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Comparative Government - Processes

Overview

Module description

This module introduces you to the comparative study of political processes. It focuses on a number of states from Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas, including large and small, rich and poor countries, democracies, one-party systems and theocratic states, monarchies and republics, unitary and federal systems.

Subjects covered include political parties, electoral systems, political movements and political communication.

Indicative module syllabus

  • Political culture, political trust, representative democracy/deliberative democracy
  • Political participation and political parties
  • Elections, voters, referendums
  • Policy-making, public policy, e-democracy

Learning objectives

By the end of this module, you will:

  • be familiar with the role of major governmental institutions and their relationship to each other
  • have a broad understanding of the diversity of political systems
  • be able to produce comparative analysis and critically analyse comparative case studies
  • have further developed research skills, making use of a wide range of sources of information on government and politics
  • be familiar with academic literature and debates about comparative government and politics
  • have fairly detailed knowledge of government and politics in several countries
  • have developed communication skills - both written and oral - in presenting ideas and analysis of contemporary governments.