166-020 Modern Political Thought

Availability

2nd and 3rd year

Credit Points

12.5

Coordinator

Prof Verity Burgmann

Prerequisites

Usually 25 points of first-year politics.

Semester

2 (view timetable)

Contact

Thirty contact hours per semester. A 2-hour lecture per week for 10 weeks and a 1-hour tutorial per week for 10 weeks. The lecture and tutorial programs are staggered and cover the 12 weeks of semester

Subject Description

This subject is an accessible survey of the development and principal arguments of the major schools of political thought in the past 250 years, especially those that have motivated and expressed the needs of large groups of people. The schools of political thought surveyed include liberalism, Marxism, feminism, anarchism, syndicalism, communism, nationalism, fascism, socialism, social democracy, conservatism, neo-liberalism, environmentalism, postmodernism and postcolonialism. Tutorial discussion centres on primary source documents for each school of thought, which include classical political essays such as Marx's Communist Manifesto and Mill's On Liberty.

Generic Skills

  • be able to research through the competent use of the library and other information sources, and be able to define areas of inquiry and methods of research in the preparation of essays;

  • be able to conceptualise theoretical problems, form judgements and arguments and communicate critically, creatively and theoretically through essay writing, tutorial discussion and presentations;

  • be able to communicate knowledge ideologically and economically through essay writing and tutorial discussion;

  • be able to manage and organise workloads for recommended reading, the completion of essays and assignments and examination revision;

  • be able to participate in team work through small group discussions.

Assessment

An essay of 2000 words 50% (due mid-semester) and a 2-hour examination 50% (during the examination period).

Prescribed Texts

A subject reader will be available.

  • A Heywood, Political Ideologies. (3rd ed) 2003.


Status:                   Official 2006
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