Last modified: 28 Jun 2018 10:27
This course introduces advanced Politics and International Relations students to different ways of thinking about how the production of wealth and poverty serves to sediment economic, political and cultural hierarchies globally, especially how international practices depend on the re-production of these hierarchies for their legitimation.
Beginning with a reading of some classic texts on the sources of wealth and poverty, the course offers a close theoretical and historical investigation of the silences around questions of wealth and poverty in dominant understandings of the contemporary shape of the world, including questions of development, gender, security, and human rights.
Study Type | Undergraduate | Level | 4 |
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Term | Second Term | Credit Points | 30 credits (15 ECTS credits) |
Campus | None. | Sustained Study | No |
Co-ordinators |
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This course attempts to introduce advanced Politics and International Relations students to different ways of thinking about how the production of wealth and poverty serves to sediment economic, political and cultural hierarchies globally, especially how international practices (concerned with human rights, development, and security, for instance) depend on the re-production of these hierarchies for their legitimation.
Main Learning Outcomes
The link between the production of wealth and poverty in stabilising (or de-stabilising) international order within the disciplinary study of International Relations is rarely made central to extant discussion. By the end of this course, students will be able to:
* Identify and critically analyse key texts, classical and contemporary, on the systematic production of wealth and poverty in a global context.
* Identify and critically discuss the consequences of the erasure of questions of wealth and poverty in theoretical approaches to the study of International Relations
* Understand how silences about wealth and poverty have been crucial to shaping understanding and management of key areas like development, security, human rights etc. within the practice of International Relations.
Beginning with a reading of some classic texts on the sources of wealth and poverty, as well as contemporary critical IR scholarship on this theme, the course offers a close theoretical and historical investigation of the silences around questions of wealth and poverty in dominant understandings of the contemporary shape of the world, including questions of development, gender, security, and human rights. The course concludes with a consideration of how contemporary processes of the precarisation of labor are re-ordering the global distribution of wealth and poverty.
Information on contact teaching time is available from the course guide.
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: Research paper of 4,000 words on a topic individually chosen by student, subject to consultation and approval by course coordinator (60%); and one 2-hour written examination (40%) Resit: Continuous assessment 50 % (Research paper 4000 words); 1 two hour examination 50%
There are no assessments for this course.
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