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210042 PS BAK6: Political institutions and courts (2025S)
Continuous assessment of course work
Labels
Details
Language: English
Lecturers
Classes (iCal) - next class is marked with N
- N Wednesday 19.03. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 26.03. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 02.04. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 09.04. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 30.04. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 07.05. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 14.05. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 21.05. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 28.05. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 04.06. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 11.06. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 18.06. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
- Wednesday 25.06. 16:45 - 18:15 Hörsaal 2 (H2), NIG 2.Stock
Information
Aims, contents and method of the course
This course offers an introduction to comparative politics in English. Students will learn about central political institutions across different political systems, methods used to study them empirically, the normative and policy-related implications of institutional choices and the factors that shape these choices. The main aim of the course is to enable students to rely on this knowledge to compose and answer a research question of their choosing. We will study electoral systems, parties, legislatures, governments, and courts, with a special focus on these last institutions. We will learn how different institutions constrain and incentivize political actors and influence states’ capacity for representation, policy-making, mitigation of social conflict, and citizens’ participation.Learning is divided in three phases. In the first preparatory phase students are expected to thoroughly read the required literature, which is on average two texts with about 35-40 pages per week. To facilitate the understanding of students and interaction between peers, class participants are expected to prepare at least one substantial question or comment on the required readings for each class, to be submitted to the instructor via Moodle before the class. The preparatory phase also includes reading world politics on a regular basis and relating this to the material covered in class.The second phase is class attendance, where we will discuss the mandatory readings and continue with case studies presentations and other forms of hands-on practical work. To facilitate case study discussions each student (in small groups if necessary) is expected to prepare one case study report during the semester on a given institution and a country of the student’s choice and shortly present it in class. The assignment of groups, classes, and institutions for the case study report and presentation will be decided at the beginning of the course.The third phase is reflection. As final task for the course students will be asked to prepare an empirical research question and explain why it would be interesting to investigate further and try to find an answer. This process should encourage students to think about the covered material, relate the separate pieces and find the big picture. Students will not be required to actually answer this question in full. However, to encourage interaction and creativity, students will be assigned a research question written by one of their peers and they will have to provide feedback to their peers and help them improve their question. Then, each student will find scholarly work on their original research question, and write a short paper in the form of an empirical research paper, but not including results (max. 2500 words, excluding bibliography).
Assessment and permitted materials
- 15% In-class participation : interactions in class in the form of meaningful questions and comments, in all its phases (readings discussion, case-study presentations and discussion).
- 20% Submission of comments/questions on the assigned literature (10 readings): comments/questions on the reading have to be submitted via Moodle before each class.
- 20% Case-study report and short presentation: 500 words written report on the features of the institutions covered in class for a country of student’s own choice. Each student will be assigned to a group to write one report during the course of the semester and prepare a short presentation (10 minutes max.) of it to launch class discussion. Students should upload their case-study report on Moodle by Tuesday 20h00 of the week to which they are assigned to submit. Further guidelines will be provided in class and on Moodle.
- 10% Research question and motivation (500 words): students will have to elaborate a research question inspired by the readings and classes on a topic of their choice. The research question has to be operationalizable (i.e., it should be possible to answer it after choosing an appropriate method to investigate it).
- 5% Peer-review of the research question (200 words): students will be randomly assigned another students’ research question and will have to provide peer-review feedback to their colleague (instructor in copy).
- 30% Short empirical research paper (2500 words): students will then have to develop a short literature review on the topic of their research question and develop the starting blocks of their research paper (RQ, hypotheses, methods, operationalization), without producing, analyzing and discussing their results. The literature should include at least 20 scientific journal articles, chapters or books and strictly follow the APSA reference style (use of bibliographic management software like Zotero is allowed). Guidelines on the task will be provided on Moodle and in class.The use of AI and PlagiarismReading and writing academic texts (in English) and understanding empirical data are skills you should learn in this class. You can enhance academic skills mainly through practice: Make sure you develop your writing and analytic skills before relying on text-generative AI. In this class, the following rules apply:
• You can use AI to brainstorm ideas, but try to practice your own analytic skills and always question the suggestions.
• You have to search for relevant literature yourself. You have to read all literature you use and cite yourself. Use the academic abstract written by authors as a summary. You can translate the texts you need to read with tools if necessary, so that you can understand it better. Try to practice your English reading skills as much as possible.
• You have to draft all text you write yourself in English. You can use AI to enhance your writing (e.g. Grammarly) after drafting the text. You can use tools for translating certain words or expressions, but not full paragraphs.
• You have to document all steps when you use AI or other tools to help you.
• Plagiarism and ghostwriting are strictly forbidden. If doubts of improper use of AI or plagiarism arise, students could be asked to provide an oral discussion of their written workAll course materials can be found on Moodle. The syllabus contains mandatory readings and additional readings that students can read if they want to explore further the empirical literature on the topic.
