INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 2012
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The purpose of this course is to help students advance along the lines of their specific interests in the policy issues of International Relations. These issues include, among others, conflict-resolution, regional cooperation, poverty-reduction, and environmental protection. Equally important for students, however, is the establishment of firm theoretical footings. As in many other policy-related fields of inquiry, theories in International Relations are not context-free. The constraints of time often dictate theory formulation as they profoundly influence the theorists’ normative commitments. Given these, the course consists of three major components. 1) A firm historical background, a common prerequisite for all issue-specific perspectives. 2) Critical examinations of selected empirical and normative theories. 3) Examinations of specific policy issues in light of normative perspectives. The course fuses these three major components into a narrative flow moving from “High Politics” to “Low Politics.” Along the way, the course discusses a new framework for defining policy issues in need of solution, Human Security.

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What are the desciplinary alternative to international relations that helps solve the "problems" in global governance?
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Dethronement of GNP

The criticisms of economic development have their roots not only in the perceived income-gap among the nations, but also in other pressing issues that...
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The Rich and the Poor

One of the key issues involved in what appears to be a perpetual experimentation with economic development is the widening gap between the rich and th...
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Regimes and Globalization

An engine of economic development, the Bretton Woods System, before its tenure expired, is claimed to have enriched the world and installed the basic ...
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An Entirely Different World...?(2)

An examination of changes in economic development theories reveals a number of assumptions that are needed for their hypotheses to work. These are the...
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An Entirely Different World... ?

Are there innovative way(s) of reconstructing the issues of “national security” to meet the need of post-Cold War era? What could be “national securit...
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Cold War and Japan: Defense Policy

A postwar invention, the notion of national security, nonetheless, established itself quickly as the underlying theme for any nation’s external contac...
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“Proxy Wars”

As misleading as it is powerful, the notion of a “proxy” dominated much of the decision-makers in the United States throughout the Cold War period. Th...
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