Undergraduate

Pipeline Initiative in Political Science (PIPS)

Semester
Spring 2023
Instructor(s)
Units
1
Section
1
Number
192
CCN
27078
Times
Tues 9:30-11am
Location
SOCS791
Course Description

Are you interested in, or even just curious about, earning a PhD in political science or a related
field? Great! Berkeley’s Political Science Department is thrilled to announce a new initiative to
help undergraduate students learn about pursuing a PhD in political science.
This initiative is designed to help students learn about what it means to earn a PhD in political
science and how to prepare for and apply to PhD programs. The goal is to build a community of
undergraduate scholars who will be connected with each other and with faculty and graduate
students at Berkeley. Students will learn about political science research, ways to prepare to be
a competitive PhD applicant, and receive support and advice on the application process.
The program is open to students who are in at least their second year of college studies. The
program is focused on helping students from historically minoritized or underrepresented
groups, including but not limited to, non-cis-gendered individuals, members of the queer
community, BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color), Latinx, individuals who are
differently abled or who experience disability, first-generation college students, and those from
low-income / low-resource backgrounds.
Students who are selected for the program will participate in a series of workshops throughout
the semester, will be advised on pursuing research opportunities as an undergraduate, and will
have the opportunity to receive mentoring from graduate students and faculty. Students may
earn one credit unit for completing the program.

 

Please apply via link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSepklsqrI20FFDgVAWg1F5IQQJbcl-Mayb17L9s8NXD5yI9Zw/viewform?usp=sf_link

 

Applications will be evaluated on a rolling basis. 

INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

Semester
Spring 2023
Instructor(s)
Units
4
Section
1
Number
126A
CCN
23924
Times
Tu/Th 9:30-11AM
Location
BIRG50
Course Description

This course explores the theories, history, and issues in international political economy. International political economy has been described as “the reciprocal and dynamic interaction in international relations of the pursuit of power and the pursuit of wealth.” The purpose of this course is to examine those interactions -- between power and wealth, the state and the market -- from a number of competing perspectives and different levels of analysis. We will focus on the causes and consequences of international trade and monetary relations; the growth of regional integration; the role of hegemony in maintaining the stability of international economic systems; strategies of economic development and transition; the role of multinational corporations in both developing and developed countries; and the drivers and consequences of migration and immigration. Student evaluations will be based on quizzes, short memos, sections, and a final exam.

 

 

Subfield: International Relations

 

Prerequisites

Although there are no formal prerequisites for this course, background in international relations, international economics, or post World War II history is essential. Students who have NOT taken any economics should NOT take the class.

Reconciliation After Atrocities

Semester
Spring 2023
Instructor(s)
Units
4
Section
1
Number
124D
CCN
27404
Times
TuTh 12:30-2pm
Location
DWIN145
Course Description

It is increasingly recognized that for societies to move on after widespread human rights and humanitarian abuses some kind of reconciliation process is necessary. What does reconciliation mean at the national vs. the personal level? What institutions and processes work best to encourage reconciliation? What role do truth commissions and trials play in this process? Are these processes best dealt with nationally or should they be led by an international body? This course will start by examining the concept of reconciliation and then look at case studies including Germany and Japan after WWII, Cambodia after the Khmer Rouge, Argentina and the Dirty War, Chile after Pinochet, South Africa and Apartheid, the Rwandan genocide, and the war in Yugoslavia. Students will complete a research project on a case study of their choice.

 

Subfield: International Relations

 

War in the Middle East

Semester
Spring 2023
Instructor(s)
Units
4
Section
1
Number
124B
CCN
25020
Times
Tu/Th 11-12:30pm
Location
MORG101
Course Description

The Middle East seems plagued by endless strife:  wars, civil wars, insurgencies, terrorism.  Is that perception true?  If so, why is this region so conflict-prone?   What factors motivate, constrain, and shape these conflicts?  How can policy makers influence war in the Middle East?  This undergraduate lecture class takes on these and other thorny questions.  It is a sequel to PS124A (“War!”) and builds on insights from that class to explore war in a particular part of the world.

This is not a class on Middle East politics.  It is an IR class focused less on the politics of particular states and more on relations between states, especially violent relations.  This is not a class on the Arab-Israeli conflict or on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  Both are important cases of war in the Middle East and will be explored alongside other significant conflicts in the region. 

Most importantly:  This is not a class designed to defend a specific claim or theory about conflict in the Middle East.  On the contrary, this is a social science class:   My goal is to teach the importance of exploring pressing policy questions by testing the strengths and weaknesses of competing and often contradictory theories in an even-handed manner.  At the same time, students will be expected to reach their own conclusions and produce pragmatic recommendations in the form of policy memoranda.