- 20% Submission of comments/questions on the assigned literature (10 readings): comments/questions on the reading have to be submitted via Moodle before each class.
- 20% Case-study report and short presentation: 500 words written report on the features of the institutions covered in class for a country of student’s own choice. Each student will be assigned to a group to write one report during the course of the semester and prepare a short presentation (10 minutes max.) of it to launch class discussion. Students should upload their case-study report on Moodle by Tuesday 20h00 of the week to which they are assigned to submit. Further guidelines will be provided in class and on Moodle.
- 10% Research question and motivation (500 words): students will have to elaborate a research question inspired by the readings and classes on a topic of their choice. The research question has to be operationalizable (i.e., it should be possible to answer it after choosing an appropriate method to investigate it).
- 5% Peer-review of the research question (200 words): students will be randomly assigned another students’ research question and will have to provide peer-review feedback to their colleague (instructor in copy).
- 30% Short empirical research paper (2500 words): students will then have to develop a short literature review on the topic of their research question and develop the starting blocks of their research paper (RQ, hypotheses, methods, operationalization), without producing, analyzing and discussing their results. The literature should include at least 20 scientific journal articles, chapters or books and strictly follow the APSA reference style (use of bibliographic management software like Zotero is allowed). Guidelines on the task will be provided on Moodle and in class.The use of AI and PlagiarismReading and writing academic texts (in English) and understanding empirical data are skills you should learn in this class. You can enhance academic skills mainly through practice: Make sure you develop your writing and analytic skills before relying on text-generative AI. In this class, the following rules apply:
• You can use AI to brainstorm ideas, but try to practice your own analytic skills and always question the suggestions.
• You have to search for relevant literature yourself. You have to read all literature you use and cite yourself. Use the academic abstract written by authors as a summary. You can translate the texts you need to read with tools if necessary, so that you can understand it better. Try to practice your English reading skills as much as possible.
• You have to draft all text you write yourself in English. You can use AI to enhance your writing (e.g. Grammarly) after drafting the text. You can use tools for translating certain words or expressions, but not full paragraphs.
• You have to document all steps when you use AI or other tools to help you.
• Plagiarism and ghostwriting are strictly forbidden. If doubts of improper use of AI or plagiarism arise, students could be asked to provide an oral discussion of their written workAll course materials can be found on Moodle. The syllabus contains mandatory readings and additional readings that students can read if they want to explore further the empirical literature on the topic.
Minimum requirements and assessment criteria
This course is held in English. Students must be able and willing to read and understand academic literature in English and to follow and take part in a discussion in English. Students also must submit their coursework in English. Submission in other language will not be accepted and the assignment will be considered as non-submitted.
Attendance is required in the first session and, overall, not more than two classes can be missed (course with continuous assessment ‘Prüfungsimmanente Lehrveranstaltung, pi LV’).
Students who miss the first session without previously contacting the instructor with a valid justification (e.g., medical note) will be deregistered.Grade list:
87 – 100 points: Very Good (1)
75 – 86 points: Good (2)
63 – 74 points: Satisfactory (3)
50 – 62 points: Sufficient (4)
0 – 49 points: Fail (5)
Attendance is required in the first session and, overall, not more than two classes can be missed (course with continuous assessment ‘Prüfungsimmanente Lehrveranstaltung, pi LV’).
Students who miss the first session without previously contacting the instructor with a valid justification (e.g., medical note) will be deregistered.Grade list:
87 – 100 points: Very Good (1)
75 – 86 points: Good (2)
63 – 74 points: Satisfactory (3)
50 – 62 points: Sufficient (4)
0 – 49 points: Fail (5)
Examination topics
The weekly questions/comments on readings must bring a substantial reflection or debate related with the topic of the reading and theme of upcoming session. Further details will be provided in the first session.Deadlines:
- Weekly questions/comments on readings: by Wednesday (16:00) before each session
- Research question: 29 April 2025
- Feedback for peer-review: 13 May 2025
- Final paper: 27 June 2025
- Weekly questions/comments on readings: by Wednesday (16:00) before each session
- Research question: 29 April 2025
- Feedback for peer-review: 13 May 2025
- Final paper: 27 June 2025
Reading list
Textbook:
Caramani, D. (2023) Comparative politics. Sixth edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780192846051.001.0001In addition to chapters from the textbook, this course will include empirical research articles on the topic of each class. The full reading list can be found in the syllabus.
Caramani, D. (2023) Comparative politics. Sixth edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780192846051.001.0001In addition to chapters from the textbook, this course will include empirical research articles on the topic of each class. The full reading list can be found in the syllabus.
Association in the course directory
Last modified: Tu 14.01.2025 15:06