SELECTED SYLLABI

You'll find below links to a number of syllabi (for political science courses mostly) which I downloaded off the internet. Some links to various other collections of (mainly political science) syllabi are also given here.  To find syllabi for diplomatic history courses, check the course materials subpage from Sarantakes website and the SHAFR syllabus bank. Various other collections of syllabi are available online.  See, for example, the Miller Center (Dave Robertson) list of syllabi on international relations, or the collection of syllabi relating to German history generated by the H-German syllabus contest. Some of these syllabi—for example, Margaret Anderson’s syllabus for a course on the “History and Historiography of the German Problem”—are really superb.

You can also locate syllabi by using Dan Cohen’s Syllabus Finder, an online search engine.  The best way to use this search engine, in my experience, is to search for the title of a book likely to show up in the syllabus of a course dealing with a particular subject.  This search engine currently (December 2006) goes through “775,727 syllabi at the Center for History and New Media and over 500,000 syllabi” available through Google.

Or you might want to use Google to search for syllabi yourself.  Click into the advanced search window, limit your search to the edu domain and to files in pdf or doc format, and include as search terms a short version of the title of a particular book or article that you would expect to find in the sort of syllabus you’re interested in.  You might try to guess what the sort of course you’re interested in would be called and then search for keywords or phrases likely to be found in a such a course title. 

A list of history department websites is available online.  A list of political science department websites is also on the internet; for another list, click here.  Those lists can help you identify syllabi.  Often a department website will include links to that department’s course offerings and the course webpages will have links to syllabi.  Or you could click into a list of instructors teaching in a particular department; those lists are often broken down by field and instructors’ webpages will often have links to webpages for the courses they’re teaching.  Sometimes syllabi will be linked directly to an instructor’s webpage.

Some of the syllabi listed below are already a little out of date.  To get more recent versions, just do a Google search for the title plus the instructor’s name, if necessary limiting it to a particular site or domain (e.g., “harvard.edu”).  

 

I. General International Relations Courses (various levels, but mostly courses for beginning graduate students; listed alphabetically by last name of instructor)

Theories of Security in World Politics (Deborah Avant, GWU, 2002)

International Politics and Public Policy (Matthew Baum, Harvard—JFK School, 2009)

Foundations of International Relations Theory (Andrew Bennett, Georgetown, 2001)

International Relations History and Theory (Hein Goemans, Rochester, 2008)

International Politics (Robert Jervis, Columbia, 2000) (introductory course)

International Relations Theory (Stephan Haggard, UC San Diego, 2003)

Global Politics in the Post-Cold War World (Huntington, Harvard, 2003)

Seminar in International Politics (Robert Jervis, Columbia, 1998)

Theories of International Relations (Robert Jervis, Columbia, 1997)

Theories of War and Peace (Jack Levy, Rutgers, 2003). A very extensive 97-page syllabus. Links to other syllabi at various levels, some quite extensive, are given on the courses and syllabi page of Levy's website.

Introduction to International Relations (Charles Lipson, Chicago, 1999)

International Relations: Perspectives on Conflict and Cooperation (Charles Lipson, Chicago)

Realism (John Mearsheimer, Chicago, 2006)

Field Seminar on International Relations (Moravcsik and Stam, Harvard and Dartmouth, 2004). For links to other Moravcsik syllabi (including very useful ones on European integration and IPE in general), see the teaching page on his website

International Conflict (Dan Reiter, Emory. 1999)

Conceptual Foundations of International Politics (C. Roberts, Columbia SIPA, Summer 2001)

International Relations Theory (Scott Sagan, Stanford, 2003)

Theories of International Relations (Kenneth Schultz, UCLA, 2004)

Conflict and Peace (Randall Schweller, Ohio State, 2002)

Contemporary Issues of World Order (Jack Snyder, Columbia, 2000)

Theories of International Relations (Arthur Stein, UCLA, 2007) A very useful 18-page syllabus, with all sorts of important information for beginning graduate students in IR.

Causes and Prevention of War: Theory and Method (Stephen Van Evera, MIT, 2001). An extraordinary 35-page handout, more an introduction to the field than a syllabus in the usual sense.

Bargaining, Diplomacy and International Conflict (Robert Walker, Washington University, 2007)

International Relations: Theory and Practice (Stephen Walt, Harvard—JFK School, 2008)

 

Note also the reading list for the graduate exam in international relations (with sections on security and IPE), University of Chicago, 2004, and the international relations reading list (Yale, 2005).

