Section | Class Size | *Available | Times |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 15 | 9 | Times: ....F.. 2:00PM-4:00PM; |
This sequence in the junior tutorial covers some of the major issues in international political economy today: trade, international commodity cartels, direct foreign investment, monetary relations, imperialism, global economic depression, and underdevelopment. International economic relations will be studied in light of domestic and international political forces. Political economy constructs will be subject to both critical analysis of descriptive assumptions and behavioral postulates as well as testing against empirical data and historical case studies. Topics in this tutorial sequence will include the emergence of free trade toward the middle of the 19th century and the devolution toward protectionism toward the end of the century. The Great Depression will be examined, along with parallels to our own time in which protectionism and debt servicing problems threaten the functioning of world financial markets. The rise of imperialism in the latter-part of the 19th century will be examined critically in terms of probable causes. The rise of the post-World War II economic regime Bretton Woods will be analyzed, with special attention to its evolution as a means of creating international economic order and stability. Considerable attention will be devoted to North-South relations. Our principal international commodity cartel example will be OPEC. We look at how OPEC finally overcame its internal and external political weaknesses to exploit its monopoly potential in the economic realm. The analysis of multinational corporations.
COURSE FORMAT: Discussion Seminar
Level: UG Credit: 1.00 Gen Ed Area & Dept: SBS GOVT
Prerequisites: CSS 414
Last Updated on MAR-03-1998
Copyright Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 06459