Swedish name: Internationell ekonomisk historia (nivå 1)
This syllabus is valid: 2009-06-08 valid to 2012-01-08 (newer version of the syllabus exists)
Syllabus for courses starting after 2024-02-19
Syllabus for courses starting between 2022-08-22 and 2024-02-18
Syllabus for courses starting between 2020-06-29 and 2022-08-21
Syllabus for courses starting between 2014-08-25 and 2020-06-28
Syllabus for courses starting between 2012-01-09 and 2014-08-24
Syllabus for courses starting between 2009-06-08 and 2012-01-08
Course code: 2EH012
Credit points: 15
Education level: First cycle
Main Field of Study and progress level:
Economic History: First cycle, has only upper-secondary level entry requirements
Grading scale: Pass with distinction, Pass, Fail
Responsible department: Department of Economic History
This course studies the international economic and social development during the last millennium. The first module: Introduction to International Economic History provides an overview of the long-term economic and social development from the early medieval period up to the interwar period. The second module: Problems in Economic History, provides in-dept insights and perspectives on the specific economic-historical development after 1920 with regards to economic crisis, doctrines, and economic and social changes.
Module I: Introduction to International economic history After completing the course the students will have: - Basic knowledge about the long-term economic-historical development from the early medieval period up to the 1920s - Basic knowledge about the preconditions for economic growth and patterns of industrialisation in different societies - Basic knowledge about the development of trade and economic-political doctrines - Basic understanding for the long-term development of gender relations - Understanding for the role of the factors of production, and institutional and structural change Module II: Problems in International Economic History After completing the course the students will have: - Basic knowledge and understanding for changes in the international economic order from the interwar period onwards with regards to foreign trade patterns and the mobility of factors of production - Understanding for the causes and impacts of different economic crises, payment systems, technology shifts and structural changes - Knowledge about the role of economic integration and trade among market and planned economies - The ability to compare different economic development patterns and their specific time related contexts - The ability to apply a gender perspective on the long-term economic and social development
The course is based on lectures, seminar discussions and both written and oral presentations
All exams are mandatory and individual. Depending on the actual circumstances for teaching and the number of students attending the course, we apply a variety of examination modes. This can e.g. be hand in - and presentations of - individual papers, activity in seminar discussions, written exams or oral exams, which is specified in the actual Study Guide. According to the rules of the National Swedish Board of Universities and Colleges the grading will be made individually at all courses given by the Department of Economic History. Students who do not pass the first examination will be offered a second examination within reasonable time. All students have the rights to take a test up to four times in order to pass. A student who has failed the examination twice has the right to ask the Board of the Social Sciences Faculty to appoint another teacher to examine him or her. Academic credit transfer The course can be combined with any other undergraduate economic history class of 15 credits and thereby correspond to 15 + 15 credits of undergraduate level studies in economic history. For foreign students the ECTS seven grade transcription model is used.
Berend T. Iván q (Tibor Iván)
An economic history of twentieth-century Europe b economic regimes from laissez-faire to globalization
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press c 2006 : 2006 : 356 s. :
ISBN: 978-0-521-85666-9 (hbk)
Mandatory
Search the University Library catalogue
A concise economic history of the world : from Paleolithic times to the present :c Rondo Cameron, Larry Neal
Cameron Rondo E, Neal Larry
4. ed. : New York : Oxford University Press : 2003 : 463 s. :
ISBN: 0-19-512704-8
Mandatory
Search the University Library catalogue
Marks Robert
The origins of the modern world : a global and ecological narrative from the fifteenth to the twenty-first century
2. ed. : Lanham, Md. : Rowman & Littlefield : cop. 2007 : xiv, 221 s. :
http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy0704/2006046223.html
ISBN: 978-0-7425-5419-1
Mandatory
Search the University Library catalogue
Berend T. Iván q (Tibor Iván)
An economic history of twentieth-century Europe b economic regimes from laissez-faire to globalization
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press c 2006 : 2006 : 356 s. :
ISBN: 978-0-521-85666-9 (hbk)
Mandatory
Search the University Library catalogue
A concise economic history of the world : from Paleolithic times to the present :c Rondo Cameron, Larry Neal
Cameron Rondo E, Neal Larry
4. ed. : New York : Oxford University Press : 2003 : 463 s. :
ISBN: 0-19-512704-8
Mandatory
Search the University Library catalogue
Berend T. Iván q (Tibor Iván)
An economic history of twentieth-century Europe b economic regimes from laissez-faire to globalization
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press c 2006 : 2006 : 356 s. :
ISBN: 978-0-521-85666-9 (hbk)
Search the University Library catalogue
Rider Christine
An introduction to economic history
Cincinnati : South-Western College Publ. : cop. 1995 : 594 s. :
ISBN: 0-538-84710-7
Search the University Library catalogue
Berend T. Iván q (Tibor Iván)
An economic history of twentieth-century Europe b economic regimes from laissez-faire to globalization
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press c 2006 : 2006 : 356 s. :
ISBN: 978-0-521-85666-9 (hbk)
Search the University Library catalogue
Rider Christine
An introduction to economic history
Cincinnati : South-Western College Publ. : cop. 1995 : 594 s. :
ISBN: 0-538-84710-7
Search the University Library catalogue