PSCI 280
Silicon Valley: Digital Transformation and Democracy
Spring 2023
Division II
Writing Skills
This is not the current course catalog
Class Details
Nearly every country in the world seeks to drive economic growth by promoting digital technologies. The universal model is Silicon Valley. In this tutorial, students will examine the origins of the Silicon Valley model and other countries’ attempts to emulate it. Departing from “just so” stories of technological determinism, we take up the lens of comparative political economy to investigate the politics that allowed US tech firms to shape economic policy to meet their interests. It is no accident that tech became a symbol for economic growth in the 1970s, precisely when it also began to build powerful alliances in Washington. After investigating the origins of the Silicon Valley model, we trace attempts to adopt it in Europe and Asia, which highlight the model’s political contingencies and some of the more salient conflicts over the tech sector. We focus on the ways in which the Silicon Valley model can threaten social welfare through economic inequality and precarious employment, and engage a variety of perspectives, including workplace ethnography, to examine these threats, as well as potential regulatory responses. The course concludes by considering what policies could be appropriate for supporting, while also regulating, the tech sector in the twenty-first century.
The Class:
Format: tutorial
Limit: 10
Expected: 10
Class#: 3919
Grading: no pass/fail option, no fifth course option
Limit: 10
Expected: 10
Class#: 3919
Grading: no pass/fail option, no fifth course option
Requirements/Evaluation:
Five 5-page papers; five 2-page responses; participation
Prerequisites:
One introductory course in political science and/or permission of the instructor.
Enrollment Preferences:
Preference will be given to sophomores and juniors majoring in PSCI and POEC.
Distributions:
Division II
Writing Skills
WS Notes:
Students will write essays each week. In addition, students will read each others' work and engage in structured critique.
Attributes:
POEC Comparative POEC/Public Policy Courses
PSCI Comparative Politics Courses
PSCI Comparative Politics Courses
Class Grid
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HEADERS
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CLASSESColumn header 2DREQColumn header 3INSTRUCTORSColumn header 4TIMESColumn header 5CLASS#
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PSCI 280 - T1 (S) TUT Silicon Valley
PSCI 280 - T1 (S) TUT Silicon ValleyDivision II Writing SkillsTBA3919