The students will acquaint themselves with basic foreign policy decision-making models; learn to apply this knowledge to the composition of foreign policy recommendations, and familiarise themselves with foreign policy decision-making by means of participating in a simulation game.
Contents
Foreign policy as a research focus, comparative policy approaches to foreign policy decision-making, practical background of foreign policy analysis, practical background of foreign policy decision-making, case studies, future scenarios.
Teaching language
English
Modes of study
Option
1
Available for:
Degree Programme Students
Other Students
Open University Students
Doctoral Students
Exchange Students
Lectures + examParticipation in course work
In
English
Open for all RES students (international relations students have primacy), course is held in connection to the autumn school in Tampere (2013), spring school in Petrozavodsk (2014).
Evaluation
and evaluation criteria
Numeric 1-5.
mastery of concepts and theories, and independent thinking and discussion as evinced in classroom work and exam
Study materials
- Allison, Graham & Philip Zelikow (1999). Essence of Decision: Explaining the Cuban Missile Crisis. New York: Longman.
- Hybel, Alex (1990). How Leaders Reason: U.S. Intervention in the Caribbean Basin and Latin America. Cambridge, Mass.: Basil Blackwell.
- Technical assignments for policy recommendations composition, rules of simulation game to be distributed to students via e-mail