Swedish name: Global and Regional Governance
This syllabus is valid: 2024-08-12 and until further notice
Course code: 2SV031
Credit points: 15
Education level: Second cycle
Main Field of Study and progress level:
Political Science: Second cycle, has only first-cycle course/s as entry requirements
Peace and Conflict Studies: Second cycle, has only first-cycle course/s as entry requirements
Grading scale: Three-grade scale
Responsible department: Department of Political Science
Revised by: Head of Department of Political Science, 2024-02-19
The purpose of the course is to provide both general overview and specialization in the field of global and regional governance. The course discusses contemporary theories of globalization, regionalization and multilevel governance, and addresses conditions for governance on global and regional levels as well as changes in the governing of the traditional nation-state and its democratic structures. The course aims at developing knowledge and competence relevant to employment at various administrative levels in Sweden as well as abroad. The course also prepares the students for further academic studies at the Ph.D. level.
Students who successfully complete the course are expected to be able to
90 credits in Political Science, Peace and Conflict Studies or equivalent, including a thesis 15 credits. Proficiency in English equivalent to Swedish Upper Secondary course English 6. Where the language of instruction is Swedish, applicants must prove proficiency in Swedish to the level required for basic eligibility for higher studies.
The course is largely based on students' independent studies. Forms of instruction include lectures and seminars with oral presentations and written assignments. Attendance at seminars is mandatory. The course is concluded with an individual final essay. Written feedback is offered for the final essay.
The final grade is awarded when all mandatory assignments are passed. The grade scale for the entire course is Fail (U), Pass (G) or Pass with distinction (VG). In order to be awarded Pass (G) as the final grade the student shall have been granted Pass (G) on all seminars and on the final essay. In order to be awarded Pass with distinction (VG) as the final grade the student shall have been granted Pass (G) on all seminars and Pass with distinction (VG) on the final essay.
General rules regarding examination
A student who does not meet the requirements to pass an examination can, if decided by the course instructor, be given a complementary assignment to reach the requirements to pass the examination. The complementary assignment can be individually modified to the specific requirements that the student has failed to reach, but the assignment must be of corresponding proportion to the original examination.
Ordinarily, the complementary assignment is given at the end of the course or when the grades at the original examination is announced. When the student has been given the complementary assignment, he/she should finish the assignment within ten days (not including weekends and holidays). If the student fail to finish the assignment within the required time, a new complementary assignment can only be given the next time the course is arranged, or during the two weeks of re-take exams the Department arranges every year during week 34 and 35.
If it is not possible to do complementary assignments (if so, it is stated next to each individual examination above), the student is required to do a re-take exam. The first re-take exam should be given two months after the original examination, at the latest, but no sooner than ten days after the grade on the original examination has been given (not including weekends and holidays). If the examination is given during May or June, the first re-take exam should be given no later than three months after the original examination. Two weeks of re-take exams are also arranged every year, which means complementary assignments are treated during this time independently of when the course was given. These weeks are arranged during week 34 and 35.
Students who fail an examination may retake that examination. A student has the right to request a new examiner if he/she fails two sub-course examinations (i.e. an examination and a re-take). In such cases students should contact the Director of Undergraduate Studies (Studierektor). Examination in accordance with the same syllabus as during the original examination can be guaranteed for up to two years after the student's first registration.
Transfer of Credits
Students who wish to transfer credits from other Departments or universities (Swedish or foreign) should do so in accordance to the Principal's decision "Tillgodoräknandeordning vid Umeå universitet (Dnr. 545-3317-02)".
The application must be submitted in written form. The request should specify which module or course the request applies to. An official transcript should also be submitted. The transcript must include the following information: where and when the course was given, the discipline and level of the course, total course credits and grade received. A syllabus describing the course and a list of required readings should be submitted with the request. Where applicable, written research papers should also be submitted.
Upon completion of this course, the credits can be transferred to a selective course. However it is always the responsible Department or program that determines the possibility for credit transfers and the extent of the credit transfer. The student should therefore always contact the responsible Department or program before submitting an application for credit transfers.
A written and anonymous course evaluation is given at the end of the course. During the course an oral evaluation is also arranged, and the student can also anonymously submit thoughts and opinions in digital form.
Auld G.
Confronting trade-offs and interactive effects in the choice of policy focus: Specialized versus comprehensive private governance
Included in:
Regulation & governance
2007- : 8 : pages 126-148 :
Mandatory
Rules for the world : international organizations in global politics
Barnett Michael N., Finnemore Martha
Ithaca, N.Y. : Cornell University Press : 2004 : 226 s. :
ISBN: 0-8014-8823-0 (hft.)
