PSCI 368
Identity Politics: Conflicts in Bosnia, Israel-Palestine, Northern Ireland, & South Africa Spring 2020
Division II
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Identities have been either the stakes, or the guise taken by other kinds of conflicts, in Bosnia, Israel-Palestine, Northern Ireland, and South Africa for centuries. They have led to, or expressed, political divisions, clashing loyalties, and persistent and sometimes consuming violence. They also have produced attempts by both internal and external actors to resolve the issues. This research seminar will engage the origins of the conflicts and the role of identities in them, the role of disputes about sovereign power in creating and intensifying them, the strategies for reconciling them that are adopted domestically and internationally, the deals that have been struck or have not been struck to bring peace in these societies, and the outcomes of the various efforts in their contemporary politics. The course will begin by reading about both the general theoretical issues raised by conflicts in these “divided societies” and various responses to them. After familiarizing ourselves with what academic and policy literatures have to say about them, we then will read about the histories and contemporary politics in each society. With that as background, students will choose an aspect or aspects of these conflicts as a subject for their individual research.
The Class: Format: seminar
Limit: 15
Expected: 15
Class#: 3906
Grading: no pass/fail option, no fifth course option
Requirements/Evaluation: one 7- to 10-page paper and one 20- to 25-page research paper
Prerequisites: Political Science majors
Enrollment Preferences: Political Science majors or permission of instructor
Distributions: Division II
Attributes: PSCI Comparative Politics Courses

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