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COURSE DETAIL

ONTOLOGY, EPISTEMOLOGY AND POLITICS OF THE ECOLOGICAL CRISIS
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Political Science Environmental Studies
UCEAP Course Number
173
UCEAP Course Suffix
O
UCEAP Official Title
ONTOLOGY, EPISTEMOLOGY AND POLITICS OF THE ECOLOGICAL CRISIS
UCEAP Transcript Title
ECOLOGICAL CRISIS
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This course is structured in two parts, theoretical and practical, and examines the diverging ontological, epistemological, and political frameworks to resolve the biosphere crisis to the human habitability of planet Earth. The first part of the course compares post-dualist approaches (advocating the abandonment of the society-nature distinction) with the theories that recognize a heuristic and epistemological value of the society-nature dualism. The second part of the course maps the range of policies, ideologies, and collective actions in response to the climate disaster: from neo-Malthusian eco-fascism defending a nationalist rootedness in the territory; to the liberal eco-modernism of green growth; as well as the socialist project of a Green New Deal and the agroecological peasant movement, La Via Campesina.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
DHUM 25A25
Host Institution Course Title
ONTOLOGY, EPISTEMOLOGY AND POLITICS OF THE ECOLOGICAL CRISIS
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Seminar
Host Institution Department
Humanities

COURSE DETAIL

VARIETIES OF REGULATORY CAPITALISM
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Political Science Economics
UCEAP Course Number
170
UCEAP Course Suffix
I
UCEAP Official Title
VARIETIES OF REGULATORY CAPITALISM
UCEAP Transcript Title
REGULTRY CAPITALISM
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description
This course explores the political and systemic reasons for the necessity of regulation of land, labor, and money in capitalism, its distributional implications, and its practical difficulties. It then looks at the different modes of regulation in different national capitalisms in Europe and the US in the context of globalization, with a particular emphasis on finance.
Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
BSPO 1860A
Host Institution Course Title
VARIETIES OF REGULATORY CAPITALISM
Host Institution Campus
English Seminar
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Political Science

COURSE DETAIL

ANTHROPOLOGY OF FRENCH AND AMERICAN LAWS
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Legal Studies Anthropology
UCEAP Course Number
120
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
ANTHROPOLOGY OF FRENCH AND AMERICAN LAWS
UCEAP Transcript Title
FR & AMER LAWS
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description
Drawing on Karl Llewellyn's anthropological approach to law, the first sessions ask: what jobs need to be done in a human group for it to become and therefore remain a society; how did the normative tools that are found in any human group transform historically to become Western law, then evolve into distinct civil law and common law traditions. Once students are provided with the foundational knowledge and methodology of legal anthropology, the remaining sessions are devoted to understanding what French and American laws reveal about the workings of their respective societies. Through adopting a chronological approach, the course covers major questions both societies face and how both legal systems address these concerns differently. For instance: how should power be organized to avoid tyranny; how should social instability resulting from industrialization and capitalism be mitigated; how should society respond to the tensions and challenges that arise from varying individual identities and technology.
Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
DDRO 25A27
Host Institution Course Title
ANTHROPOLOGY OF FRENCH AND AMERICAN LAWS
Host Institution Campus
English Seminar
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Law

COURSE DETAIL

THE POLITICS OF URBANISM
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Urban Studies Political Science
UCEAP Course Number
144
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
THE POLITICS OF URBANISM
UCEAP Transcript Title
POLITICS/URBANISM
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

The course provides the latest methodological and theoretical tools for understanding the politics of urbanization and urbanism. The course takes the politics of urbanism as a transdisciplinary arena. It encourages thinking across disciplinary boundaries to address the environmental and social challenges of the present. The question of how cities act politically on the global scale is widely discussed and receives diverse answers from researchers. The course suggests that the study of the political agency shall be grounded in urban studies and empirically tested on different layers of policymaking, allowing for hybrid combinations. An urban studies approach addresses the spatial and temporal specificity of urban processes, in contrast with the "methodological nationalism" of large parts of the social sciences. It focuses critically on spatialized social processes and socio-material assemblages, combinations of objects and agencies that affect how cities are organized and, to some extent, governed.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
ASPO 25A18
Host Institution Course Title
THE POLITICS OF URBANISM
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Lecture only
Host Institution Department
Political Science

COURSE DETAIL

U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Political Science
UCEAP Course Number
105
UCEAP Course Suffix
R
UCEAP Official Title
U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
UCEAP Transcript Title
US FOREIGN POLICY
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This seminar explores American foreign policy from within. It studies the actors making it, their purpose, and the constraints they face. US foreign policy making is shaped by both American culture and the peculiarities of American democracy. Conversely, the constraints and the imperatives inherent to the conduct of foreign policy can sometimes endanger democratic principles. The course analyzes the fundamental debates over these issues and considers their evolution over time through in-depth case studies.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
DAFF 25A39
Host Institution Course Title
U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Seminar
Host Institution Department
International Relations

