GLOBAL POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY - JPM040

 

ETCS: 5 credits

Prerequisites: None

Taught in WINTER Semester

 

Lecturer: Dr Janusz Salamon

 

Time: MONDAY, 15.30-16.50 (including lectures and seminars - see details below)

 

PLACE: Jinonice, classroom C520

 

CONTACTS:

Email: janusz.salamon at fsv.cuni.cz

Office hours: Monday, 12.30-14.00 & Tuesday, 14:00-15:30 (3 Tuesdays per month) at office 514 (Floor 5) in Jinonice

also at other times ONLINE after appointment at https://cuni-cz.zoom.us/j/4572739330

 

COURSE CHARACTERISTICS:

The course is designed specifically for students of MA in International Politics and Economics with the aim to enable all students - both those who did their undergraduate studies in political science and those he did not - to explore the key problems of political philosophy in a global context. Thus while for the students who are newcomers to political theory all issues discussed in the course of the semester will be new, for those who have studied political philosophy the approach to the foundational questions of political philosophy will be different from what they already know. The global dimension of the course will consists in bringing to the picture of contemporary political philosophy - which is usually dominated entirely by contributions of Western political thinkers - complementary perspectives of East Asian (predominantly Chinese) and Islamic political traditions. It is hoped that this course will serve as a basis for a truly global and inter-cultural approach to the study of other areas of political science which IEPS students will pursue in the next semesters of their degree programme.

 

COURSE OUTLINE:

Class 1 Global Political Anthropology or How Diverse Views of Human Nature Influence Political Traditions

Class 2 Various Conceptions of Liberty and Variety of Liberalism

Class 3 Various Conceptions of Equality and Variety of Egalitarianism

Class 4 Justification of Political Obligation / Political Authority East and West

Class 5 Diverse Expressions of Solidarity in Various Political Traditions

Class 6 Communitarianism and Conservatism in the West

Class 7 Mid-term Test

Class 8 Russian Conservatism

Class 9 Political Philosophy of India's 'Hindutva' Movement

Class 10 Confucian Political Thought

Class 11 Confucian Political Tradition and Individual Rights

Class 12 Islamic Political Thought

Class 13 Islamic Political Tradition and Individual Rights

 LITERATURE:

The class readings will be always available for download at the present course webpage in the SIS:

The lecture readings will be taken mainly from the following books (available at the library of the Faculty of Social Sciences in Jinonice):

Risse M., Global Political Philosophy, Palgrave, 2012.

Goodin, R. E., P. Pettit, T. Pogge (eds), A Companion to Contemporary Political Philosophy, Blackwell, 2007.

Simon, R. L., Guide to Social and Political Philosophy, Blackwell, 2002.

Christiano, T., J. Christman (eds), Contemporary Debates in Political Philosophy, Blackwell, 2009.

Matravers, D., J. Pike, Debates in Contemporary Political Philosophy: An Anthology, Routledge, 2003.

Goodin, R. E., P. Pettit, Contemporary Political Philosophy: An Anthology, Blackwell, 1997.

Bird, C., An Introduction to Political Philosophy, Cambridge University Press, 2006.

Murray, A. R. M., Introduction to Political Philosophy, Routledge, 2010.

FINAL EXAM & FINAL ESSAY

The Final Exam will be written in class. You will have 160 minutes to your disposal. Students will be asked to select in accordance with their preference a number of topics (THREE at the mid-term and FOUR at the final) from a list provided by the instructor, and to discuss (in a form of short essays: at least 3 pages per topic) relevant issues covering the material explored in class and in the related readings. Critical assessment of the theories and arguments - as opposed to mere memorisation - is expected. The exam (as well as the research paper described below) is compulsory for all enrolled students.

The Final Essay, ca. 2000 words in length, will be devoted to a topic chosen by the student from a list of three topics provided by the lecturer. A more detailed essay instruction will be provided in due course (once you will accumulate a sufficient amount of knowledge to be able to start working on your essay effectively.) Since various students will take their exam at different times (choosing one of the three exam dates that will be published in the SIS in due course), the deadline for the submission of the essay will be 48 hours before your exam.

 

COURSE GRADING:

Final essay (ca. 2000 words)         40%

Final Exam                                   60%

Total                                            100%

 

 

GRADING SCALE: 

  • A = 91-100 % – excellent
  • B = 81-90 % – very good
  • C = 71-80 % – good
  • D = 61-70 % – satisfactory
  • E = 51-60 % – minimal pass
  • F = 0-50 % – fail