This class begins, like its counterpart, with a historical overview of war in the region.  The second part of the class introduces theories that complement and elaborate on theories from PS124A:  arguments about the relationship between war and resources, religion, authoritarianism, civil-military relations, territorial disputes, sovereignty, and power.  In the third part of the course, we will explore current policy concerns related to conflict in the region:  Nuclear proliferation, terrorism, the civil war in Syria, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, drone warfare, and the U.S. role in the region.

 

Subfield: International Relations

Requirements

Students interested in enrolling should be prepared for a demanding class that will require proactive involvement, mandatory attendance at weekly sections, three exams and several written assignments.   The class is also reading intensive: students can expect to read 200-300 pages per week.

Prerequisites

PS124A (“War!”) is a prerequisite for this class.  Students who have not taken PS124A will not be admitted to PS124B, without exception, since PS124B assumes familiarity with theories of war.

We will be monitoring enrollment. If you have not taken POL SCI 124A, you will be DROPPED.

Selected Topics in International Relations: Gender and International Human Rights

Semester
Spring 2023
Instructor(s)
Units
4
Section
1
Number
123S
CCN
23951
Times
TuTh 12:30-2pm
Location
MOFF101
Course Description

Are human rights women's rights? Are women's rights human rights? This course examines the international human rights system (treaties, conventions, institutions and case law) through the lens of gender, exploring the ways in which they are organized around gendered assumptions that shape and limit their ability to reach and remedy the reality of women's lives. The course also considers the tension between international human rights law and local gender justice as well as how international human rights have evolved in response to the rise of global feminisms. The course explores these issues through a series of case studies examining such issues as sexual violence, human trafficking, religious freedom and women's access to education, health care and employment.

Subfield: International Relations

 

Note: This description is from Fall 2013

Special Topics in Political Theory: Roman Law

Semester
Spring 2023
Instructor(s)
Units
4
Section
1
Number
116L
CCN
32663
Times
Tu/Th 11-12:30pm
Location
NGAT105
Course Description

Roman law (or the ‘Civil Law’) was the foundation for Western legal science and, for many centuries, provided a common language for theorists of politics and the state. This course aims to demystify this legal language and trace its later legacies in modern political thought and jurisprudence. The first part of the course will cover the essentials of classical Roman law, with selected readings and cases from Justinian’s Institutes and the Digest. Topics will include the history and sources of classical Roman law, civil procedure (especially formulary method), the law of persons, the Roman family, property, succession, and obligations. With this background, the second part of the course will trace how techniques of Roman legal reasoning shaped fundamental idioms of modern political theory and the modern social sciences, such as personality, sovereignty, rights, liberty, representation, and the theory of the social contract. The course will also briefly consider the modern Reception of Roman law in modern legal systems such as the French Civil Code, the German Civil Code, and Roman-Dutch law, which had a global influence as instruments to govern colonial dependencies. Major textual sources may include Hotman, Bodin, Grotius, Hobbes, Pufendorf, and Kant. Latin is not required for this course, although students will be expected to learn essential legal terms in Latin.

 

Subfield: Political Theory

Democracy Ancient and Modern

Semester
Spring 2023
Instructor(s)
Units
4
Section
1
Number
117D
CCN
33155
Times
Tu/Th 12:30-2pm
Location
EVAN10
Course Description

Dêmokratia, democratia, democracy. What did this term mean to the ancient Greeks who coined it, to the Romans who borrowed it, to the early modern Europeans who discussed it—and what does it mean today? Who or what was the original dêmos, how did it rule, and how different is the interpretation of “rule by the people” that now predominates? Starting with the first attestations of da-mo in the 12th century BC and ending with Iceland’s recent attempt to crowdsource its constitution, this course offers a chronological exploration of the idea and practice of democracy intended to broaden our imaginative horizons with respect to what democracy has been, is, and could become.

 

This course was originally listed as 116.

 

THE POLITICS OF DISPLACEMENT

Semester
Spring 2023
Instructor(s)
Units
4
Section
1
Number
111AC
CCN
22984
Times
MF 11am-1pm
Location
DWIN88
Course Description

Is there a connection between the unprecedented presidential campaign of 2016, the dysfunctional government in Washington, D.C., and in the so called “culture wars” in America?  The sophisticated social science that has analyzed our election choices and identified our political differences has not been able to explain why the world’s most powerful and wealthy society is so deeply divided on so many issues, and in such personal and polemical ways.  Coupled with random mass killings, police involved shootings and the shooting of police, what is behind the violence in our society so different than in other first world democracies.  It may be that social science cannot answer that question on its own.  It may be that a theoretical analysis of our history and culture can offer insight and context that is beyond mere empirical analysis. 

