THE PolitICS OF WESTERN EUROPE
PS3710 KEVIN DEEGAN-KRAUSE
Class Hours: TBA Class Location: TBA
Office Hours: TBA Office Location: 2053 F/AB
Web Address: http://www.clas.wayne.edu/polisci/kdk/westeurope Office Phone: 313-577-2630

Introduction

>We sometimes think best when we ask "What if?"  Kim Stanley Robinson's The Years of Rice and Salt attempts to imagine a world in which the 14th century bubonic plague killed 99% of its victims (instead of merely 30-60%).  Can we imagine a world without Europe?  More specifically, can those of us who are interested in politics imagine such a world?  Perhaps the only way we can is to understand how Europe has contributed to our understanding of power and weakness, freedom and obligation.  This course begins with the Europe of the 14th century and traces how past developments have affected politics in ways that continue to shape life not only in Europe but in the rest of the world.  As Europe struggles with its own identity and undertakes one of the most fundamental transformations in its history, we must look back in order to look forward.

Goals

The course is designed to help you achieve the following four objectives:

Methods

Every class period will involve an integrated mix of lecture and discussion. Lectures will touch on and complement the readings assigned for class. In-class discussions will tie together the lectures and readings and give you the opportunity to add your own insights about the questions we are discussing and to help you get inside the heads of the people we read about and understand why they acted as they did. The exams will give you the chance to show what you have learned (and the incentive to learn it). The five writing assignments will challenge you to think more deeply about particular topics covered in the course and to apply what you have learned to real situations. They will also help you develop your ability to construct cogent arguments and to write with clarity and precision.

Assignments

The following list of assignments and expectations should give you an idea of what you will need to do in this course and how I will evaluate your work:

Category Method of evaluation Assignment Due Value
Each Sum
Facts and Concepts I will add results from weekly tests into a single numerical score and grade it on a curve in line with the distribution of paper grades. Quizzes TBA
Application, Writing, and Research I will grade papers for responsiveness to question, quality of thesis statement, argument, evidence, organization, and grammar and syntax!   See more on how I grade. Two-page diagnostic reflection paper TBA
Three-to-four page guided paper TBA
Three-to-four page guided paper TBA
Six page research paper or Wikipedia entry TBA
Research presentation
Participation and Attendance I will evaluate your responsiveness classroom discussion Attend and participate in every class. All semester long
Overall Failure to complete any of the above assignments during the course will result in a grade of F. 100%

There are also a few other assignment-related considerations worth your attention:

The first of these weekly tests will test your ability to locate all the major countries in Europe on a blank map.
Click here for world maps in .pdf format (566KB searchable) or jpg format (154KB, not searchable) or a slightly different set of maps including including, another world map in .jpg format (50KB, not searchable) and more detailed maps of Africa and Europe, Asia and North and South America. There are also several helpful on-line geography quizzes to be found online that will test your knowledge well beyond the limited list of countries below.

Papers. Good writing is good thinking. Writing is one of the most important things you can learn while you are at Wayne State. Although this is a large class you will still have two good opportunities to practice and refine your writing.  These will determine fully half of your grade.

Content and Style. Good writing is good thinking. Writing is one of the most important things you can learn at university. Therefore, papers will be marked and graded as if this were an English class. If you are having problems, please take the opportunity to talk with me about possible remedies and I will do whatever I can to help. You can find on-line guides to writing in the English language at the Grammar and Style resources website and at Wayne's Academic Success Center on the second floor of the Undergraduate Library. There is also a very good website called "The Nuts and Bolts of College Writing" which is a companion to Michael Harvey's book of the same name, and has excellent coverage on a variety of writing questions including paper arguments, style, organization and plagiarism. I have also received the permission from a few former students to post some examples well-written student essays that I have received in the past at Wayne, in the hope that these may offer some guidance. 

