Module Identifier IP30120  
Module Title INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL THEORY TODAY  
Academic Year 2002/2003  
Co-ordinator Dr Toni A Erskine  
Semester Semester 1  
Other staff Ms Patricia A Owens  
Course delivery Lecture   16 Hours (16 x 1 hour)  
  Seminars / Tutorials   8 Hours (8 x 1 hour)  
Assessment Semester Exam   2 Hours   50%  
  Semester Assessment   Essay: 1 x 3,000 words   50%  
  Supplementary Exam   Students may, subject to Faculty approval, have the opportunity to resit this module, normally during the supplementary examination period. For further clarification please contact the Teaching Programme Administrator in the Department of International Politics.    

Learning outcomes

On completion of the module, students will be able to:

- Critically assess the range of contending theories of international politics
- Describe and analyze the work of at least one major thinker presenting each approach
- Evaluate the central concepts belonging to each theory
- Compare different theories, and communicate their relevance
- Analyze the relationship between theory and practice in specific contexts

Brief description

This module provides a core disciplinary training in international political theory. It does this by engaging with all the main contending approaches to the subject.

Aims

This module aims to build on the international political theory taught at Part 1, while acting as a bridge to mode specialist options in Part 2. One of the central thematics framing the module is the importance of linking theory to practice: from the personal to the international, our lives are constituted by and shaped through an engagement with political theory.

Content

The course begins by recapitulating the main traditions of IR theorising, such as liberalism and classical realism. It quickly moves to focus on the debate triggered by Kenneth Waltz's Theory of International Politics. This text not only succeeded in reinvigorating realism, it also provoked a wide range of critical responses. The last of this type was Alexander Wendt's Social Theory of International Politics. Within this 20 year time frame, several important theoretical innovations have taken place, including the emergence of critical theory, feminist theory and post-structuralism.

Transferable skills

This module provides students with an opportunity to develop, practice and test a wide range of transferable skills which will help them to conceptualize and evaluate examples and ideas. Directed reading, in advance of weekly seminars, will enable students to practice and enhance their reading, comprehension and thinking skills. Theories like neorealism and liberal democratic peace theory require an engagement with positivism, including using models and the analysis of historical data. Lectures aid the development of comprehension skills, including note-taking: seminars help to enhance communicative skills as well as the ability to listen and participate actively in focused discussion. The module also involves one case study which is designed to show the relevance of theory to a particular context. Such an approach to learning requires that students immerse themselves in a particular role. The list of transferable skills culminates with the enhancement of independent research (essay) and the capacity to analyze and formulate arguments under time constraints (exam).

10 ECTS credits

Reading Lists

Books
** Recommended Text
Scott Burchill & Andrew Linklater et al. (2000) Theories of International Relations. 2nd. London: Palgrave
Paul Viotti and Mark Kauppi eds. (2000) International Relations Theory. 3rd. New York: Macmillan