The history of the American political founding generally follows a routine script.  The story goes that Americans fought for self-government from an overbearing political authority wielded by the British Crown and established individual freedom to pursue private prosperity and social emancipation.  Later, fear of the British Crown morphed into fear of any central political authority in general to the point where today Americans mistrust government.  In that script, African slavery and Native American dispossession are viewed as historical exceptions that still require a coherent explanation, but are unrelated to the issues at the core of contemporary American politics.

In this course, the revolution against traditional political authority embodied in Thomas Jefferson's and Thomas Paine's attacks on the British crown, the rise of slavery, and the conflict with Native America will be viewed as co-extensive and coherent elements of our past and our national cultural and social development.  In short, I will argue that America possesses a distinct cultural identity that has shaped our politics, policies, the shape of our national government, and remains at the core of our popular culture. 

I will place these historical elements in context with the theory of cultural trauma that resulted from the 3rd Estate European poor displaced to North America between the 16th and 19th centuries.  I will connect that trauma to our national fear of political authority in America.  I will also suggest that this fear is what binds both the progressives who attack the National Security Administration to the conservatives who stand by gun rights. This cultural and social trauma becomes the catalyst of America’s cultural identity, and that cultural identity may be the basis of our existing political structure, the character of contemporary politics, and our approach to much of our public policy. 

 I will offer a cultural trope; the American Western, that contains all the aspects of a cultural identity built out of trauma and fear.  We will see its imprint in many cultural social and political artifacts.  I will speak to the significance of the “Western”, its frontier setting and its uber-masculine character.  Through this cultural lens, students will be offered a way of understanding contemporary American politics and public policy that was previously unknown to them. Using original materials from the antebellum, including biographies, history, literature, and commentary, as well as contemporary images from American popular culture [such as film clips, news, and documentaries], a connection between the past and present will be presented.  

The American Cultures requirement seeks comparisons and contrasts of at least three cultural entities in its format.  The requirement will be achieved through contrast and comparison of Native American, European American, and African American cultural identities in the ante and post bellum, and their interplay in the story of American political history.  This is a course in political theory that will give context to both culture and politics in America.  Your work will be presented in three separate papers (a 6-page take-home midterm, 12-page term paper, and a 6-page take-home final exam), and discussions of course materials in sections.  Attendance at both lectures and sections are elements of the course grade.  There will be a focus on writing skills and framing expository arguments, as well as discussion and participation in lecture, section and office hours.

Subfield: Either American Politics or Political Theory 

Selected Topics in American Politics: Liberal Democracy, Identity, and Nation in the United States

Semester
Spring 2023
Units
4
Section
1
Number
109M
CCN
27099
Times
Tu/Th 3:30-5pm
Location
LEWS9
Course Description

This course will explore the relationship between liberal democratic governance, identity, and nation in the United States. The course is interdisciplinary in nature, approaching the issues through the lenses of history, philosophy, law, and the social sciences. We will look at the historical roots of contemporary problems in the US such as political polarization, economic inequality, and the culture wars. We will explore the relationship between liberal democracy and different forms of identity, including racial, ethnic, gender, cultural, and national identities. In doing so we will try to shed light on contemporary social problems, and will discuss how to bring about stable, productive, and just social change in the United States.

The course is divided three main parts: (1) Core Concepts; (2) Liberalism, Democracy, and Governance; and (3) National Identity and Empire.

 

Instructor: Richard Ashcroft

Subfield: American Politics

Selected Topics in American Politics: Latino Politics

Semester
Spring 2023
Instructor(s)
Units
4
Section
1
Number
109L
CCN
32955
Times
MW 5-6:30pm
Location
LEWS9
Course Description

The United States social fabric is interwoven by more than 60 million Latinos. The term “Latino”, however, is not a monolith. It masks heterogeneous political experiences and views. Latinos have divergent immigration histories and socialization experiences in the US, all of which have differently shaped their political perspectives and engagement patterns. This course examines the past and present of Latino politics in the US. The course reviews the history of conquest, colonization, and immigration that gave rise to the Latino population in the US, the differences and similarities in the contexts of reception of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Dominican, and Central American, the cultural and institutional determinants of Latino identities, and the historical and institutional contexts shaping the contemporary political attitudes, behaviors, and representation of Latino voters.

The course follows and builds on two textbooks: Latino Politics by Lisa García Bedolla and Christian Hosam, and Latino Politics in America by John García and Gabriel Sanchez. Students will attend lectures, engage in reading-based participation and active learning, take one exam, and complete a final research paper. Students will start developing their research paper early in the course. Discussion sections will be designed to introduce students to the writing of a research paper and quantitative data analysis, and to provide a forum for students to present advances on their papers and to receive feedback from their peers and instructors.

 

Subfield: American Politics