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Cursus: GE3V20015
GE3V20015
Thinking about Capitalism: From Adam Smith to Thomas Piketty
Cursus informatie
CursuscodeGE3V20015
Studiepunten (EC)7,5
Cursusdoelen
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.
Inhoud
This is the second course of Specialisation 4: Challenges of Modern Society (Track History).

Priority rules apply to this course. Make sure you register for this course before June 14, 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/

Capitalism has proved a contentious issue; should we take for granted that unbridled capitalism is necessary for economic growth or do recent developments prove that markets must be tamed in order to benefit society as a whole? The capitalist system is undoubtedly the most successful economic system, outcompeting others such as communism. Free markets, the specialization of labour, entrepreneurship and the maximization of profit have brought unprecedented wealth to the developed world. Capitalism itself, however, turns out to be unstable. Growth and recession alternate, producing winners and losers. Critics of capitalism have proposed alternative economic orders, or argued for some moral order to be imposed on capitalist market economies. In this course the views of a number of classical thinkers on capitalism will be discussed: Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Max Weber, Friedrich Hayek, John Maynard Keynes, Milton Friedman and Thomas Piketty. What was, in their view, the nature of capitalism? Which problems does the system have? And how should these shortcomings be remedied?

This is a classical history course with students reading key texts on the topic of capitalism as an economic system.


 
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