POLITICS OF INTERNATIONALECONOMIC RELATIONS
LECTURER:
Dr O. P.ADELUSI
COURSE
DESCRIPTION:
This course is designed to provide a
generalized view of economic basis of State actions in International
Politics;International Trade;Commercial Policies of States;Capital Movement;the
IMF,World Bank,Multi-national Enterprises,Custom Union,Currency Areas.The
issues raised are related to the general implications they have for Foreign
Policy
COURSE
OBJECTIVES:
At the end of this
course, students are expected to
·
Have a
good grasp of the economic basis of State actions in International Politics.
·
Understand
the essentials of International Trade,Commercial Policies of States and others.
METHOD OF TEACHING/TEACHING
AIDS:
The
method of Teaching is mostly participatory. The teacher outlines the major points
of discourse on the topic. He talks to these points so outlined. Students are encouraged to participate by
raising questions.
The
Teaching Aid employed is the Overhead Projector .Power point presentation is
the modality of teaching.
COURSE
OUTLINE:
MODULE
1.-AN OVERVIEW
Week 1. - Concepts
Clarification
Theory of
International Trade/International Economic Relations
Week 2 - Conceptual Isssues in Economic Integration Theory-
Regionalism
MODULE
II- THE EURO-AMERICAN SYSTEM
Week 3.–International
Monetary System
Week 4. -From the Bretton Woods System to Interdependence
MODULE III- THE NORTH – SOUTH SYSTEM
Weeks 5 - Politics of Direct Foreign Investments.
Week 6– The
Link between Aid and Foreign Policy.
MODULE
IV-TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
Week 7 - Globalization – Joining the Trade Regime
(a ) The Uruguay Round.
(c)
The Doha Round.
(d)
North – South Trade in the 21sth Century.
(e) Interdependence
Week 8-Oil and
Politics
( a) Corporate
Oligopoly
( b)
Seven Sisters
(c)
The OPEC System
(d) Stable OPEC Management
(e)
The Second Oil Crisis: A System out of Control?
Week 9 – The Role of Non-State Actors –
Multinational Corporations.
MODULE
V-IMPLICATIONS OF THE END OF COLD WAR
Week 10 – East-West
Economic Relations: From Isolation to Integration.
Week 11 - China – Regional Power
or Global Economic Superpower?
WEEKS 12
& 13 -REVISION
METHOD
OF GRADING:
C/A Test: 10%
Mid-Semester Exam 20%
End of Semester Exam 70%
GRAND
RULES & REGULATIONS
·
Attendance to lectures and
tutorials are compulsory for registered students- 80%
·
Students must be seated 10
minutes before the commencement of every lecture.
·
Listening to Teacher as He
talks to Bullet Points on the Screen.
·
The class copies Bullet
Points on the screen.
·
Students are encouraged to
ask questions.
TOPIC
FOR TERM PAPER/ASSIGNMENT:
The Relationship between Economic and
International Relations
ALIGNMENT WITH JOSEPH AYO
BABALOLA UNIVERSITY VISION/GOALS
The course aligns with core values
of Capacity Building.
CONTEMPORARY
ISSUES RELEVANCE
Politics of
Direct Foreign Investments.
RECOMMENDED READINGS
1.
Spero,
Joan E, and Jeffrey A.Hart,(2010), Politics
of International Economic Relations, Belmont,CA: Wadsworth Publishing.
2.
Adelusi
Olufemi.P,(2007), Development Policies
and Analysis:A Reader. Standard Mass Concept Company.Akure and Lagos.
3.
Barma,
Naazneen and Steven Vogel, (2008), The
Political Economy Reader:Markets as Institutions.(New York:Routledge)
4.
Chen,Ming-Jer,(2001),Inside Chinese Business:A Guide for Managers
Worldwide (Boston,MA:Harvard Business School Press)
5.
Drucker,Peter,et.al.,(2001),Harvard Business Review on Decision Making
(Boston,MA:Harvard Business School Press.
6.
Harvard
Business School,Editor,(2005). Strategy:Create
and Implement the Best Strategy for your Business. (Boston,MA:Harvard
Business School Press),
7.
Bhagwati,Jagdish,(1988), Protectionism.Cambridge,MA:MIT Press.
8.
Coughlin,Cletus,K.Alec
Chrystal and Geoffrey Wood,(2000),”Protectionist Trade Policies: A Survey of
Theory,Evidence and Rationale,” Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis.
9. Friedman,
Thomas L., The World is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century (New
York: FS&G, 2005).
10. Foreign
Affairs Editors’ Choice, The Rise of China (New York: WW Norton, 2002).
11. Lawrence,
Robert Z., Crimes & Punishments?: Retaliation Under the WTO (Washington,
DC: Institute for International Economics, 2003).
12. KLJLevitt,
Steven and Stephen Dubner, Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the
hidden Side of Everything (New York: HarperCollins, 2005).
13. Rodrik,
Dani, Has Globalization Gone Too Far? (Washington, DC: Institute for
International Economics, 1997).
14. Stiglitz,
Joseph. Globalization and Its Discontents. (New York: Norton Press,
2002).
15. Schott,
Jeffrey J., Free Trade Agreements: US Strategies and Priorities (Washington,
DC: Institute for International Economics, 2004).
16. Gilpin,
Robert. The Challenge of Global Capitalism: The World Economy in the 21st
Century (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000).
17. Held,
David, et. al. Global Transformations: Politics, Economics, and Culture (Stanford:
Stanford University Press, 1999).
18. Landes,
David, The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some are so Rich and Some so
Poor (New York: Norton, 1999).
19. Gordon, Philip and Sophie Meunier, The French Challenge:
Adapting to Globalization (Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 2001
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