If your ambition extends beyond writing correctly to writing well (and I hope it does), you cannot ask for better guides than the following two authors:

Citing your sources. In our information-based society, ideas are as precious as the gold of earlier eras. Stealing someone else's ideas is no more acceptable than stealing someone else's possessions, and it will get you in a lot of trouble. But why steal something that is already free? The only cost to you as a student for using somebody else's ideas is that you must give them appropriate credit and that is very easy to do. If you get any idea from any source, you must cite that source, even if you do not use the same wording.  In other words, you must cite the source even if you rewrite it in your own words.  Furthermore, if you use an author's specific wording for more than three words in sequence ("In the beginning...", you must put the words in quotation marks.  For more guidance, I have adapted guidelines written Dr. Noel Parker of the University of Surrey on when and why to cite others' words.  In general, please simply follow the adage: 'when in doubt, cite your source'" (Cason 1998). The previous sentence is a case in point. I found the quotation on the web-site of Prof. Jeffrey Cason at Middlebury College. If this syllabus had a section for Literature Cited, it would contain the following entry:

Cason, Jeffrey. 1998. Course Requirements. Available WWW:
http://cweb.middlebury.edu/ps103a-s98/requirements.html [Accessed 17 August 1999].

For the sake of clarity, I will require you to follow a particular format for citations. My choice is the author-date method as defined in the Chicago Manual of Style, which I have used in the example above. The format consists of a parenthetical reference within the text (Author Year of Publication, Page Number) and a full elaboration of the reference in a Literature Cited section at the end of your paper. I have put full guidelines for citation on-line, but I would also be happy to give you a printed copy.  

If you have any questions or doubts about what to cite, you must contact me before you hand in a paper with questionable references. It is better to use up a grace day or two to come up with your own ideas and properly cite those that you take from others than to risk your grade--perhaps even your college career--by needlessly using somebody else's ideas and failing to credit them.  Of course the most serious problems with citation are not accidental omissions but intentional efforts to save thought and effort by simply copying what somebody else has already done.  

The consequence of plagiarism is automatic failure

The paper assignments in this course cannot be answered by anything you can buy or copy whole from the internet or fellow students, and I have become extremely adept at identifying the sources of plagiarism.  Unfortunately, there have been enough attempts (none successful) that I must now subject papers to a random screening process involving test-based search engines and the surprisingly discerning services of the university's web-based plagiarism detector.  In the unlikely event that a student still finds it necessary to plagiarize, I will deal with such incidents in accordance with the provisions of the Student Due Process Statue specified in the university's Academic Integrity statement, which you can obtain online at: http://www.otl.wayne.edu/pdf/2006_july_aibrochure.pdf

Format. Unless you have prior approval from me, you must prepare your papers and take-home exams on a word processor in one of four formats: text (.txt), rich text (.rtf), Microsoft Word (.doc) or Word Perfect (.wpd). Papers must be double spaced, with reasonable font size (10-12) and margins (1 inch), and within the specified length guidelines. All these guidelines are there for your benefit as well as for mine. A paper that is too long bears evidence of inability to be concise and organized. A paper that is too short suggests that something is missing. Finally, think for at least a moment about aesthetics. Before submitting a paper that is messy, crammed together or otherwise unreadable, think about how it will affect the mood of your instructor--upon whose evaluation depends your grade.

Electronic Paper Submission.  Papers are due by 4:30 p.m. on the specified due date.  Unless you have discussed alternatives with me, you should submit each paper electronically through the Digital Drop Box that is available under the "Tools" section of the course page on Blackboard (http://blackboard.wayne.edu).  This will provide a formal record of the paper's submission including a time and date stamp.  It also allows you to submit your papers from home or work.  Unless we have agreed ahead of time I will not accept papers sent solely by email because there is no way to verify claims that papers have been sent.

Deadlines. Students will have a total of three days (72 hours, to be precise) of grace which can be applied in any combination to any of the first four assignments (but not to the final because I have a limited time in which to submit grades). You may allot your 72 hours among the papers in any way you want. (You can, for example, submit one 72 hours late and all of the rest on time. Or you can submit one 10 hours late, one 20 hours late and one 42 hours late. Any combination is acceptable as long as the total does not exceed 72 hours). Plan ahead, because in exchange for this flexibility, I will hold you to high standards of punctuality. Once grace time is used up, grades for late assignments immediately drop by a full letter (making a B into a C, for example) and continue to drop by one grade for each 24 hour period of lateness. There will be no exceptions, barring written evidence of trauma or tragedy. Be forewarned that papers handed in late may not be handed back to you as promptly as those handed in on time.

