The Study of International Relations - Introduction and Methodology 2104-UPIR-D1TSIR
Course Content:
I. Introduction: The concept of IR or International Studies, origins of the discipline and its subject matter, boundaries of the discipline, theories of the discipline.
II. Subject matter of IR: “the international” ,.”model of agent – structure”. Agency in IR and classifications of agents: state and non – state actors.
III. Level of analysis of IR
a) Individuals
b) State level, motives of state activity, forms and methods
c) regional subsystems/regional studies: concept of regionalism, regionalization, forms of regionalism.
d) International system /global studies
IV. Concept of the International System: theories, structure (unipolarism, bipolarism, multipolarism).
V. Concept of the International society: constitutive elements, role of norms and institutions.
VI. Overview of the theories of IR
VII. Foreign policy analysis: foreign policy as a process, decisions, implementation, strategies, instruments.
VIII. International Institutions: institutions definition, forms and functions of institutions.
IX. International Security Studies: insecurities, security dilemma, securitizations, human security, national security, regional and global security.
X. IR Methodology: research questions, inductive and deductive strategies.
Type of course
Course coordinators
Assessment criteria
Exam requirements:
1) All issues presented during a lecture will be a subject of written exam .So regular attendance is highly recommended.
2) Required Textbook: Karen Mingst, Ivan Arrequin – Toft, Essentials of International Relations, W.W. Norton and Company, 2014, New York
Practical placement
none
Additional information
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors, localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: