Skriv ut | Lukk vindu |
Vår 2023
STV-3019 Comparative political economy - 10 stp
The course is administrated by
Institutt for samfunnsvitenskap
Type of course
This course can be taken as a singular course.
Course contents
The aim of the course is to examine political causes behind the distribution of wealth among and within nations of the world. People across the world have put in an equal amount of their time at work, yet the fruits of their labor have been more or less wasted in some parts of the world, cultivated so as to offer a life in abundance in other parts of the world. Race, religion, culture, and natural resources are obviously irrelevant to explain this pattern of distribution. The key to the answer is the government: what kind of government is beneficial for economic growth and prosperity? This course is about political economy, addressing the competing approaches that claim to have the explanations to national and regional variations in growth. Note that the course does require some experience with quantitative methods.
Application deadline
Applicants from Nordic countries: 1 June for the autumn semester and 1 December for the spring semester. Exchange students and Fulbright students: 1 October for the spring semester and 15 April for the autumn semester.
Admission requirements
Students must document at least a bachelor’s degree (180 ECTS), or an equivalent qualification, with a specialization of at least 90 ECTS in political science.
- Applicants with a Norwegian study background need an average minimum grade of C or better from the bachelor’s degree to be admitted to the master’s program.
- Applicants who hold a bachelor’s degree or equivalent issued in Europe, Canada, USA, Australia or New Zealand need an average minimum grade of C or better or the corresponding numerical mark/percentage score in order to be considered for admission. The Canadian equivalent is 70%.
- Applicants who hold a bachelor’s degree or equivalent issued in countries other than the above mentioned must have an average grade of B or better, or the corresponding numerical mark/percentage score, in order to be considered for admission.
Objective of the course
Objective of the course
Student who has successfully completed the course should have achieved the following learning outcomes:
Knowledge
- Introduce students to the main debates on the relationships between politics and economic development.
- Use theoretical knowledge to deduce testable hypotheses and apply them quantitatively
Analytical understanding
- Present examples of how different approaches claim to explain variations in national and regional economic growth
- Increase the ability to do critical examinations of general ideas and theories on economic growth, prosperity and poverty.
- Learned about the main debates on the relationships between politics and economic development
- Able to present critical evaluations of different approaches that claim to explain variations in national and regional economic growth
- Improve their skills as to understand how different systems of government influence and condition economic growth, prosperity and poverty.
Language of instruction
English.
Teaching methods
18 hours of lectures/seminars in March and April. The teaching consists of two parts. Part I goes through the theoretical framework around political economy. In part II, this theory is applied to test hypotheses. Students will be encouraged to bring their own data and experiences to classes. There will also be data easily available for the applied part.
Date for examination
Off campus exam hand out date 22.05.2023 hand in date 06.06.2023
The date for the exam can be changed. The final date will be announced at your faculty early in May and early in November.