210124 SE M9: Osteuropastudien (2021W)
Comparative Capitalism: Eastern Europe in Comparative Perspective (engl.)
Prüfungsimmanente Lehrveranstaltung
Labels
GEMISCHT
Eine Anmeldung über u:space innerhalb der Anmeldephase ist erforderlich! Eine nachträgliche Anmeldung ist NICHT möglich.
Studierende, die der ersten Einheit unentschuldigt fernbleiben, verlieren ihren Platz in der Lehrveranstaltung.Achten Sie auf die Einhaltung der Standards guter wissenschaftlicher Praxis und die korrekte Anwendung der Techniken wissenschaftlichen Arbeitens und Schreibens.
Plagiierte und erschlichene Teilleistungen führen zur Nichtbewertung der Lehrveranstaltung (Eintragung eines 'X' im Sammelzeugnis).
Die Lehrveranstaltungsleitung kann Studierende zu einem notenrelevanten Gespräch über erbrachte Teilleistungen einladen.
Studierende, die der ersten Einheit unentschuldigt fernbleiben, verlieren ihren Platz in der Lehrveranstaltung.Achten Sie auf die Einhaltung der Standards guter wissenschaftlicher Praxis und die korrekte Anwendung der Techniken wissenschaftlichen Arbeitens und Schreibens.
Plagiierte und erschlichene Teilleistungen führen zur Nichtbewertung der Lehrveranstaltung (Eintragung eines 'X' im Sammelzeugnis).
Die Lehrveranstaltungsleitung kann Studierende zu einem notenrelevanten Gespräch über erbrachte Teilleistungen einladen.
An/Abmeldung
Hinweis: Ihr Anmeldezeitpunkt innerhalb der Frist hat keine Auswirkungen auf die Platzvergabe (kein "first come, first served").
- Anmeldung von Mo 06.09.2021 08:00 bis Mo 20.09.2021 08:00
- Anmeldung von Mi 22.09.2021 08:00 bis Mi 29.09.2021 08:00
- Abmeldung bis Fr 22.10.2021 23:59
Details
max. 50 Teilnehmer*innen
Sprache: Englisch
Lehrende
Termine (iCal) - nächster Termin ist mit N markiert
Sobald die Teilnehmer*innenzahl feststeht, werden die Teilnehmer*innen nach Alphabet in zwei Gruppen geteilt. Diese wechseln sich in Folge wöchentlich mit Präsenz- und Onlinelehre ab. Sie sollten entsprechend alle zwei Wochen an die Universität kommen.
Dienstag
05.10.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
12.10.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
19.10.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
09.11.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
16.11.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
23.11.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
30.11.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
07.12.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
14.12.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
11.01.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
18.01.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Dienstag
25.01.
09:45 - 11:15
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Hörsaal 1 (H1), NIG 2.Stock
Information
Ziele, Inhalte und Methode der Lehrveranstaltung
The seminar locates the East European political economies within major topics, debates, and approaches in comparative political economy. Many of the concepts and theories of comparative political economy have been developed to explain divergence and convergence among advanced capitalist countries, while neglecting the east. At the same time, the specific challenges of the East European socio-economic transformations after the fall of the wall have led to intense efforts at theorizing and explaining the specificities of East European market economies. Building on both strands in the literature, the seminar traces the emergence of East European capitalism, its varieties, and its challenges after the Great Financial Crisis. Throughout the course, Eastern European political economies will be compared to each other, to other European, and non-European political economies.
Art der Leistungskontrolle und erlaubte Hilfsmittel
• Seminar presence and participation
• Three position papers
• Four question papers
• Small research paper
• Three position papers
• Four question papers
• Small research paper
Mindestanforderungen und Beurteilungsmaßstab
• Seminar presence and participation (students must not miss more than 2 seminars): 15%
• Three position papers: 30%
• Four question papers: 20%
• Research paper (approximately 3000 words, excluding the biography): 25%
• Three position papers: 30%
• Four question papers: 20%
• Research paper (approximately 3000 words, excluding the biography): 25%
Prüfungsstoff
seminar readings
Literatur
• Menz, Georg. 2017. Comparative Political Economy: Contours of a Subfield. First edition. Oxford University Press. Chapter 2: “The turn towards Comparative Capitalisms and the Relationship with IPE”
• Hall, Peter A., and David Soskice, eds. 2001. Varieties of Capitalism: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage. Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press; Chapter 1
• Baccaro, Lucio, and Jonas Pontusson. 2016. “Rethinking Comparative Political Economy: The Growth Model Perspective.” Politics & Society 44 (2): 175–207.
• Bohle, Dorothee and Béla Greskovits. 2009. “Varieties of Capitalism and Capitalism «tout Court».” European Journal of Sociology 50 (03): 355–86.
• Nölke, Andreas, and Arjan Vliegenthart. 2009. “Enlarging the Varieties of Capitalism: The Emergence of Dependent Market Economies in East Central Europe.” World Politics 61 (4): 670–702.
• Bohle, Dorothee and Béla Greskovits. 2007. “Neoliberalism, Embedded Neoliberalism and Neocorporatism: Towards Transnational Capitalism in Central-Eastern Europe.” West European Politics 30 (3): 443–66.
• Myant, Martin, and Jan Drahokoupil. 2011. Transition Economies: Political Economy in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons; chapter 16, “Emergent varieties of capitalism”, pp, 299-312
• Ban, Cornel and Dragos Adascalitei. 2020. The FDI-led Growth Regimes of the East-Central and the South-East European Periphery. Copenhagen Business School [wp]. CBDS Working Paper No. 2020/2.
