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National Security Strategy
POLI 142J
| Course Mechanics
| Lectures
| Documents
| Fun
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Course Mechanics
- GET THE ESSAY PROMPT!
- Course Syllabus
- Schedule of Readings
- Midterm Examination: study guide, sample
- Final Examination: study guide, sample
- Essay: grading criteria, sample,
and real world examples from the Policy Planning Staff and
the CIA
- Course Grade Distributions: 2004,
2005,
2007,
2008,
2010,
- Course Evaluations: 2002,
2004,
2005,
2007,
2008
- Some pretty funny entries at ratemyprofessors.com
- Time-wasting but obligatory clips
GET THE ESSAY PROMPT!
You can find a copy of the Fall 2014 essay
here.
You can use the chart below to calculate the essay grade yourself. Let's say you received X=22 points total on the essay.
The percentage score is Y=(100*X)/24=(100*22)/24=91.67. Look up the letter grade for the range in which your percentage score
falls. For example, 91.67% is in the range 90% -- 94%, for which the grade letter is A-. Hence, if you scored
22 points on the essay, your grade is A-.
Letter Grade | Percent Ranges |
A+ | >= 100% |
A | 95% -- 99% |
A- | 90% -- 94% |
B+ | 85% -- 89% |
B | 80% -- 84% |
B- | 70% -- 79% |
C+ | 65% -- 69% |
C | 60% -- 64% |
C- | 50% -- 59% |
D | 40% -- 49% |
F | 0% -- 39% |
The Lectures
I strongly advise you to come to class and take notes. I will provide you with (very helpful) lecture outlines in class.
You will also find that reading on your own is one thing, and having someone point out the connections, place material in
context, and draw contemporary comparisons is something else altogether. You will learn better by listening actively and
then reading. Still, the following are fairly complete lectures. Do not print these until a few days after I give the
corresponding lecture in class because I am quite likely to update these on the basis of feedback I receive.
Do not forget to consult the handy maps!
A. Coercive Diplomacy and Military Power
- The Diplomacy of Strategic Coercion
- Games and Information
- Strategies in Extensive Form Games
- Best Responses and Nash Equilibrium
- Nash Equilibrium in Mixed Strategies
- Credibile Moves and Perfect Equilibrium
- Incomplete Information and Sequential Equilibrium
- Revealing and Eliciting Information
- Credible Commitments in Deterrence and Compellence
- Rationalist Theories of War
B. Evolution of US Strategic Doctrine
- The Nature of the Soviet Union, 1917-1945
- The Strategy of Containment
- Sword and Shield, 1945-1950
- Thermonuclear War and Nuclear Deterrence
- Limited War and Korea, 1950-1953
- The New Look, 1953-1960
- Flexible Response, 1961-1968
- The Cuban/Caribbean Missile Crisis, October 1962
- The Vietnam War, 1954-1975
- The Rise and Fall of Dètente, 1971-1980
- Evil Empire, 1980-1991
- New World Order, 1992-2000
Documents and Supplementary Material
A few lists that you may need to refer to, plus a handful of helpful materials.
Decompression & Fun