Showing 109 courses for the subject Political Science and International Relations
Who holds power in Aotearoa New Zealand? What forces influence our national politics? What role do citizens, iwi, media, politicians and other groups play in shaping political processes and outcomes? This course explores Māori and colonial influences...
Politics is the activity of answering the question ‘how should we live?’ This course offers an introduction to some of the various ways political thinkers have tried to answer this question, by (re)defining fundamental political ideals like justice, ...
This course is an introduction to the principal concepts, issues and theoretical debates within the field of International Relations. Topics covered include: power, diplomacy, the United Nations, arms control, terrorism, developmental politics, civil...
What can we learn by comparing the politics and government of different countries? This course examines competing explanations for democratic and authoritarian regimes including economic, cultural and institutional theories of state development. Thes...
Why do countries sometimes fear for their safety or survival? Are other states or non-state actors the main problems? Are all security problems about violence? And how do policymakers analyse security issues? In posing these and other questions this ...
The aim of this course is to introduce students the major political, social and economic challenges and dilemmas facing the modern Middle East. Each week, we will discuss a key issue and concept, such as colonial legacies, state-society relations, th...
This course introduces students to political change in modern East Asian states: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Vietnam. It examines how different types of state have emerged out of the traditional East Asian political order, and how this outcome ha...
This course explores how world order has been understood and contested in IR, including the roots of the contemporary international system, debates about how it currently functions and critical accounts of the marginalisation and injustice it produce...
This course introduces students to the diverse institutions that shape politics, society and economics in a number of European countries. It seeks to explain why political, social and economic diversity exists in Europe and why it matters. In doing s...
This course focuses on the ideologies of political parties in Aotearoa New Zealand. An applied approach outlines the principles which underpin how political parties respond to contemporary political issues such as education, health, welfare, local go...
An introduction to American politics, with a particular focus on the continued development of America's system of government. The course examines major political themes in US politics against the background of the relationships between different bran...
This course will examine constitutional issues and broader political change in a number of Southeast Asian states. Students have the opportunity to gain a better understanding of political institutions and wider political trends in countries with ver...
This course introduces students to the nature and varieties of modern dictatorship and non-democracy, the causes of their emergence, and the processes that lead to their collapse and transformation. Our focus will be on developing concepts and tools ...
The aim of this course is to introduce students to the major political, social and economic challenges and dilemmas facing the modern Middle East. Each week, we will discuss a key issue and concept, such as colonial legacies, state-society relations,...
This course introduces the study of Chinese politics and international relations. It provides an introduction to China, its major foreign policy initiatives, key international relationships and orientation toward the rules-based international order. ...
This course focuses on the role of nationalism in both global and domestic politics. Is nationalism a regressive or progressive ideology? When is nationalism connected to patriotism and when to racism? The first part of the course will investigate th...
This course examines the nature of power in world politics and international security. Students will learn about theories and frameworks for conceptualising power in international relations. The course also examines how our understanding of power has...
Special Topic:TBC
POLS212
TBC
In their quest for security how do states and non-state groups get other political actors to do things they would not otherwise do? How much can and should they rely on military power as opposed to economic power and the power of ideas? And what are ...
This course examines theories of political representation in parliamentary democracies and how these play out in a range of political institutions. Using New Zealand and the United Kingdom as our primary case studies, we explore interactions between ...
Ideas That Shape the World
POLS214
He mokopuna au, kua mōhiotia taku iti. He tīpuna au, kua mōhiotia taku nui. I am a grandchild, what I have known is little. I am an ancestor, what I have known is great. Political theory creates fundamentally new ways of seeing the world which, when ...
This course focuses on the political roles, functions and effects of the media in New Zealand. Topics studied will include: media and elections (including voting behaviour); news management and production; the role of public relations in political lo...
This course examines methods of governing societies divided by deep ethnic, religious, or linguistic cleavages. Drawing on cases including South Africa, Northern Ireland, Iraq, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Malaysia and Fiji, we analyse forms of power sharing,...
This course explores how public opinion is constructed and how it affects voting choices in combination with other factors such as socio-demographics, group identifications, institutions, media exposure, and party campaigns. Countries covered follow ...
International Politics of China
INTP243
This course introduces the study of Chinese politics and international relations. It provides an introduction to the People’s Republic of China, its major foreign policy initiatives, key international relationships and orientation toward the rules-ba...
New Zealand Foreign Policy
INTP244
This course examines how New Zealand engages the world through its foreign and defence policies. It employs different conceptual frameworks to critically analyse key factors that shape these, including relations with major powers, multilateral organi...
Foreign Policy Analysis
INTP245
This course introduces and explores the notion of foreign policy, which is traditionally considered one of the most important bridges between 'domestic' and 'international' politics. Here the spotlight is kept on the sources, instruments, agents, pro...