COURSE DETAIL

INTERNATIONAL LAW, ARMED CONFLICTS, AND MASS MEDIA
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Legal Studies Film & Media Studies Communication
UCEAP Course Number
133
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
INTERNATIONAL LAW, ARMED CONFLICTS, AND MASS MEDIA
UCEAP Transcript Title
INTL LAW&MASS MEDIA
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This course provides an introductory primer to the field of international law. It then navigates through a series of case studies exemplifying the subversion of legal conflicts by mass media, including Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine, and even climate change. Finally, it tests the limits of this approach by considering the involvement of social media as an emerging Fifth Estate.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
DDRO 25A36
Host Institution Course Title
INTERNATIONAL LAW, ARMED CONFLICTS, AND MASS MEDIA
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Seminar
Host Institution Department
Law

COURSE DETAIL

THE INFLUENCE OF OPINION IN FRENCH SOCIETY
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology
UCEAP Course Number
117
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
THE INFLUENCE OF OPINION IN FRENCH SOCIETY
UCEAP Transcript Title
OPINION FR SOCIETY
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description
The objective of this class is to understand how public opinion is formed and to analyze how this opinion, once formed, can influence the political, economic, social and foreign policy decisions. The course looks at all the elements that the citizen, the employee, the member of an association, or a political party uses to form an opinion and how this influences the entity, the political, economic, association or social authorities. Presentations look at all the facets of opinion and how they play in decision-making process, as much to conform to as well as to resist.
Language(s) of Instruction
French
Host Institution Course Number
CSPO 25F21
Host Institution Course Title
L'INFLUENCE DE L'OPINION DANS LA SOCIÉTÉ FRANÇAISE
Host Institution Campus
French Seminar
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Political Science

COURSE DETAIL

THE CHINESE ECONOMY: GROWTH AND UNCERTAINTY
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Economics
UCEAP Course Number
127
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
THE CHINESE ECONOMY: GROWTH AND UNCERTAINTY
UCEAP Transcript Title
CHINESE ECONOMY
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description
This seminar presents the Chinese economy and its last three decades of evolution from a macroeconomic perspective. The second biggest economy in the world has three specific characteristics of being opaque, not studied often, and offering a rare example of a fast growing non-fully economically liberal capitalist system. Beyond its purely empirical importance as second biggest GDP and largest world growth engine over the past decade, the Chinese economy, through its extraordinary rise, has challenged economics knowledge and the whole international economics order. At the time the Chinese economic model becomes both more assertive and more contested, a better understanding of it appears essential to a comprehensive understanding of today's world, and even more so for tomorrow's.
Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
DECO 25A11
Host Institution Course Title
THE CHINESE ECONOMY: GROWTH AND UNCERTAINTY
Host Institution Campus
English Seminar
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Economics

COURSE DETAIL

SOCIOLOGY OF POVERTY
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology
UCEAP Course Number
125
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
SOCIOLOGY OF POVERTY
UCEAP Transcript Title
SOC OF POVERTY
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description
This course examines how sociology constructs and discusses the category of poverty and how public politics attempts to fight against it. It also discusses social reproduction and lifestyles of those who are seen as poor. The course considers the question of money, as poverty can be initially thought of as a lack of money, but it is not always through this angle that it is seen. The course relies on reading academic texts as well as analyzing written and iconographic documents which present representations of poverty.
Language(s) of Instruction
French
Host Institution Course Number
CSOC 25F07
Host Institution Course Title
SOCIOLOGIE DE LA PAUVRETÉ
Host Institution Campus
French Seminar
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Sociology

COURSE DETAIL

MEMORY POLITICS: AN INTRODUCTION TO MEMORY STUDIES
Country
France
Host Institution
Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences Po)
Program(s)
Sciences Po Paris
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology Political Science Anthropology
UCEAP Course Number
136
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
MEMORY POLITICS: AN INTRODUCTION TO MEMORY STUDIES
UCEAP Transcript Title
MEMORY POLITICS
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This course provides an introduction to memory studies, an interdisciplinary field encompassing sociology, political science, anthropology, and history, among other disciplines. The course introduces the main theoretical concepts in memory studies and the historical development of different approaches while focusing on recent debates on the relationship between memory politics and contemporary political developments (the rise of populism; nostalgia in the post-socialist world; Brexit; tearing down of colonial statues; return of looted artifacts from the Global North). The course provides an understanding of the basic notions of memory and its relation to identity formation, both individual and collective; the role of memory in institutional politics through memorialization rituals; the importance of monuments; and the role of memory and nostalgia as sites of resistance in everyday politics of contemporary world. Through lectures, selected readings, media screenings, group discussions, and student presentations, the course provides insight into the importance of power interplays of different memory and history narratives and critically engages in understanding contemporary memory discourses.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
DSPO 25A46
Host Institution Course Title
MEMORY POLITICS: AN INTRODUCTION TO MEMORY STUDIES
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Seminar
Host Institution Department
Political Science
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