?
Class 11: Case Study 5: TTIP: Trade Policy under Stress?
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Teaching methods | |||||||||||||||||||||||
This course takes a split teaching
format. The first two weeks will be a teacher-guided seminar where
we read and discuss a wide range of analytical approaches towards
economic globalization and its key features. The second part will
be student-guided seminar where groups of students will present
their case studies.
Students who register for the course will already note their preference for a particular case study topic. Each students will send a pre- assignment that lays out some rough hypotheses that may be relevant for the particular case. This course takes a split teaching format. The first two weeks will be a teacher-guided seminar where we read and discuss a wide range of analytical approaches towards economic globalization and its key features. The second part will be student-guided seminar where groups of students will present their case studies. Students who register for the course will already note their preference for a particular case study topic. Each students will send a pre-course assignment that lays out some rough hypotheses that may be relevant for the particular case. |
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Student workload | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Further Information | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Preliminary Assignment: To help students get maximum value from ISUP courses, instructors provide a reading or a small number of readings or video clips to be read or viewed before the start of classes with a related task scheduled for class 1 in order to 'jump-start' the learning process.
Feedback Activity: A feedback
activitity defined by the course instructor will take place app.
half-way through the course.
The timetable is available on http://www.cbs.dk/files/cbs.dk/isup_timetable_2016_updated.pdf |
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Expected literature | |||||||||||||||||||||||
PRIMARY LITERATURE (MUST-HAVE BOOKS):
Jeffrey Frieden: Global Capitalism: Its Fall and Rise in the Twentieth Century ISBN 9780393329810 W.W. Norton2007 (paperback), 2007
Frank J. Lechner, John Boll: The Globalization Reader ISBN 9781118733554 Wiley-Blackwell, 5th edition, 2014 paperback
Dani Rodrik: The Globalization paradox: democracy and the Future of the World Economy ISBN 9780393341287 (European edition) W.W. Norton, 2012
SECONDARY LITERATURE (NICE-TO-HAVE BOOKS):
Ferdi De Ville, Gabriel Siles-Brugge: TTIP: The Truth about the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership ISBN 97815095-1021 Polity, 2015
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