International Relations: Wealth and World Affairs / Hononga whenua: Te Rawa me ngā Take o te Ao
INTP247
This course looks at the global, international and domestic politics of the world economy. It looks at the ways in which economic processes shape politics and the ways in which political processes shape economics. We look at international trade, fina...
International Security
INTP248
This course is an introduction to the study of conflict and security. It examines how and why conflict emerges in the international system and explores different approaches to its mitigation and resolution, using both traditional materialist theories...
This course will focus on three areas: (1) understanding the nature and dynamics of cyberspace as a domain of international relations; (2) understanding the features of states and non-state actors acting as cyber powers; and (3) contemporary issues o...
This course surveys the historical and philosophical development of international relations theory and political theory. It will examine foundational texts drawn from thinkers across the range of western political theory, from ancient Greece to the t...
Is waging war ever morally justified, and, if so, when? Do affluent states and individuals harm the global poor? How should New Zealand deal with historic injustice and the legacy of colonialism? What is the fairest and most effective way of addressi...
This course aims to provide a theoretically grounded review of Japan’s post-WWII domestic politics and foreign policy. After examining Japan’s political system we will focus on Japan’s relations with the main actors in Northeast Asia (USA, China, Rus...
This course introduces the study of global environmental politics. It addresses key themes like security, justice, production, and governance in relation to global environmental issues like climate change, energy, biodiversity, food, and garbage. In ...
This course engages key ideas from critical theorists and their forerunners, questioning status quo assumptions about global politics. During the course we read and discuss primary texts from selected philosophers. We use their thought to examine the...
This course examines major positions and issues in contemporary political philosophy, including questions about rights, equality, justice, freedom, and democracy. This course is also able to be taken towards a major in POLS. See major requirements fo...
The Politics and Foreign Policy of Japan / Ngā Tōrangapū me Ngā Kaupapa Here Tāwāhi o Hapanī
INTP304
This course provides a theoretically grounded review of Japan’s post-WWII domestic politics and foreign policy. After examining Japan’s political system, we will focus on Japan’s relations with the main actors in Northeast Asia (USA, China, Russia an...
This online course examines a range of Māori political structures, movements, ideologies and visions. Students will also explore Māori politics in relation to Pacific and international Indigenous contexts. The themes covered in the course include Tin...
Entertainment forms of political communication such as music are very often neglected in research of political communication, although music has a long and varied association with politics. It has provided the soundtrack to political protest and been...
The political and social history of the Pacific Islands since 1945 has been tumultuous, with decolonisation, democratisation, urbanisation, governance and ethnic conflict playing out in various countries. We will examine developments between WWII and...
This course explores the aftermath of World War II, namely the problem of displaced persons, refugees and expellees on the quest for peace and governance of Europe. It will include attention to humanitarian organisations, international law, the geogr...
This course examines the international politics of modern economic development. Why have some countries/regions developed better than others? Does their political economic model matter? Does the structure of international political economy matter? Th...
This course introduces students to the institutions and evolution of the European Union. It also examines explanations of the process of European integration. It asks whether the governance institutions of the EU are comparable to those of its member...
This course compares recent American strategy towards Asia and the Middle East, both important regions. It considers US approaches to regional security issues including Asia’s territorial disputes and the Middle East peace process, and the competitiv...
This course examines the implications of immigration and increasing diversity for political processes and outcomes in contemporary societies, with particular focus on how the politics of migration and and identity intersect. Drawing especially on exa...
Many issues that we struggle with most in Aotearoa New Zealand today can feel insurmountable. In the face of 'wicked problems' like climate change, socioeconomic inequality, and settler-colonialism, how do everyday citizens make meaningful impacts? T...
This course introduces students to the international relations of East Asia: what they are, how they work, what drives their development and examines in particular the transformations of international order in modern and contemporary East Asia. The c...
This course examines the politics of the Pacific Island states, covering the area from Papua New Guinea in the west to Rapa Nui in the east. Among other topics, we look at the subversion of Western-derived systems of government in the Pacific context...
This course examines the contemporary Politics of the People's Republic of China. It introduces the key approaches to studying elite, military and party politics, social movements and economic development, and explores state-society relations, ideolo...
This course studies the government and politics of African nations. Students have the opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of government institutions and political issues on the African continent.
Directed Individual Study
POLS359
This is a supervised programme of research and study on selected themes in Political Science and International Relations. With the assistance of the course coordinator and staff members with appropriate expertise students will pursue a project that t...
Special Topic: US Foreign Policy
INTP360
This course analyses the central issues in US foreign policy in contemporary world politics. The course develops the analytic tools that are useful for understanding the international environment and for an examination of how the United States pursue...
