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Course module: GE3V17038
GE3V17038
Institutions of Global Governance
Course info
Course codeGE3V17038
EC7.5
Course goals
Learning outcomes: after completing the course, students will have attained the following learning outcomes:
  • in-depth knowledge and understanding of historical developments related to the course topic;
  • in-depth knowledge of the historiography within the course topic;
  • in-depth knowledge of the theoretical discourse about this topic;
  • knowledge of a relevant historical case pertaining to the specialised topic.
Learning objectives and skills: after completing the course, students will be able to:  
  • critically reflect and actively participate in classroom discussions about the topic;
  • apply concepts, historiography and theories connected with the course topic;
  • collaborate in reading groups (tutorial groups);
  • devise and develop a research question on the basis of an in-depth case study of their choice;
  • apply their newly acquired knowledge of the theoretical discourse and historiography to a case study of their choice;
  • conduct independent research focusing (mainly) on in-depth secondary literature.
Content
This is the third course of Specialisation 6: Globalisation and World Order
(Track International Relations)

Priority rules apply to this course. Make sure you register for this course before 11 November 12.00 noon to be considered for enrollment.
Students who major in History, TCS or LAS and take this course as part of their specialization, and pre-master’s students are guaranteed a place.
Other students will be placed through random selection. 

LAS and TCS students who follow this course as part of the core curriculum of their major, need to complete a compulsory preparation course/assignment. See for more information: https://tcs.sites.uu.nl/

​In this course, students examine the themes surrounding global organisational processes: how state systems work, where the desire for a global political order comes from, which institutions regulate global relations and what their strengths and weaknesses are. Are we on course for a global government, or will the rise of new centres of world power instead lead to greater fragmentation? The emphasis will lie on the last hundred years, in particular on institutions such as the League of Nations, the United Nations and other global governance organisations. Research will be conducted into the motivations behind setting up these institutions, how the interests of various individual nations (or groups of nations) were represented and which obstacles formed an impediment to decisive governance on global issues. Attention will be devoted not only to political organisations, but also to economic and cultural institutions (IMF, the World Bank, ADB), to allow students to acquire a thorough understanding of the structure of the international order and the recent developments in an increasingly polycentric world.

Note! If you select a specialisation from the International Relations in Historical Perspective track, you cannot register for/ follow the International Relations minor because there is too much overlap between the courses.
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