 

II. Security Studies

The Philip Merrill Center for Strategic Strategic at SAIS has created a “master list of syllabi in strategic studies”;  that collection is available by clicking here. Eliot Cohen, the Director of the Merrill Center, has made a number of his own syllabi available over the internet:

Eliot Cohen syllabi:

Soldiers, Statesmen, and the Use of Force (2000)
Strategy and Policy (2001)
Research Seminar (2001)
War in the Modern World (2002) (pdf)
Understanding Military Technology (2002) (pdf)

            See also:

            Nuclear Weapons (Kyle Beardsley, Emory, 2008)

            War, Peace and Strategy (Richard Betts, Columbia, 2000)

            International Security (Alexander Downes, Duke, 2009)

            Strategy and Arms Control Reconsidered: Missile Defense, Nuclear Proliferation and U.S. National Security Policy during the 1960s (Frank Gavin, Texas, 2006)

            Strategic Studies Seminar (Avery Goldstein, Univ. of Penna., 2001) (pdf)

 

            Summer Workshop on Analysis of Military Operations and Strategy (SWAMOS) syllabus (2004).   

 

 

III. International Political Economy; International Law, European Integration, Human Rights

A collection of syllabi for courses dealing with human rights issues is available on UC Berkeley’s Institute of  International Studies website: IIS human rights syllabus bank.

 

International Political Economy (Lukauskas, Columbia, 2004)

The Modern World Economy, 1870-2000 (Frieden, Harvard, 2000)

International Political Economy (Ferraro, Mt. Holyoke)

International Law and International Relations (Slaughter, Harvard, 1999) (pdf)

International Law and Organisations for Diplomatic and International Studies (Henn, Birmingham, 2004)

The Political Economy of European Integration (Ellison, UCLA, 2001)

Economics and Security (Rosecrance, Harvard—JFK School, 2008)

The Politics of the European Union (A. Sbraglia, Pitt, 2007)

International Political Economy (Stearns and Hudson, Birmingham, 2004)

International Political Economy (Moravcsik and Broz, 1999)

 

 

IV. Methods

In this area as well, a collection of syllabi is available on the internet: CQRM (Consortium for Qualitative Research Methods) syllabus bank. Links to about 40 syllabi as of August 2004. Note also:

Research Methods:  Qualitative Inference (Robert Keohane, Princeton, 2007)

Methods of Political Analysis (Moracsik and Hall, Harvard, 2002)

 

 

V. Specific Countries, Regions, and Topics

            A. United States

            U.S. Foreign Policy (R. Betts, Columbia, 2000)

            Contemporary U.S. Foreign Policy (R. Lieber, Georgetown, 2004)

            American Foreign Policy: Past, Present and Future (S. Van Evera, MIT, 2005) (31-page syllabus; includes extensive bibliography)

            American Foreign Policy: Theory and Method (S. Van Evera, MIT, 2004) (35 pages long)

 

B. Russia

            The Politics of Russia (D. Treisman, UCLA, 2000)

            Russia after Communism (Fish, Berkeley, 2002)

 

C. China

            International Relations of China (R. Baum, UCLA, 2000)

            Chinese Security and Foreign Policy (S. Han, Yonsei University, 2005)

 

D. Middle East

            Syllabi for Israel Studies Courses (American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise), including (among others):

                        The Arab (Jewish)- Israel Conflict (David Tal, Syracuse University, 2006)

                        The United States and the Middle East (A. Ben-Zvi, Georgetown, 2006)

                        The Arab-Israeli Conflict and the Peace Process (A. Ben-Zvi, Georgetown, 2006)

                        International Politics in the Middle East (Carol Saivetz, Harvard, 2003)

                        Theories of International Relations and Realities in the Middle East (A. Kacowicz, Georgetown, 2003)

                        Negotiating Middle East Peace (A. Kacowicz, Georgetown, 2003)

                        Arab-Israeli Relations (I. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania, 2004)                       

            International Politics of the Middle East (Zeev Maoz, UC Davis, 2006) (original link) (course website)

            The Arab-Israeli Conflict (Zeev Maoz, UC Davis, 2006) (original link)

            Insurgency and Counterinsurgency in the Greater Middle East (Hashim, Harvard, 2006)

 

E. Terrorism

            Terrorism, Security, and Intelligence (Richard Clarke and Rand Beers, Kennedy School, Harvard, 2005)

            International Terrorism (Chaim Kaufmann, Lehigh, 2005)

           

F. Globalization

            Globalization (S. Berger, MIT, 2002)

 

G. Other

            Development of the Modern State (Hall and Ertman, Harvard, 1999)