Energy and Security in IR 2100-ERASMUS-ESIR
The aim of the course is to present students the importance of the energy sector for the power of the state and the well-being of its citizens. The student understands the relationship between energy , climate policy, economic policy and social policy. They understand the evolution of the importance of the energy sector for the power of the state in international relations. Students know the structure of the energy market and they understand consequences of energy regime for particular groups of countries. Students have knowledge about the energy and climate policy of great powers, exporters of energy resources and importers of energy resources. They know how these countries influence the energy market. Students understand the management structure of the modern energy market. Students know the most important terms in the field of energy and climate studies. Students understand the political, economic and environmental dimensions of energy policy
1. Energy in theories of international relations
2. The role of the energy sector in international relations - part 1 (1901-1973),
3. The role of the energy sector in international relations - part 2 (1973-2022)
4. The oil course
5. Energy diplomacy of China
6. Energy diplomacy of the United States
7. Global gas market
8. Exam
Koordynatorzy przedmiotu
Kryteria oceniania
Written exam, 2 questions, 30 minutes. Individual programme: paper, 24000-40000 symbols. Text structure: Introduction, 3-4 chapters, conclusions and bibliography. The introduction must include: research question/ research hypothesis and description of methodology.
Literatura
Amuzegar Jahangir, „Oil Wealth: A Very Mixed Blessing”, Foreign Affairs, 1982, 60(4),
814–35.
• Colgan, J. D. (2014). The Emperor Has No Clothes: The Limits of OPEC in the Global Oil
Market. International Organization, 68(3), 599-632.
• Cordesman Anthony H., The Myth and Reality of Energy Independence, 2.1.2013, CSIS,
http://csis.org/files/publication/130103_us_energy_independence_report.pdf
• Davis Jeffrey, Ossowski Rolando, Daniel James, Barnett Steven, Stabilization and Savings
Funds for Nonrenewable Resources. Experience and Fiscal Policy Implications, 13.4.2001,
IMF Occasional Paper 205, http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/nft/op/205/
• Delacroix Jacques, „The Distributive State in the World System”, Studies in Comparative
International Development, 1980, 15(3), 3–20.
• Fattouh Bassam, OPEC Pricing Power. The Need for a New Perspective, Oxford Institute for
Energy Studies, WPM 31, 2007.
• Fattouh Bassam, Oil Market Dynamics Through the Lens of the 2002-2009 Price Cycle,
Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, WPM 39, 2010.
• Fattouh Bassam, An Anatomy of the Crude Oil Pricing System, Oxford Institute for Energy
Studies, WPM 40, 2011.
• Fattouh Bassam, Kilian Lutz, Mahadeva Lavan, The Role of Speculation in Oil Markets:
What Have We Learned So Far?, www.personal.umich.edu/˜lkilian/milan030612.pdf, 2012
• Fattouh Bassam, Mahadeva Lavan, OPEC: what Difference has it Made?, Oxford Institute
for Energy Studies,MEP-3, 2013.
• Florini, A., & Sovacool, B.K. (2009). Who governs energy? The challenges facing global
energy governance. Energy Policy, 37 (12), 5239-5248.
• Frank Lawrence P., „The First Oil Regime”, World Politics, 1985, 37(4), 586–98.
• Frisch Morten, Current European Gas Pricing Problems: Solutions Based on Price Review
and Price Re-Open Provisions, International Energy Law and Policy Research Paper Series
Working Research Paper Series, 2010, no. 3.
• Hamilton James D., Historical Oil Shocks, NBER Working Paper 16790, Cambridge 2011.
• Kilian Lutz, Murphy Dan, The Role of Inventories and Speculative Trading in the Global
Market for Crude Oil, 2010, www.gwu.edu/Aforcpgm/km031610.pdf
• Lesage, D., Van de Graaf, T., & Westphal K., (2010). Global Energy Governance in a
Multipolar World. Abingdon: Ashgate.
• McPerson Charles, National Oil Companies. Evolution, Issues, Outlook, World Bank 2003,
http://sitesources.worldbank.org/INTOGMC/Re372sources/NOCPaperMCPherson.pdf
• Myers Jaffe Amy, Soligo Ronald, The International Oil Companies, 2007,
http://www.bakerinstitute.org/publications/NOC_IOCs_Jaffe-Soligo.pdf
• Maugeri Leonardo, Oil: The Next Revolution. The Unprecedented Upsurge of Oil
Production Capacity and What It Means for the World,
http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/files/Oil-%20The%20Next%20Revolution.pdf.
• Melling Anthony J., Natural Gas Pricing and its Future. Europe as the Battleground,
Carnegie Endowment, Washington, D.C. 2010.
• Sachs Jeffrey D., Warner Andrew M., Natural Resource Abundance and Economic Growth,
NBER Working Paper no. 5398, Cambridge, MA 1995.
• Segal Paul, Why Do Oil Price Shocks No Longer Shock?, Oxford Institute for Energy
Studies, WPM 35, 2007.
• Segal Paul, How to Spend It: Resource Wealth and the Distribution of Resource Rents,
Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, SP 25, 2012.
• Sovacool, B. K. & Florini A. (2012). Examining the complications of global energy
governance. Journal of Energy & Natural Resources Law, 30(3), 235–263.
• Stern Jonathan, Is There Rationale for the Continuing Link to Oil Product Prices in
Continental European Long Term Gas Contracts?, Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, NG
19, 2007.
• Stern Jonathan, Continental European Long-Term Gas Contracts: is a Transition Away
From Oil Product-linked Pricing Inevitable and Imminent? Oxford Institute for Energy
Studies, NG 34, 2009.
• Vivoda Vlado, Resource Nationalism, Bargaining and International Oil Companies:
Challenges and Change in the New Millennium, Adelaide 2009,
http://aie.org.au/Content/NavigationMenu/OilGasSIG/InterestingUsefulArticles/ISA09_
Vivoda.pdf
• Wilson, J. D. (2015). Multilateral Organisations and the Limits to International Energy
Cooperation. New Political Economy, 20(1), 85-106.
Daniel Yergin, The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power, Simon & Schuster 1990.
Van de Graaf, T., Sovacool, B.K., Ghosh, A., Kern, F., Klare, M.T. (Eds.) , The Palgrave Handbook of
the International Political Economy of Energy, Palgrave 2016.
Benjamin K. Sovacool (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Energy Security, Routledge 2011.
Goldthau, Andreas (ed.), The handbook of global energy policy, Wiley-Blackwell, 2013.
Więcej informacji
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