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POST 2230 - REVIEW

POST 2230 - REVIEW

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POST 2230 - REVIEW. Understanding War. a) What was the main message presented in the documentary “Why We Fight”? - dangers of the military industrial complex b) What are the key concepts covered in the lecture and the GWP (course textbook) reading for the week? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: POST 2230 - REVIEW

POST 2230 - REVIEW

Page 2: POST 2230 - REVIEW

Understanding War a) What was the main message presented in the

documentary “Why We Fight”?- dangers of the military industrial complex

b) What are the key concepts covered in the lecture and the GWP (course textbook) reading for the week? - history of the nature of warfare (Thucydides, etc.)- democratic peace thesis - changing character of war; revolution in military affairs technology (information and weapons); asymmetric warfare; origin in 1st gulf war; critiques of RMA - post-modern war? Role of states? Cultures? Failed states and humanitarian intervention?

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Understanding Security a) What are the different approaches to understanding

security, covered in the lecture and in the readings for the week?

- Realism and Neo-Realism, conventional security studies.

- Liberal Institutionalism- Social Constructivist - Critical Security Studies (human security)

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b) What are the key concepts covered in the lecture and the GWP readings for the week?

- human security

freedom from fear and freedom from want - conventional security studies

militarization, relative gains, nuclear weapons, strategy, war, etc.

- causes of insecurity, and sources of emancipation

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Terrorism a) Why is it difficult to define terrorism?

b) What are the key concepts covered in the lecture and the GWP reading for the week? - defining terrorism (violence? Political intention? State/non-state?

Target? Instill fear?)- just causes for use of violence? (weapon of the weak?) - role of technology in changing character of terrorism- “clash of civilizations” as cause of Islamic terrorism, and critiques

of this view.- critical perspectives of 9/11 (freedom, democracy, liberty; blowback; imperialism)- how to combat terrorism?

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c) What does Tilly tell us about terrorism, or how does he enhance our understanding of it? - how to define the terms terror, terrorism and terrorist

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Nuclear Proliferation a) What are the main obstacles to halting nuclear

proliferation globally? - lack of enforcement of treaties- power imbalance b/w NWs and non NWS- Cohn, technocratic language- cheating on treaties, relative gains- changing nature of war; non-state actors

b) What are the key concepts covered in the lecture and the GWP reading for the week? - History of int’l treaties, non-proliferation regime, etc.- deterrence, “nuclear peace”, MAD- power and discourse, motivations for getting/keeping nuclear technology.

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International Political Economy

a) How can we historicize the evolution of the international political economy since the early 20th century until the present? - Great Depression- Keynesianism, embedded liberalism- 70s crises- neoliberalism

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b) What are the key concepts covered in the lecture and in the GWP reading for the week?

- Keynesian economics- central ideas of neoliberalism- effects of neoliberalism in the South- effects in the North- global political economic institutions - Volker shock

c) How does Harvey contribute to our understanding of the international political economy?

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Global Poverty and Development

a) What are the different approaches to understanding global poverty and development?

- poverty as a lack of money to buy material needs; lack of successful economy and growth; measured by GDP per capita, etc.; best overcome with advice of experts

- poverty involves material and non-material needs; cultural values, democracy, ecology, etc., are important factors; development is a bottom-up, emancipatory process.

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b) What are the key concepts covered in the lecture and GWP reading for the week? - Growth vs. sufficiency- Origins and causes of poverty?- Millennium Development Goals- Critical views of “development”- Hunger, food security, and globalization

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Commodifying and Celebritizing Development

a) How can we historicize the evolution of development’s representation?

- Pornography of poverty- Making development sexy

b) What are the key concepts covered in the lecture and readings for the week?

- commodifying and celebretizing development- making development sexy- millennium development goals- product (red)- criticisms of (red) model for development

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c) What are the main arguments presented by Richey and Ponte?

- “Product RED, in its positive spin, masks the social and environmental relations of trade and production that underpin

poverty, inequality and disease.” - (red) re-establishes “white man’s burden” making benovlence

trendy, cool, and youthful.

Cameron and Haanstra? - relations of power unchallenged- northern charity most important- “Northern ‘selves’ are portrayed as beneficent and as

possessing the wisdom and agency needed to help Southern ‘others’, while the structural issues that sustain global poverty remain in the shadows.”

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Gender in World Politics

a) What are the different approaches to understanding gender?

- varieties of feminism: liberal, Marxist, socialist, radical, post-modern, post-colonial

b) What are the key concepts covered in lecture and the GWP reading for the week? - patriarchy, double burden- gender, analysis through a gendered lens- gender inequality globally.

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Human Rights

a) What are the different approaches to understanding human rights? - first, second, third generation rights.- different views that privilege different kinds of rights

b) What are the key concepts covered in the lecture and the GWP reading for the week?- criticisms of current rights regime (feminist, cultural)- humanitarian intervention? Enforcing rights- freedom from want? Political, economic, social rights?- why is it so hard to achieve human rights? Sovereignty, imperialism, capitalism?

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• c) What do Steele and Amoureux tell us about the benefits and limits of NGO monitoring of genocide? - idea of the panopticon - case studies of Rwanda and East Timor.