INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS
POS V 3501y, Spring 1998
202 Altschul, M W 2:40-3:55
Elizabeth Wishnick
This course will introduce students with a limited knowledge of Political
Science to basic concepts, themes, issues in comparative politics as well
as to various methodological approaches to the field. The course
will expose students to the uses of the comparative method in analyzing
political systems, the dynamics of their development, and the sources of
their breakdown and change. The trend toward democratic change in
the post-Cold War period is a key theme of the course. During the
course, the following questions will be addressed: How is democracy conceptualized
in different countries? What are its strengths and weaknesses?
How are they measured? What are the forces which lead to democratic
transitions? What impedes democratic change?
The course begins with an overview of the comparative method and the
main building-blocks in the study of comparative politics: states and regimes.
The next section of the course outlines four key themes in the study of
comparative politics: new challenges to the state, the interaction of political
and economic development, the role of collective identities in political
development, and the dynamics of political participation. A third
section examines issues of political change and analyzes different paths:
modernization, reform, revolution, and transitions to democracy.
In the fourth section, the concepts, themes, and issues studied will be
applied to the comparative analysis of three pairs of countries:
1. Great Britain and Japan: Democratic Regimes
2. China and Russia: Regimes undergoing the transition from communism
3. Mexico and Nigeria: Democratizing and authoritarian regimes in developing
countries
The first three sections of the course will be covered in the first
half of the semester and the second half will be devoted to the comparative
analysis of case studies.
Class Format and Requirements
Format. The course aims to integrate lectures and discussion.
Students are encouraged to ask questions and participate in the discussion
of the material.
Requirements. Students are required to do all assigned
readings and attend all lectures. Attendance will be taken.
In the event that a student is in between grades, participation and attendance
will be taken into account.
Exams. Students will be tested on the material covered
during the lectures and the assigned readings.
In-Class Mid-Term (40% of course grade): There will be an in class mid-term
on March 11 covering the conceptual parts the course. THERE IS NO
MAKE-UP EXAM!!
In-Class Final Exam (60% of course grade): During the in class final,
students will be asked to apply their knowledge of the concepts, themes,
and issues covered in the first part of the course to the comparative analysis
of the cases studied in the second part.
Make-Up Final Exam Policy. If a student claims a scheduling
conflict for the final exam, appropriate documentation from the registrar
must be supplied and will be verified.
Students requesting a make-up exam for reasons other than a scheduling
conflict MUST have either a letter from their academic dean or from the
university health service, which will be verified. Students are discouraged
from making such requests because, even if granted, out of fairness to
the other students, the make-up will be different from the scheduled exam
and graded more stringently.
Required Readings
The following books are available for purchase at Posman Books and the
Columbia University bookstore:
1. Mark Kesselman, et al., eds. Comparative Politics at the
Crossroads, (D.C. Heath, 1996)
2. Bernard Brown, et al., eds., Comparative Politics: Notes and Readings,
8th edition, (Harcourt Brace, 1996).
3. Frank L. Wilson, Concepts and Issues in Comparative Politics,
(Prentice Hall, 1996).
4. Christian Soe, ed., Comparative Politics Annual 1997/98, 15th
edition, (Dushkin, 1997).
5. Christopher Clapham, Third World Politics, (University of
Wisconsin Press, 1985).
All books and articles listed on the syllabus are on reserve at both
the Barnard and College libraries.
Part I: Overview and Basic Concepts
1/21 1. Overview of the Course
1/26 2. The Comparative Method: What and how to compare
Wilson, pp. 1-15.
Brown, pp. 16-41.
1/28 3. States and Nations
Brown, pp. 42-65.
Kesselman, pp. 1-11; 24-27.
2/2 4. Regime Types: Authoritarianism and Democracy
Kesselman, pp. 11-23.
Brown, pp. 87-147
Part II: Main Themes
2/4 1. New Challenges to the State
Brown, pp. 66-86.
Soe, #56, 60
Peter Evans, "The Eclipse of the State?"
