30573 - HISTORY OF EUROPEAN INTEGRATION
Department of Social and Political Sciences
GRACE BALLOR
Suggested background knowledge
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
This elective course provides an overview of the key developments in the history of European integration in a global context, from the international peace settlement following the Second World War to the completion of the Single European Market, the establishment of the European Union in the 1990s to its enlargement to include Eastern Europe a decade later. In this course, we discuss themes like the geopolitics of the German question, decolonization, the Cold War, and the Soviet collapse in the genesis of economic and political integration in Europe. We study the plurality of “Europes” that emerged in the postwar period, including the institutional evolution of the European Communities and European Union, their challenges, and their achievements. We evaluate the roles that different actors – including multilateral organizations and multinational corporations – played in the European project. And we examine the relationship of European integration to critical analytical frameworks like internationalism, neoliberalism, and globalization. Course assignments are designed to help students apply this knowledge to their own analyses of contemporary political debates.
NOTE: This is an Engage Course within the CIVICA Bachelor Engage Track developed within the framework of the CIVICA alliance.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Identify key developments and actors in the history of European integration
- Understand the role of economic and geopolitical factors in the integration process
- Examine the making of the European Union and its predecessors in global context
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Analyze primary and secondary sources on regional cooperation
- Develop original, evidence-based arguments about the history of European integration
- Apply knowledge of integration history to contemporary debates about the EU
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Online lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Individual assignments
DETAILS
Lectures are designed to engage students on the course topics and to help them summarize and understand the content of the advanced course readings. Guest lectures give students the opportunity to learn from scholars with particular areas of expertise relating to contemporary Europe and enrich a collective understanding of course material.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
This course is designed to be cumulative and is constructed in such a way that every student can succeed. Student acquisition of knowledge and mastery of skills developed in this course will be assessed in three ways, reflecting the course’s teaching and learning modes: through demonstrating mastery of course content on quizzes; participating in class discussion and presentation; and producing a podcast based on original research in collaboration with peers. Students will work together in small groups to create and produce an audio podcast on a theme of their choosing, which must include an interview with an official from an institution of European governance and/or an expert on the EU. This assignment gives students a valuable opportunity to develop their own analyses of topics that interest them most, to engage closely with experts, and to contribute a resource for others studying European integration.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students who do not participate in the in-person class sessions and who do not qualify as attending students must complete an original research essay on an assigned question related to the course content, citing both primary and secondary sources (50% of the overall course grade). After passing the research essay, they may register for the general exam (50% of the overall course grade).
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Teaching materials will be provided on the course syllabus.