Audit report of differences found in 166-232

Go Back to 166-232 (Politics, Faculty of Arts, v3, p153)

NOTE: These differences were detected by computer program - they may or may not be substantive.


Differences in Politics, Faculty of Educ(Parkville) (v5, p164)

Different CONTACT

Source=[Three hours a week of lectures, seminars and tutorials.]

Xref = [Three hours of lectures, seminars and tutorials each week.]

Different CONTENT

Source=[Some of the books students will read are A. F. Davies, <i>The Human Element</i>. His <i>Skills, Outlooks and Passions</i>, is another valuable source - especially the section on passion where he discusses the political place of envy, hope, trust, and many other emotions. Harold Lasswells <i>Psychopathology and Politics</i> is a classic study of the motives for becoming political. Another thing - this is a subject which encourages reflection and self-analysis as well as reading and analysing others out there in politics.]

Xref = [Some of the books students will read are A. F. Davies, <i>The Human Element. His Skills, Outlooks and Passions, </i> is another valuable source - especially the section on passion where he discusses the political place of envy, hope, trust, and many other emotions. Harold Lasswells <i>Psychopathology and Politics</i> is a classic study of the motives for becoming political. This is a subject which encourages reflection and self-analysis as well as reading and analysing others out there in politics.]

Different OBJECTIVES

Source=[At the end of this subject students will: <ul> <li>understand that politics is driven by human passions, fantasies and desires; <li>have confronted the idea that there is unconscious politics as well as conscious politics (Sigmund Freuds first ambition was to be a great political leader); <li>see that politics is far bigger than Canberra, Washington or Beijing - it threads its way through all aspects of life, into all organisations and every part of culture, even into families and intimate relationships; <li>agree that politics without the human element is a contradiction in terms (Political Science without biography is a form of taxidermy, said the great American Political Psychologist, Harold Lasswell); <li>have discovered links between theories about how we develop a self in childhood and national and international politics. </ul>]

Xref = [At the end of this subject students will: <ul> <li>understand that politics is driven by human passions, fantasies and desires; <li>have confronted the idea that there is unconscious politics as well as conscious politics (Sigmund Freud's first ambition was to be a great political leader); <li>see that politics is far bigger than Canberra, Washington or Beijing - it threads its way through all aspects of life, into all organisations and every part of culture, even into families and intimate relationships; <li>agree that politics without the human element is a contradiction in terms (Political Science without biography is a form of taxidermy, said the great American Political Psychologist, Harold Lasswell); <li>have discovered links between theories about how we develop a self in childhood and national and international politics. </ul>]

Different POINTS

Source=[16.7 2nd and 3rd years]

Xref = [16.7]


Mon Oct  9 16:30:34 1995 
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