COURSE SYLLABUS The Contemporary World
COURSE SYLLABUS The Contemporary World
COURSE SYLLABUS The Contemporary World
Description:
This course introduces students to the contemporary world by examining the multifaceted phenomenon of globalization. Using the various
disciplines of the social sciences, it examines the economic, social, political, technological, and other transformations that have created an
increasing awareness of the interconnectedness of peoples and places around the globe. To this end, the course provides an overview of the
various debates in global governance, development, and sustainability. Beyond exposing the student to the world outside the Philippines, it
seeks to inculcate a sense of global citizenship and global ethical responsibility.
This course includes mandatory topics on population education in the context of population and demography.
Learning Outcomes:
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The Contemporary World
4. Understand the issues confronting the nation-state
5. Assess the effects of globalization on different social units and their responses
B. Skills
1. Analyze contemporary news events in the context of globalization
2. Analyze global issues in relation to Filipinos and the Philippines
3. Write a research paper with proper citations on a topic related to globalization
C. Values
1. Articulate personal positions on various global issues
2. Identify the ethical implications of global citizenship
Course Outline:
Weeks 1-2 Introduction to Globalization
- Defining globalization
Weeks 3-5: The Structures of Globalization
- The Global Economy
- Market Integration
- The Global Interstate System
- Contemporary Global Governance
Weeks 6-8: A World of Regions
- Global Divides: The North and the South
- Asian Regionalism
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Week 9: Midterm
Weeks 10-11: A World of Ideas
- Global Media Cultures
- The Globalization of Religion
Weeks 12-14: Global Population and Mobility
- The Global City
- Global Demography
- Global Migration
Weeks 15-16: Towards a Sustainable World
- Sustainable Development
- Global Food Security
Weeks 17-18: Conclusion
- Global Citizenship
- Research paper writing Course Requirements:
1. Regular quizzes
2. Midterm analysis paper
3. Group reports
4. Final research paper Assessment
25 % Quizzes
15 % Recitation
15 % Midterm Essay
25 % Group Reports and other Research Papers
20 % Final Research Paper
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The Contemporary World
THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD Learning Plan
- Analyze how different Wave: Southeast Asia and Middle-Class assigned an Asian
Asian states confront Formation in the Making of a Region.” In country to research
the challenges of Beyond Japan: The Dynamics of East and report on. These
globalization and Asian Regionalism, ed. Peter groups will deliver
regionalization Katzenstein and Takashi Shiraishi. 10minute
Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, pp. presentations on the
237–71. contemporary
foreign and economic
policies of their
respective countries.
Week 9: Midterm
- Synthesize Synthesis Midterm essay Midterm essay:
knowledge Students will be
concerning asked to write
globalization 2,000word essays
answering one of
these two questions:
1. How do we make
globalization
more just?
2. How is the state
affected by
globalization?
How is the nation
affected by
globalization? Do
these
institutions/conce
pts remain
relevant?
Why/why not?
Weeks 10-11: A World of Ideas
- Analyze how various Global Media Lecture/discussion LCD Projector Quiz on the reading
media drive various Cultures materials
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forms of global Group Report Reading Materials
1
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GE Learning Outcomes Ethics
10. Advocate respect for human rights L
L = Learned
P = Practiced
O= Opportunity to learn
Textbook:
Steger, Manfred B., Paul Battersby, and Joseph M. Siracusa, eds. 2014.The SAGE Handbook of Globalization. Two volumes.
Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications.
Other Readings:
Aguilar, Filomeno V. 2012. “Differentiating Sedimented from Modular Transnationalism: The View from East Asia.” Asian and
Pacific Migration Journal 21(2): 149–171.
Bello, Walden F. 2006. “The Multiple Crises of Global Capitalism.” In Deglobalization: Ideas for a New World Economy, pp. 1-31.
Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press.
Castles, Stephen. 2000. “International Migration at the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century: Global Trends and Issues.”
International Social Science Journal 52 (165): 269–281.
Carter, April. 2001. “Global Civil Society: Acting as Global Citizens” in The Political Theory of Global Citizenship, pp. 147-176
London: Routledge.
Connell, Raewyn. 2007. “Dependency, Autonomy and Culture. In Southern Theory: The Global Dynamics of Knowledge in Social
Science, pp. 139-163. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
Hobsbawm, Eric J. 1996. “The Future of the State.” Development and Change 27(2): 267–278.
Lesthaeghe, Ron. 2010. “The Unfolding Story of the Second Demographic Transition.” Population and Development Review 36(2):
211–251.
Livi-Bacci, Massiomo. 205. “What We Can and Cannot Learn from the History of World Population. Population Studies: A Journal of
Demography 69(S1): S21–S28.
Mazower, Mark. 2006. “An International Civilization? Empire, Internationalism and the Crisis of the Mid-Twentieth Century.”
International Affairs 82(3): 553–566.
McMichael, Philip. 2009.“A Food Regime Analysis of the World Food Crisis.”Agriculture and Human Values 26(4): 281-295.
Sassen, Saskia. 2005. “The Global City: Introducing a Concept.” Brown Journal of World AffairsXI(2): 27-43.
Shiraishi, Takashi. 2006. “The Third Wave: Southeast Asia and Middle-Class Formation in the Making of a Region.” In Beyond
Japan: The Dynamics of East Asian Regionalism, edited by Peter Katzenstein and Takashi Shiraishi, pp. 237–271. Ithaca,
NY: Cornell University Press.
Steger, Manfred B. 2005. “Ideologies of Globalization.” Journal of Political Ideologies 10(1): 11–30.
Wallerstein, Immanuel. 2004. “The Modern World-System as a Capitalist World Economy: Production, Surplus-Value, and
Polarization.” In World-SystemsAnalysis: An Introduction, pp. 23-41. Durham and London: Duke University Press.