Evaluation. An excellent paper must demonstrate a strong argument expressed in a coherent thesis statement and developed in an organized fashion using appropriate argument and evidence.  Grammar and syntax are also crucial.  I will grade papers as if this were an English class. An abundance of grammatical and usage errors can have a severely negative effect on your grade.  If you have questions, I have prepared an extremely detailed account of how I grade written work.

Speaking Assignments. It is essential that you acquire the ability to talk about what you have learned without putting others to sleep, bewildering them, or insulting them. Those of you who have spent any time in the business and academic worlds will know that this skill is insufficiently widespread. As part of this course, I will therefore require you to give a formal presentations at the end of the semester.  Your presentation should follow the model used in business and academic settings.  If you are not familiar with that format, do not worry.  We will discuss it at great length.

Participation and Attendance.  Class attendance is mandatory. More than three absences can result in a penalty of one full letter grade. Habitual lateness is indistinguishable from absence and will incur the same penalty.  While you are in class, I expect you to be fully engaged.  This means that you must have a willingness to respond to my questions (which will be constant) and to ask questions of your own.  Unprepared rambling, stony silence, or regular absence can reduce your grade. You must also demonstrate a respect for the comments and questions of others. 

Final Grades. These depend on you, but you should know that I am a difficult grader and award grades of "A" only to work that could be regarded as exceptional in any university in the country.  I regard grades of A- and B+ as appropriate for work that is very good but not exceptional.  No student can receive a passing grade without completing all required assignments; it is not enough simply to do well on most assignments and leave one or two undone.

Accessibility

Every student should have the best possible chance to engage in learning. If you are registered with the Educational Accessibility Services office, please see me during the first week of class so that we can determine how I can help you. Please bring your paperwork from EAS to our meeting.

Books and materials

This course will make heavy use of on-line resources to save you some money, but there are two books you might wish to purchase.  Because they are not required, I cannot order them through the bookstore.  You may also want to look for them through local used book stores such as John K. King's Bookstore, 901 W. Lafayette, 961-0622, or online used or new booksellers (see the links below)

Rebirth, by Cyril Black.  I recommend this book to you if you want to learn the full historical context of what we will be discussing:

Kings or People, Reinhard Bendix's .  The readings are on-line, but I suspect you would be more comfortable with the actual book.

This is, of course, not the only material we will be using.  All the rest of the materials used in the course are available in three forms:

You are responsible for downloading or photocopying the material one week before it is due.  If you cannot download it or obtain a photocopy, contact me immediately so that I can find some way to get you a copy that you can read before class.

As part of the course, I will also ask you to follow contemporary political developments in the U.S. and elsewhere.  To keep you up to date, you may find it helpful to subscribe to the New York Times Online and to The Economist weekly political review.  These are free and they are not mandatory, but they are perhaps the best way to spend your precious media-time.  And while you are at it, throw your TV out of the window (after checking first to make sure that no one is standing below).

Schedule

This list represents a minimum set of readings for the course. I reserve the privilege of making additions over time, but I promise to inform you about any such changes well in advance.


Section I: Introductions

Class 1

September 2

Theme

Hello, Goodbye


Class 2

September 4

Theme

Maps and legends

Read




Write

REFLECTION PAPER due in ten days on Tuesday, September 16
For help see: Grammar and Style resources on-line
For the guidlines that I use to evaluate work, see How I grade.
.

See also


Section II. From "Then" until "Now"
European Political Ideas and Their Advocates

Class 3 & 4

September 9 and 11

Theme

Traditional authority and its discontents

Read










For Tuesday:

  • Brown, Bernard E. 2000. Comparative Politics: Notes and Readings, Fort Worth: Harcourt College Publishers, pp. 135-140
  • Bendix, Max Weber: An Intellectual Portrait, selections
  • Bendix. Kings or People, Chapter 1: Introduction
  • Bendix. Kings or People, Chapter 6: England (if posted by Friday)

For Thursday:

  • Bendix. Kings or People, Chapter 7: Kingship and Aristocracy as a Type of Rule and Chapter 8: Transformations of Western European Societies in the Sixteenth Century
  • Thomas J. Reese, S.J. The Selection of Bishops

 


Class 5 & 6

September 16 and 18 

Theme

The Rise of Liberalism

Read



For Tuesday:

For Thursday:

See also


Class 7 & 8

September 23 and 25

Theme

Liberalism's Discontents I: Labor and Social Democracy

Read

For Tuesday:

For Thursday:

See also


Class 9 & 10

September 30 and October 2

Theme

Liberalism's Discontents II: 
Conservatism, the Church and Christian Democracy

Read


























Write

For Tuesday:

For Thursday:

FIRST GUIDED PAPER due in two weeks on Tuesday, October 14
For help see: Grammar and Style resources on-line
For the guidlines that I use to evaluate work, see How I grade.
.

