J. Lawrence Broz Professor and Department Chair Department of Political Science University of California, San Diego Associate Director, Center for Commerce and Diplomacy |
Teaching
University
of California, San Diego
POLI 200C: Markets and States.
Graduate Seminar. This seminar
provides an overview of the normative and positive issues associated
with
decentralized (market) and centralized (state) mechanisms of
allocation. It is motivated by two questions
at the heart of political economy: (1) What is the appropriate role
of government in the economy? (2)
How do we explain the actual role of government in the economy?
POLI 245 International Political
Economy. Graduate seminar.
We review research on how
politics shapes the foreign economic policies of nations and the
collective policy choices of international organizations. Our
substantive domain covers three
cross-border flows and the government policies that regulate them: the
flow of goods (national
and international trade policies), the flow of capital (capital
controls, financial regulations,
exchange-rate policies, the IMF), and the flow of labor (migration
policies). We also examine
the relationship between the world economy and domestic politics:
elections, voting behavior,
public opinion, and populism. INTL 102: Economics, Politics, and
International Change: The Modern World Economy. Undergraduate
lecture. This course examines the
evolution of the world economy from the late-19th century to the
present. We describe the historical trends in the international economy
and explain the causes
and the consequences of these trends. We examine three periods: The
Golden Age (1870-1913),
which was the first modern era of economic globalization. The Golden
Age came to an end
during the Interwar Period (1919-1939), which saw nations abandon the
world economy and
turn inward behind high protectionist trade barriers and restrictions
on international capital
flows. The third period, Postwar Globalization (1945-2020), witnessed
the gradual reemergence
of the world economy. Today, that trend is threatened by right-wing
populism, trade wars, crises
in global finance, the pandemic, and supply chain disruptions.
POLI 144F: Politics of International
Trade and Finance. Undergraduate lecture. This
course explores the global integration of national economies
from a political economy
perspective: we identify the winners and losers of globalization and
analyze the politics of
foreign economic policymaking. Substantive topics include: the history
of global economic
integration, determinants of trade and exchange-rate policies,
multinational corporations,
currency crises of the 1990s, the Global Financial Crisis of 2008-09,
the Eurozone Crisis, the
role of the IMF and World Bank, and the ongoing populist backlash
against globalization.
globalization and development New
York University
Politics
V53.0795: Politics of International Trade and Finance (undergraduate).
Explores the integration of trade and financial markets from a
political economy perspective. Examines the welfare and distributional
aspects of international trade and finance as they relate to the
politics of national economic policymaking. Substantive topics include:
the winners and losers of globalization; trade and financial
globalization in historical perspective; origins and consequences of
trade policy; international capital mobility and exchange-rate
arrangements, international capital flows and developing countries;
globalization and development (Fall 2000). Politics
G53.2775: International Political Economy (graduate). Read and discuss
recent research in international political economy, with an emphasis on
directed empirical work. Covers five types of cross-border flows and
the policies that regulate them: the flow of goods (trade policy), the
flow of capital (financial and exchange rate policy), the flow and
location of production (foreign investment policy), the flow of people
(immigration policy), and the flow of pollutants (environmental
policy). Evaluates the relative explanatory power of arguments in each
policy issue area (Fall 2000). Harvard
University
Globalization
and American Foreign Economic Policy (undergraduate). Examines the
foreign economic policies of the United States in the context of
increasing economic globalization. Topics include: Globalization -
Benefits and Costs, Winners and Losers; Lessons from History;
Collective Action and Political Institutions; Determinants of Trade
Policy; Political Economy of Foreign Direct Investment and
Multinational Corporations; The International Monetary System; and
Reforming the International Financial Architecture. We also discuss
late-breaking issues. Government
3007: Graduate Research Workshop in Positive Political Economy (with
James Alt, Robert Bates, Marc Busch, and Jonathan Nagler). A year-long
graduate seminar aimed at encouraging cross-disciplinary research and
excellence in graduate training. Explores how political and economic
outcomes reflect choices constrained by institutions, as well as the
way in which specific institutions affect change more generally.
Students and faculty present work-in-progress and act as discussants
for the work of others. Emphasis on developing tools of academic
scholarship and refining output into publishable products. Government
90ap: Trade Politics in the North and South (junior seminar). Seeks to
explain the systematic differences in trade policy outcomes across
developed and developing countries, particularly with respect to
agricultural commodities. Government
3005a: Graduate Research Workshop in Comparative and International
Political Economy (with Marc Busch, Jeffry Frieden, Torben Iversen and
Lisa Martin). Encourages cross-disciplinary research and excellence in
graduate training, emphasizing the development of dissertation
proposals and offering a venue within which graduate students can
present their plans to an audience of committed and informed peers. Government
90st: The Politics of International Monetary Relations (junior
seminar). Explores the politics of alternative exchange rate policies
and regimes. Covers the classical gold standard, the Bretton Woods
system, the managed float, the EMS, and EMU. Historical
Studies A-12: International Conflicts in the Modern World (with Stanley
Hoffmann). Large introductory undergraduate course surveying the
history of international relations, from the Peloponnesian War to the
present. Political
Science 30 (UCLA): Introduction to Political Economy (undergraduate
lecture). An introduction to the economic approach to politics.
Examines political processes and the interaction between economy and
polity using the tools of modern microeconomic analysis.. Lund
University, Sweden
The
Political Economy of Globalization.
Examines the evolution of the world economy from the
late nineteenth century to the present. Describes trends in the
international economy and explains the causes and the consequences of
these trends. Students come away with the basic tools they need to
understand the global economy, and the politics of international
economic relations (Summer 2004, 2005
|
Email: jlbroz@ucsd.edu |
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