This course enables students to engage deeply with a broad range of feminist thought. We will first focus on feminist critiques of social/political institutions, then on feminist prescriptions, and finally look at the means feminists have suggested f...
This course is interested in the international human rights regime and its impact on a variety of human rights outcomes such as torture, arbitrary detention, child labour, and racial/gender discrimination. Through the use of basic quantitative data a...
This course will analyse the political causes and consequences of contemporary forced migration, as well as national, regional and international efforts to manage it. Students will study a range of causes of forced migration, including conflict, huma...
This course examines methods of governing societies divided by deep ethnic, religious, or linguistic cleavages. Drawing on cases including South Africa, Northern Ireland, Iraq, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Malaysia and Fiji, we analyse forms of power sharing,...
This course deepens students’ understanding of International Economy. Combining historical perspectives and quantitative data, students will examine how crisis, ideas, security, and power have shaped the global economy. Topics may include global econ...
Human Security
INTP371
This course examines conflict and violence in world politics. It explores the changing nature of war between and within states, giving particular emphasis to contemporary civil wars. Topics covered may include: the relationship between natural resour...
This course examines the origins and development of international organisations together with their types and roles within the context of structural changes in the international system. 100% internal assessment. This course may also be able to be tak...
This course examines the nature of power in world politics including in relation to international security. Part I provides frameworks for conceptualising power in international relations. Part II presents theories of power. Part III examines how dif...
This course focuses on the role of transnational advocacy networks and social movements in world politics. In addition to taking a social scientist's perspective on how such networks and movements affect international relations, we will look at the s...
Special Topic: China Field Study
INTP378
This course is a study of Chinese politics with special emphasis on how government and politics function in China and includes a field trip to Beijing, China. This course may also be able to be taken towards a major in POLS. See major requirements fo...
This course examines political movements, organisations, and ideologies. Students will examine contemporary issues related to representation, sovereignty, citizenship, and indigenous self-determination. Case studies from a range of countries will be ...
This course aims to analyse great power politics and international order from theoretical and historical perspectives. The re-emergence/rise of Russia, China, Japan, and India as great powers has significant implications for the US-created/led intern...
This course examines issues and themes in US government and politics against the background of the US constitution and the federal system of government. In addition to readings and lecture materials, and the opportunity to research and write a resear...
This course enables us to uncover evidence and to better understand how the (political) world operates. It introduces some of the basic research tools used in the study of politics. Along the way, students will learn how to pose and answer empirical ...
The Comparative Politics of Globalisation / Ngā Kaupapa Torangapū Motuhake me te Whakatōpū Ao
POLS384
This course focuses on the domestic politics of globalisation, primarily in the developed democracies. Does globalisation constrain governments to a strict neo-liberal policy agenda? Does it diminish democracy? Does it generate insecurity and inequal...
This course explores contemporary attempts to deal with the interrelated questions of power, freedom, and justice in modern society. Topics include the nature of power in general and the forms power takes in modern states; the nature of freedom and i...
How do we coexist, communicate, and collectively work together in ‘superdiverse’ and unequal societies? This course explores this question from many angles, engaging Māori and decolonial scholarship from Aotearoa New Zealand as well as international ...
This course will focus on fundamental questions such as what political leadership is, and when and why it matters. Classical leadership theories are canvassed, normative questions about leadership addressed, and the relationship between individual le...
The course explores the way the Cold War shaped US society and culture from 1965 to 1991 and the causes and consequences of the Culture Wars that followed from 1991 to 2021. It examines the growing polarisation- political, social, cultural, ideologic...
Media, Politics and Campaigns
POLS404
This course looks at the interrelations of media, communication and politics, especially as they interact in political campaigns and elections. As well as exploring modern campaigns the course covers several related topics and themes, each of which i...
Some argue that we are in the midst of a crisis of democracy with a decreasing number of people involved in politics. Others claim that the democratic process is actually improving with more people becoming politically engaged. We study different typ...
This course examines the politics of the Pacific Island states, and New Zealand’s role in the Oceania region. The first part looks at country-specific issues, including the drivers of the coup cycle in Fiji and sovereignty debates in New Caledonia. T...
The Politics of Statebuilding
INTP416
This course examines contemporary state-building missions, such as those to Solomon Islands, East Timor, Bosnia and Kosovo, but is particularly concerned with how foreign-orchestrated interventions interact with local state formation processes. It lo...
This course will investigate the causes and consequences of contemporary human mobility from a political perspective. Topics will include: different modes of contemporary transnational migration, including refugee flows, temporary foreign workers, an...
Comparative Regional Integration
INTP417
Is the structure of political economy in the contemporary world national, regional or global? This course investigates this question by addressing one of the central issues of comparative politics and international relations: the politics of creating...