See also


Class 11 & 12

October 7 and 9

Theme

Liberalism and its discontents III: Nations and Nationalism

Read

For Tuesday:

For Thursday:

See also


Class 13 & 14

October 14 and 16

Theme

Liberalism's new challenges I: Fascism

Read

For Tuesday:

For Thursday:

See also


Class 15 & 16

October 21 and October 23

Theme

Liberalism's new challenges II: Communism

Read













For Tuesday:

For Thursday:

See also


Class 17 & 18

October 28 and 30

Theme

New lefts and new rights

Read














Write

For Tuesday:

For Thursday:

SECOND GUIDED PAPER due in two weeks on Tuesday, November 13
For help see: Grammar and Style resources on-line
For the guidlines that I use to evaluate work, see How I grade.

See also


Section III. Europe as a Political Entity 

Class 19 & 20

November 4 and 6

Theme

The Rise of the 'European'?

Read


For Tuesday:

For Thursday:

See also


Class 21 & 22

November 11 and 13

Theme

Toward a Wider and Deeper Union

Read

For Tuesday:

For Thursday:

Write

See also


Class 23 & 24

November 18 and 25

Theme

Welcome to Brussels: Week I

Read

For Tuesday the 18th

For Tuesday the 25th:

  • Various topical materials to be assigned
Write THIRD GUIDED PAPER due in three weeks on Wednesday, December 17
For help see: Grammar and Style resources on-line
For the guidelines that I use to evaluate work, see How I grade.

See also


Section IV: United Europe, Global Problems

Class 25 and 26

December 2 and 4

Theme

Welcome to Brussels

Read

For Tuesday:
Your task: To represent accurately your country and/or ideological faction as decisions move from the European Council to appropriate bodies within the EU institutional framework.  

Student Council of Ministers 
Country
European Parliament 
Ideological Faction
European Commission
Portfolio
Freedom, Security and Justice
Culture
Taxation
Education and Training
Economic and Monetary Union
Sport
Employment and Social Affairs
Public Health
Agriculture
Enterprise
Energy
Regional Policy
??? Elbonia  (whoever becomes Prime Minister of Elbonia may substitute Elbonia for the country assignment above)

Below are a large number of links to help you research your positions.  There is more out there, obviously, but regard this as a start.

General References on EU Enlargement from the EU itself

EU Perspective on Turkey

Turkey’s Perspective on the EU

Other Perspectives on Turkey and the EU

For Thursday:
The class will simulate the Intergovernmental Conference (ICG) called for the purposes of "to identify and come forward with recommendations on the key issues arising for the Union's future development" especially with regard to the proposed draft constitution presented by the European Convention.  In this case you will play both your country and ideology (defined above) at the same time.  I.e. Don Adams will be a Social Democrat from Germany.  Below are documents that may help you.

Sections of the constitution that open for class discussion
The whole constitution

Information about the ICG


Class 27

December 9

Theme

Now what?

Read

For Tuesday:

See also


Final

December 17
Theme

Final exam date

Hand in THIRD GUIDED PAPER
  • Step One: E-mail the file by 4:30 p.m. on December 10 
    to .

  • Step Two: :Print out a hard-copy of the exam and deliver to the Political Science Department office by 4:30 p.m. of the exam day, either in person (being sure to have it signed and dated by a member of the department staff) or through the trusty U.S. Postal Service to the following address:

Department of Political Science
Wayne State University
2040 F/AB
Detroit, MI 48220
ATTN: Kevin Deegan Krause, Comparative Politics

If any of these two steps will be a problem for you, you must let me know by the last day of class.  The broader principle here--which must be obvious--is that if you want credit for the paper, you must make sure that I act