• Rutland, Peter. 2018. “The Political Economy of Energy in Russia.” In The International Political Economy of Oil and Gas, edited by Slawomir Raszewski, 23–39. International Political Economy Series. Cham: Springer International Publishing.
• Balmaceda, Margarita M. 2015. Politics of Energy Dependency: Ukraine, Belarus, and Lithuania between Domestic Oligarchs and Russian Pressure. Reprint edition. Toronto ; Buffalo ; London: University of Toronto Press, chapter 1, “Introduction: Domestic Politics and the Management of Energy Dependency in the Former Soviet Union”, pp. 3-42.
• Epstein, Rachel A. 2014. “When Do Foreign Banks ‘Cut and Run’? Evidence from West European Bailouts and East European Markets.” Review of International Political Economy 21 (4): 847–77.
• Mabbett, Deborah, and Waltraud Schelkle. 2015. “What Difference Does Euro Membership Make to Stabilization? The Political Economy of International Monetary Systems Revisited.” Review of International Political Economy 22 (3): 508–34.
• Naczyk, Marek. 2021. “Taking Back Control: Comprador Bankers and Managerial Developmentalism in Poland.” Review of International Political Economy, 1–25
• Bluhm, Katharina, and Mihai Varga. 2020. “Conservative Developmental Statism in East Central Europe and Russia.” New Political Economy 25 (4): 642–59.
• Scheiring, Gábor. 2021. “Dependent Development and Authoritarian State Capitalism: Democratic Backsliding and the Rise of the Accumulative State in Hungary.” Geoforum, no. 124, pp. 267-278.
• Fabry, Adam. 2019. “Neoliberalism, Crisis and Authoritarian–Ethnicist Reaction: The Ascendancy of the Orbán Regime.” Competition & Change 23 (2): 165–91.
• Johnson, Juliet, and Andrew Barnes. 2015. “Financial Nationalism and Its International Enablers: The Hungarian Experience.” Review of International Political Economy 22 (3): 535–69.
• Ban, Cornel, and Dorothee Bohle. 2020. “Definancialization, Financial Repression and Policy Continuity in East-Central Europe.” Review of International Political Economy, 1–24.
• Hall, Peter A., and David Soskice, eds. 2001. Varieties of Capitalism: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage. Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press; Chapter 1
• Baccaro, Lucio, and Jonas Pontusson. 2016. “Rethinking Comparative Political Economy: The Growth Model Perspective.” Politics & Society 44 (2): 175–207.
• Bohle, Dorothee and Béla Greskovits. 2009. “Varieties of Capitalism and Capitalism «tout Court».” European Journal of Sociology 50 (03): 355–86.
• Nölke, Andreas, and Arjan Vliegenthart. 2009. “Enlarging the Varieties of Capitalism: The Emergence of Dependent Market Economies in East Central Europe.” World Politics 61 (4): 670–702.
• Bohle, Dorothee and Béla Greskovits. 2007. “Neoliberalism, Embedded Neoliberalism and Neocorporatism: Towards Transnational Capitalism in Central-Eastern Europe.” West European Politics 30 (3): 443–66.
• Myant, Martin, and Jan Drahokoupil. 2011. Transition Economies: Political Economy in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons; chapter 16, “Emergent varieties of capitalism”, pp, 299-312
• Ban, Cornel and Dragos Adascalitei. 2020. The FDI-led Growth Regimes of the East-Central and the South-East European Periphery. Copenhagen Business School [wp]. CBDS Working Paper No. 2020/2.
• Rutland, Peter. 2018. “The Political Economy of Energy in Russia.” In The International Political Economy of Oil and Gas, edited by Slawomir Raszewski, 23–39. International Political Economy Series. Cham: Springer International Publishing.
• Balmaceda, Margarita M. 2015. Politics of Energy Dependency: Ukraine, Belarus, and Lithuania between Domestic Oligarchs and Russian Pressure. Reprint edition. Toronto ; Buffalo ; London: University of Toronto Press, chapter 1, “Introduction: Domestic Politics and the Management of Energy Dependency in the Former Soviet Union”, pp. 3-42.
• Epstein, Rachel A. 2014. “When Do Foreign Banks ‘Cut and Run’? Evidence from West European Bailouts and East European Markets.” Review of International Political Economy 21 (4): 847–77.
• Mabbett, Deborah, and Waltraud Schelkle. 2015. “What Difference Does Euro Membership Make to Stabilization? The Political Economy of International Monetary Systems Revisited.” Review of International Political Economy 22 (3): 508–34.
• Naczyk, Marek. 2021. “Taking Back Control: Comprador Bankers and Managerial Developmentalism in Poland.” Review of International Political Economy, 1–25
• Bluhm, Katharina, and Mihai Varga. 2020. “Conservative Developmental Statism in East Central Europe and Russia.” New Political Economy 25 (4): 642–59.
• Scheiring, Gábor. 2021. “Dependent Development and Authoritarian State Capitalism: Democratic Backsliding and the Rise of the Accumulative State in Hungary.” Geoforum, no. 124, pp. 267-278.
• Fabry, Adam. 2019. “Neoliberalism, Crisis and Authoritarian–Ethnicist Reaction: The Ascendancy of the Orbán Regime.” Competition & Change 23 (2): 165–91.
• Johnson, Juliet, and Andrew Barnes. 2015. “Financial Nationalism and Its International Enablers: The Hungarian Experience.” Review of International Political Economy 22 (3): 535–69.
• Ban, Cornel, and Dorothee Bohle. 2020. “Definancialization, Financial Repression and Policy Continuity in East-Central Europe.” Review of International Political Economy, 1–24.
Zuordnung im Vorlesungsverzeichnis
Letzte Änderung: Fr 12.05.2023 00:19