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Key Debates in Political Science 2 (POLS40025)
HonoursPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
Availability | Semester 2 |
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Fees | Look up fees |
This is an Honours reading seminar that examines key theoretical and methodological texts in political science. The subject is designed to provide preparation for writing an Honours thesis while also enabling the consolidation, broadening and enhancement of students’ knowledge of the discipline. Theoretical texts are critically examined in relation to political debates, case studies and empirical scholarship.Alongside its companion subject, Key Debates in Political Science 1, this subject will reflect the breadth of the discipline of political science, with a focus on identifying, distinguishing and relating key sub-disciplines and trans-disciplinary theoretical debates in politics and international studies.
This second iteration of Key Debates in Political Science is divided into two parts. The first half is devoted to examining key concepts, theories, methods and problems in International Relations while the second half focuses on key theoretical, methodological and political debates in public policy, normative theory, and political science in general. Students completing the subject will have a robust understanding of what characterises the contemporary scholarly terrain of the discipline, and where their own research interests are located.
Intended learning outcomes
Upon successful completion of this subject students should:
- Demonstrate a detailed knowledge and understanding of the broad set of foundational questions in the discipline of Politics and International Studies
- Demonstrate a deeper knowledge and understanding of some of the key sub-disciplinary and trans-disciplinary debates in political science and relate these to the contemporary world of politics
- Demonstrate an independent approach to knowledge that can identify different methods of inquiry and research in academic scholarship and evaluate their intellectual and ethical merits
- Demonstrate a critical understanding of core concepts in International Relations, such as order, power, and justice, and how they are understood by different theoretical perspectives
- Be able to relate and compare the major approaches to understanding politics and appreciate their different strengths and weaknesses
- Be able to communicate coherently, concisely and effectively in writing.
Last updated: 8 November 2024