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.
Human security can be recognized only through its absence. This is one of the oft-quoted observations. How so, is the major concern this week. As a me...
Since “Human Development Report, 1994,” a new sort of language has emerged as a way of highlighting the policy issues that most directly affect the li...
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...
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...
An engine of economic development, the Bretton Woods System, before its tenure expired, is claimed to have enriched the world and installed the basic ...
An examination of changes in economic development theories reveals a number of assumptions that are needed for their hypotheses to work. These are the...
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...
A postwar invention, the notion of national security, nonetheless, established itself quickly as the underlying theme for any nation’s external contac...
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...