Mandatory
Search the University Library catalogue
Barnett Michael
Humanitarianism Transformed
Included in:
Perspectives on politics
New York : Cambridge University Press for the American Political Science Association : 2003- : 3 : pages 723-740 :
Mandatory
Complex global governance and domestic policies: four pathways of influence
Bernstein Steven, Cashore Benjamin
Included in:
International affairs
Oxford : Blackwell Publishing : 2000- : 88 : pages 585604 :
Mandatory
Betts Alexander
Institutional Proliferation and the Global Refugee Regime
Included in:
Perspectives on politics
New York : Cambridge University Press for the American Political Science Association : 2003- : 7 : pages 323-336 :
Mandatory
Waiting for What? The Feminization of Asylum in Protracted Situations
Hyndman Jennifer, Giles Wenona
Included in:
Gender, place and culture
Abingdon : Routledge : 1995 : 18 : pages 361-379 :
Mandatory
Institutional Accountability of Nonstate Actors in the UNFCCC: Exit, Voice, and Loyalty
Kuyper Jonathan, Bäckstrand Karin, Schroeder Heike
Included in:
The review of policy research [electronic resource].
34 : pages 88109 :
Mandatory
Olivius Elisabeth
Constructing Humanitarian Selves and Refugee Others
Included in:
International feminist journal of politics
London : Routledge : 1999- : 18 : pages 270-290 :
Mandatory
Hellmüller Sara
Peacemaking in a shifting world order: A macro-level analysis of UN mediation in Syria
Cambridge University : 2022 :
Artikel online
Mandatory
Karlsrud John
From Liberal Peacebuilding to Stabilization and Counterterrorism, International Peacekeeping
Taylor & Francis : 2019 :
Artikel online
Mandatory
International Organization and Global Governance
Weiss Thomas G, Wilkinson Rorden
Taylor & Francis Ltd : 2023 :
Mandatory
Holmes Georgina
Situating Agency, Embodied Practices and Norm Implementation in Peacekeeping Training
The Open University : 2019 :
PDF
SYNTHESIS REPORT OF THE IPCC SIXTH ASSESSMENT REPORT (AR6)
IPCC : 2023 :
PDF
Kenkel Kai
Five generations of peace operations: from the thin blue line to painting a country blue"
Scielo Brazil : 2013 :
PDF
UN peace operations in a multipolar order: Building peace through the rule of law and bottom-up approaches
Osland Kari, Mateja Peter
Taylor & Francis : 2021 :
PDF
Additional articles may be added.
Aguilar-Støen Mariel
Better Safe than Sorry? Indigenous Peoples, Carbon Cowboys and the Governance of REDD in the Amazon
Included in:
Forum for development studies
1997- : 44 : pages 91-108 :
Mandatory
Regional agreements in international environmental politics
Balsiger J., Williams P. D.
Included in:
International environmental agreements : politics, law and economics.
16 : pages 239-260 :
Mandatory
Conca Ken
The rise of the region in global environmental politics
Included in:
Global environmental politics
Cambridge, MA : MIT Press : 2001- : 12 : pages 127-133 :
Mandatory
Regional powers and regional orders
Godehardt Nadine, Nabers Dirk
Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge : 2011. : xv, 255 s. :
ISBN: 0-415-60383-8
Mandatory
Search the University Library catalogue
Huysmans J.
The European Union and the securitization of migration
Included in:
Journal of common market studies [Elektronisk resurs].
Oxford : Blackwell : 1997- : 38 : pages 751-777 :
Mandatory
Klepp S.
A contested asylum system: The European Union between refugee protection and border control in the Mediterranean Sea
Included in:
European journal of migration and law [electronic resource].
12 : pages 1-21 :
Mandatory
Broader, Deeper and Greener: European Union Environmental Politics, Policies, and Outcomes
Selin Henrik, VanDeveer Stacy D.
Included in:
Annual review of environment and resources [Elektronisk resurs].
Palo Alto, Calif. : Annual Reviews : 2003- : 40 : pages 309-335 :
Mandatory
Why Indonesia Adopted Quiet Diplomacy over R2P in the Rohingya Crisis : The Roles of Islamic Humanitarianism, CivilMilitary Relations, and ASEAN
Smith Claire Q., Williams Susannah
Included in:
Global responsibility to protect
2009- : pages 1-28 :
Mandatory
Spijkerboer Thomas
Bifurcation of people, bifurcation of law: externalization of migration policy before the EU Court of Justice
Included in:
Journal of refugee studies.
Oxford : Oxford University Press : 1988- : 31 : pages 216239 :
Mandatory
Great-Power Politics, Order Transition, and Climate Governance: Insights from International Relations Theory
Terhalle Maximilian, Depledge Joanna
Included in:
Climate policy.
13 : pages 572-588 :
Mandatory
Blanco Ramon
The UN peacebuilding process: an analysis of its shortcomings in Timor-Leste
Semantic Scholar : 2015 :
PDF
Greenburg Jennifer
The Strong Arm and the Friendly Hand: Military Humanitarianism in Post-earthquake Haiti
Journal of Haitian Studies : 2013 :
PDF
Jennings Kathleen
Conditional Protection? Sex, Gender, and Discourse in UN Peacekeeping
International Studies Quarterly : 2019 :
PDF
Karlsrud John
The UN at war: examining the consequences of peace-enforcement mandates for the UN peacekeeping operations in the CAR, the DRC and Mali
Taylor & Francis : 2015 :
PDF
Additional articles may be added.