Serial Number
38015
Course Number
PS2003
Course Identifier
302 24630
- Class 02
- 2 Credits
Preallocated
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE,POLITICAL THEORY DIVISION / DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION DIVISION / DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS DIVISION
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE,POLITICAL THEORY DIVISION
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION DIVISION
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS DIVISION
Preallocated- HUANG-TING YAN
- View Courses Offered by Instructor
COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
- Mon 8, 9
社科201
Type 2
100 Student Quota
NTU 100
No Specialization Program
- English
- NTU COOL
- Core Capabilities and Curriculum Planning
- NotesThe course is conducted in English。
- Limits on Course Adding / Dropping
Restriction: students with an even student ID number
NTU Enrollment Status
Enrolled0/100Other Depts0/20Remaining0Registered0- Course DescriptionThe aim of this course is to introduce the fundamental concepts and research directions of comparative government and politics, and to employ these methods and concepts to examine the political structure of various governments. To do so, we begin by examining some of the literature on concepts: What is comparative politics? The course then proceeds to explore research methods of comparative politics to build students’ basic abilities to engage in comparative political research. Subsequently, the course examines diverse political systems and structures, including democracies and autocracies, constitutional design, electoral systems, and party systems from a cross-national perspective. The course in the upcoming semester will examine the impact of institutions on the operation of constitutional organs (governments and parliaments) and their interrelationship, specifically the triangular relationship between the president, the prime minister and the government, and the parliament. Finally, the course examines how institutions affect diverse outcomes, including but not limited to government survival, political trust, economic development, welfare and health, political conflict, and regime transitions. This course will not introduce the governments of individual countries, but will incorporate these cases into various topics for comparison. The TA will assist students in the actual operation of statistical software with respect to regression-based methods and qualitative comparative analysis
- Course ObjectiveIn this course you will: acquire a strong understanding of basic research methods of comparative politics. become familiar with political institutions from a cross-national perspective. learn about how institutions impact the operation of constitutional organs and the relationship between them. learn about how institutions impact political and economic outcomes. apply the required knowledge to practical research.
- Course Requirement Assignments (75%): each assignment is worth 15%. In class final exam (25%): it is not designed to be difficult but to make sure that you understand the basic conceptual and theoretical ideas expressed in the required readings.
- Expected weekly study hours before and/or after class2/4
- Office Hour
I will hold office hours on Monday from 11:00 – 13:00 in his office in room 832. If you need to schedule a time to meet outside of the scheduled office hours, please email me directly - Designated ReadingThis course does not follow a textbook approach. Students are cordially invited to purchase a comparative politics textbook if they so desire. Instead, weekly reading will be organised as a coursepack comprising a collection of articles and book chapters that can be individually downloaded from the course website
- References待補
- Grading
75% Assignments
25% Final exam
- Adjustment methods for students
Adjustment Method Description D1 由師生雙方議定
Negotiated by both teachers and students
- Make-up Class Information
- Course Schedule
9/01Week 1 9/01 Introduction 9/08Week 2 9/08 Comparative Research Design (I): Causality, Counterfactuals and Causal Inference 9/15Week 3 9/15 Comparative Research Design (II): MSSD and MDSD 9/22Week 4 9/22 Comparative Research Design (III): Regression-based Methods 9/29Week 5 9/29 Holiday 10/06Week 6 10/06 Holiday 10/13Week 7 10/13 Comparative Research Design (III): Regression-based Methods 10/20Week 8 10/20 Comparative Research Design (IV): Quasi-Experimental Designs 10/27Week 9 10/27 Comparative Research Design (V): Causal Combination and Qualitative Comparative Analysis 11/03Week 10 11/03 Comparative Research Design (V): Causal Combination and Qualitative Comparative Analysis 11/10Week 11 11/10 Comparative Research Design (VI): Mechanisms and Causal Explanation 11/17Week 12 11/17 Comparative Political Institutions (I): Democracy and Authoritarianism 11/24Week 13 11/24 Comparative Political Institutions (II): Constitutional Design 12/01Week 14 12/01 Comparative Political Institutions (III): Electoral Systems 12/08Week 15 12/08 Comparative Political Institutions (IV): Party Systems 12/15Week 16 12/15 In-class Final Exam