Kenichi Ohmae "The Rise of the Region-State"
2/9 2. The Interaction of Political and Economic Development
Brown and Macridis, pp. 332-351
Soe, #55
Wilson, pp. 32-41; 181-199
Adam Przeworski and Fernando Limongi, "Modernization:
Theories and Facts"
2/11 3. Collective Identities
Wilson, pp. 17-31, 41-54
Soe, #57, 58, 59
Barrington Moore, Social Origins of Dictatorship, pp. 413-432
Anthony Marx, "Race-Making and the Nation-State"
2/16 5. Political Participation:
a. Citizen, State, and Society
Wilson, pp. 57-75
Brown, pp. 206-237
2/18 6. Political Participation:
b. Political Parties
Brown, pp. 243-277
Wilson, pp. 57-113
2/23 7. Political Participation:
c. Institutions and Leaders
Brown, pp. 309-323
Wilson, pp. 114-129, 149-178
Samuel Huntington, Political Order in Changing Societies, pp. 1-32
Part III: Processes of Political Change
2/25 1. Modernization and Political Development
Brown, pp. 361-414
Soe, #52, 53
3/2 2. Revolution and Reform
Wilson, pp. 200-215
Brown, pp. 156-195
Clapham, Ch 8
3/4 3. Transitions to Democracy
Brown, pp. 156-195
Doh Chull Shin, "On the Third Wave of Democratization"
Soe, #54
Muthiah Alagappa, "The Asian Spectrum"
3/9 Liberal Democracy
Soe #29
The Economist, "Full democracy"
Larry Diamond, "Three Paradoxes of Democracy"*
*this is a chapter in a book and it's listed at the Barnard library
by its author and title, L. Diamond and M. Plattner, eds., The Global Resurgence
of Democracy, 1993.
3/11 Mid-Term
3/14-3/22 Spring Break
Part IV: Case Studies
1. Great Britain and Japan
3/13 a. Parliamentary Democracy: How Does It Work?
Kesselman, Ch. 1 (sections 1, 3); Ch. 5 (sections 1, 3)
Soe, #4,5,21,30,32,33
Taichi, Sakaiya "The 1993 Watershed and the Agenda for Reform"
3/25 b. Political Participation and Political Reform
Kesselman, Ch. 1 (section 4); Ch. 5 (section 4)
Soe, #2,3,6,7, 20
The Economist, "Britain after the landslide" Iwai, Tomoaki, "'The Madonna
Boom': Women in the Japanese Diet"
3/30 c. Political Economy
Kesselman, Ch. 1 (section 2); Ch. 5 (section 2)
Arthur Gould, Capitalist Welfare Systems, pp. 1-16; 234-250*
Tony Judt, "The Societal Question Redivivus"
Soe, #37, 38, 39
*this is listed as a book in the Barnard library 2. Russia and China
4/1 Communist revolution in Russia and China
Kesselman, Ch. 6 (section 1) and Ch. 7 (section 1)
Brown, pp. 137-147
Ken Jowitt, New World Disorder, Ch. 8
Huntington, Political Order in Changing Societies, pp. 334-343
4/6 Political Leadership and Political Change
Kesselman, Ch. 6 (sections 3 and 4), Ch. 7 (sections 3 and 4)
Brown and Macridis, pp. 148-155
Soe #50
M. Steven Fish, "The Pitfalls of Russian Superpresidentialism"
4/13 Transition from Command Economies
Kesselman, Ch. 6 (section 2) and Ch. 7 (section 2)
Juliet Johnson, "Should Russia Adopt the Chinese Model of Economic
Reform"
Marshall Goldman, "Russia's Reform Effort: Is there Growth at the End
of the Tunnel?"
Business Week, "Can China Reform?"
4/15 Social and political change
Kesselman, et. al. Ch. 6 (section 5) and Ch. 7 (section 5)
Soe #41, 43
Michael McFaul, "Democracy Unfolds in Russia"
Richard Smith, "Flies and Fresh Air: Culture and Consumerism in Contemporary
China"
Journal of Democracy article on China - TBA
3. The Developing World
4/21 Colonialism and the Problem of State-Building
Clapham, Ch. 1-2
Kesselman, Ch. 9 (section 1) and Ch. 11 (section 1)
Soe #44, 45
Larry Diamond, "Nigeria's Perennial Struggle"
4/23 Nation-Building and Ethnic Conflict
Clapham, Ch. 6-7
Wilson, pp. 131-145
Kesselman, Ch. 9 (sections 3 and 4) and Ch. 11, (sections 3 and 4)
Crawford Young, "The Impossible Necessity of Nigeria"
Lucy Conger, "Mexico: Zapatista Thunder"
4/27 Political Economy of Development
Clapham, Ch. 5
Kesselman, Ch. 9 (section 2) and Ch. 11 (section 2)
Soe #46, 49
Mexico, "Second Revolution"
4/29 Political Change: Sources and Obstacles
Clapham, Ch. 3-4
Soe, #48
Kesselman, Ch. 9 (section 5) and Ch. 11 (section 5)
Chappell Lawson, "Mexico's New Politics: The Elections of 1997"
M.J. Balogun, "Enduring Clientalism, Governance Reform and
Leadership Capacity: A Review of the Democratization Process in Nigeria"
5/4 Recent Trends toward Political and Economic Change
Ken Jowitt, "Dizzy with Democracy"
Fareed Zakaria, "The Rise of Illiberal Democracy"
Samuel Huntington, "After Twenty Years: The Future of the Third Wave"
Jacques Attali, "The Crash of Western Civilization"