30196 - INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Course offered to incoming exchange students
Department of Social and Political Sciences
PAOLO MAGRI
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
Provisional course summary (to be updated before and during lectures):
- Introduction: The ultra-fragmented world
- Introduction to IR Theories
- US: The reluctant superpower
- China: A peaceful rise?
- Russia: The hollow superpower
- EU: Power and decision making
- EU: Still a leading world actor?
- Meet the experts: New "cold wars"?
- UN: Power and decision making
- UN: Peace and security
- The Ukraine war: Towards a frozen conflict?
- MENA's (in)stability
- The rise of the "Global South"
- Global challenges: Energy security and climate change
- Global challenges: Migration
- Global challenges: Africa and development
- Global challenges: Digitalization and cybersecurity
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Identify and analyse key issues in contemporary international relations.
- Describe developments in today's main big powers, both domestically and in their foreign policy, and the interplay between each of them.
- Assess the effectiveness and efficiency of the United Nations and the European Union in today's global predicament.
- Understand key current trends and international crises.
- Delve deeper in the world's global challenges.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Evaluate the potential evolution of the international system, and of the foreign policies of the main big powers.
- Formulate and discuss potential solutions to current and long-standing challenges in international politics (e.g. how to safeguard multilateral governance at a time of heightened geopolitical confrontation; or how to foster sustainable development while promoting the green transition).
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Case studies /Incidents (traditional, online)
DETAILS
- Classes consist of face-to-face lectures (100% in presence).
- The course includes a number of guest speaker's talks. Currently, guest speakers are foreseen on:
- the possibility of a new Cold war;
- the Russia-Ukraine war;
- the Israel-Hamas conflict;
- Digitalization and cybersecurity.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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x | x |
ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students have the option to sit a written partial exam for two-thirds (67%) of the class grade, after the first part of the course. In case they pass the written partial exam, they are able to sit a second written partial exam at the end of the course for the remaining third (33%) of the grade. Students that do not pass or do not sit the written partial exam are able to sit the written general exam for 100% of their grade.
Students will be tested on their knowledge of IR theory and the practice of foreign policies from big powers, as well as on specific topics such as current international crises and global challenges.
They will also be assessed on their ability to connect several topics together, as well as expand on the knowledge provided in the course with their own reasoning and opinions on the status and dynamics of current international events and trends.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students are only able to attend the written general exam for 100% of their grade (no partial exams planned).
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
- Teaching materials (slides and readings) are provided to students both before the start of the course, and during the course itself, through Bboard.
- Teaching materials provided are compulsory, but no course manual is recommended.