PULS
Foto: Matthias Friel
This lecture for MA students provides an overview to contemporarian mid-range theories on international institutions
International institutions provide order and meaning; they structure and facilitate cooperation in world politics. The lecture is intended to introduce main theoretical debates in international relations (IR) on international regimes and regime complexes, international organizations, and international norms. We will compare what kind of answers major IR theories - but also critical and feminist approaches - offer on fundamental questions of the emergence, shape, and consequences of international institutions: for example, why do sovereign nation states delegate authority to international institutions? How do international regimes like the Climate regime facilitate compliance? When do states leave international organizations? What explains the diffusion of international norms, such as gender equality and sustainable development? While some empirical examples will be included for illustrative purposes, the lecture is theory-oriented and intended to give students a solid foundation in the study of international institutions. At the end of this lecture course students should be able to give nuanced assessments of differing theoretical approaches in relation to their research goals and application to IR.
Basic knowledge on IR theories (from BA)
Written exam
Term paper (in combination with other courses of the same module)
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