UnivIS
Informationssystem der Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg © Config eG 
FAU Logo
  Sammlung/Stundenplan    Modulbelegung Home  |  Rechtliches  |  Kontakt  |  Hilfe    
Suche:      Semester:   
 
 Darstellung
 
Druckansicht

 
 
 Außerdem im UnivIS
 
Vorlesungs- und Modulverzeichnis nach Studiengängen

 
 
Veranstaltungskalender

Stellenangebote

Möbel-/Rechnerbörse

 
 
Vorlesungsverzeichnis >> Philosophische Fakultät und Fachbereich Theologie (Phil) >>

  Global Norm Diffusion in East Asia (AER I)

Dozent/in
Prof. Dr. Howard Loewen

Angaben
Proseminar
2 SWS, ECTS-Studium
für Anfänger geeignet, Bachelor, Sprache Englisch, Anmeldung per Mail: Howard.Loewen@fau.de 4 ECTS (alte PO), 5 ECTS (neue PO). In order to participate it is necessary to apply personally (e.g. via E-Mail) to the lecturer.
Zeit und Ort: Mi 14:15 - 15:45, 00.4 PSG

Voraussetzungen / Organisatorisches
It is expected that students will attend weekly seminar meetings regularly and prepare necessary reading matters independently. Furthermore, the successful passing requires a presentation as well as the production of scientific paper within the thematic frame of the course.

Inhalt
East Asia is the economic powerhouse of the world economy. The respective states and national economies are deeply interconnected with each other and with other world regions such as Europe and the Americas. As such East Asian states share an interest with their counterparts from the West to manage interdependencies in various issue areas not only in their respective region but also on the global level of cooperation. In fact, we see a fair amount of engagement of Asian states (China, Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Japan, South Korea) and Asian regional institutions (ASEAN, ASEAN+3 etc.) with global governance regimes such as the WTO, the IMF, the UN and G-20. But what happens exactly when global norms meet regional institutions and states in East Asia? This seminar seeks to answer this question by applying specific middle-range theories of International Relations such as norm localization, norm diffusion and institutional interplay to instances of norm interaction in the issue areas of economics (trade, finances) and security. The main theoretical premise of this seminar is that global norms interact with regional and national systems and are altered according to respective Asian preferences. This produces feedback loops that also impact on the global governance system.

Empfohlene Literatur
Oberthür, Sebastian / Gehring, Thomas (2011), Institutional Interaction: Ten Years of Scholarly Development, in: Sebastian Oberthür and Olav Schramm Stocke (eds.): Managing Institutional Complexity. Regime Interplay and Global Environmental Change, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 25-58; Prantl, Jochen/Ryoko, Nakano (2011), Global Norm Diffusion in East Asia: How China and Japan Implement the Responsibility to Protect, International Relations, June, Vol. 25: pp. 204-223; Archay, Amitav (2002), How ideas spread: whose norms matter? Norm localization and institutional change in Asian regionalism. International organization 58 (02), pp. 239-275.

Zusätzliche Informationen
Maximale Teilnehmerzahl: 20

Institution: Institut für Politische Wissenschaft
UnivIS ist ein Produkt der Config eG, Buckenhof