This course is a comparative study of Japan’s borders and territorial issues. It includes participation in Border Studies Summer School at Japan’s Hokkaido University. The Summer School will take place between Victoria’s Trimesters 1 and 2.
Aotearoa New Zealand’s unique political system is the subject of significant domestic and international interest. In the first half of the course, we consider events and ideas that have influenced Aotearoa’s political institutions, processes, and act...
This course examines war and its aftermath in global politics. It explores different forms of conflict in the international system as well as the changing nature of political violence. It then explores the ways in which actors in the international sy...
This course provides a limited number of selected students with the opportunity of gaining insights into parliamentary processes, the roles and responsibilities of members of Parliament, the functions and activities of the research units, the conduct...
This course explores when and why states cooperate with each other, how they structure their cooperation (through informal arrangements, laws, and organisations), and what role(s) various domestic and international actors play in these processes. We ...
This course explores how state and non-state actors are responding to the multiple challenges raised by international migration. With a focus on the cross-border movement of people displaced by climate change, conflict, disasters, and human right abu...
This course explores the ways in which political ideas and political action shape political outcomes in a variety of situations. The precise content varies year to year, driven by the interests of the students enrolled in the course but a significant...
In this course we examine issues in international political economy (IPE). We begin by focusing on the main theoretical perspectives in IPE, before moving to specific issue-areas such as international trade, finance, international investment, globali...
Asian Security
INTP442
This course introduces theoretical approaches to the study of conflict and regional order and applies them to the contemporary Asia-Pacific region. Specific topics covered may include great power rivalry in Asia; real and potential inter-state and in...
This course examines the ongoing international political change as a consequence of the recent ascendance of China in power and influence in the international system. We take China's evolving relations with the liberal international order as a case s...
Global Civil Society
INTP445
This course explores the relationship of civil society (including NGOs and social movements) to aspects of development both within countries and at the global level. It considers contrasting theoretical views, examines case studies, and stresses the ...
War and its Aftermath
INTP446
This course examines war and its aftermath in global politics. It explores political violence and its fallout in global politics, with a particular emphasis on the experience of war and the way it shapes bodies, lives and societies. Topics include th...
The main purpose of this course is to explore the role of national identity in international relations. It will introduce concepts, theories and empirical research on the role of collective identities in shaping states' policies. The first part of th...
Special Topic: The Politics of Nuclear Weapons: Disarmament, Arms Control, and Non-Proliferation
INTP451
This course analyses the role of nuclear weapons in international politics. It addresses the origins of the atomic bomb project, early efforts to control nuclear materials, deterrence theory, nuclear strategy and force posture, and considers contempo...
Special Topic: China Field Study
INTP452
This course is a study of Chinese politics with special emphasis on how government and politics function in China and China's international relations and includes a field trip to Beijing, China.
This course advances students' understanding of positivist and post-positivist approaches to the study of Political Science and International Relations, as well as providing practical experience in a range of research methods. Students will analyse t...
This course advances students' understanding of positivist and post-positivist approaches to the study of Political Science and International Relations, as well as providing practical experience in a range of research methods. Students will analyse t...
This course will introduce students to the study of migration from a range of disciplinary perspectives. Students will examine core issues, concepts, theories and debates in the analysis of migration and how key disciplines (international relations, ...
Research Project / Mahi Rangahau
INTP489
The INTP 489 research project gives students the opportunity to pursue their own research topic with guidance and support from a supervisor.
Research Project / Mahi Rangahau
POLS489
The POLS 489 research essay gives students the opportunity to pursue their own research topic with guidance and support from a supervisor.
This course examines key approaches in the study of contemporary international relations and helps students organise research projects in their postgraduate study in international relations.
This course provides a survey of the different methods and perspectives used in the Political Science discipline. Students will gain greater awareness of the philosophical and political implications of different approaches to Political Science. They ...
Research Project
INTP589
The INTP 589 research project gives students the opportunity to pursue their own research topic with guidance and support from a supervisor.
Research Project
POLS589
The POLS 589 research project gives students the opportunity to pursue their own research topic with guidance and support from a supervisor.
Thesis
INTP591
MA thesis in International Relations.
Thesis
POLS591
MA thesis in Political Science.
Dissertation
INTP593
Research paper on a selected aspect of International Relations.
Dissertation
POLS593
Research paper on a selected aspect of Political Science.
MIR Thesis
INTP595
Students follow a programme of research and writing on a topic approved by the MIR coordinator and with a supervisor assigned by the MIR coordinator. Students must submit a paper of between 20,000 and 25,000 words.
Thesis
POLS595
International Relations for PhD
INTP690
Political Science for PhD
POLS690
Showing results 1 - 109 of 109 results
Showing 1 - 109 of 109 results for Political Science and International Relations