學年學期 Academic Year / Semester | 105學年度第1學期 | Fall Semester, 2016 | ||||
開課單位 Course Department | 亞太博一、亞太博二 | International Doctor Program in Asia-Pacific Studies, Second Year | ||||
課程名稱 Course Name | (中 Ch.)亞太區域發展 | (英 Eng.)Asia-Pacific Regional Development | ||||
授課教師 Instructor | 吳得源 | WU DER-YUAN | ||||
職稱 Title | 專任副教授 | Associate Professor | ||||
選課人數 Number Registered | 0人 | |||||
學分數 No. of Credits | 3.0 | |||||
修別 Type of Credit | 必修 | Required | ||||
先修科目 Prerequisite(s) | ||||||
上課時間 / 教室 Session / Location | 二234 / 綜合271215 | tue09-12 / 271215 | ||||
點閱核心能力分析圖與授課方式比例圖 |
This is one of the core courses in the IDAS program. The course is divided into three main parts: framework and perspectives; regional and domestic development; Asia Pacific regionalism. In all, the course aims to provide doctoral/graduate-level students some fundamental conceptualizations and perspectives, revolving around development-related or regionalism-related themes, in the region. Geographically, it will include broadly such sub-regions or key actors as Northeast Asia, Southeast Asia, India, the U.S., Taiwan or China. It would be impossible for this course to cover each individual country in the region, which may well be followed up in other related courses. The texts and related references used in this course are mostly scholarly publications that are more often linked to standard social science conceptualizations than to descriptive or prescriptive policy orientations. Nevertheless, students should feel free to pursue their studies of cases, (sub-)regional or country-based, that are not included in the list and sources they refer to could be drawn from policy–oriented sources other than those suggested in the reading list.
Course Objective:
This is one of the core courses in the IDAS program. The course is divided into three main parts: framework and perspectives; regional and domestic development; Asia Pacific regionalism. In all, the course aims to provide doctoral/graduate-level students some fundamental conceptualizations and perspectives, revolving around development-related or regionalism-related themes, in the region. Geographically, it will include broadly such sub-regions or key actors as Northeast Asia, Southeast Asia, India, the U.S., Taiwan or China. It would be impossible for this course to cover each individual country in the region, which may well be followed up in other related courses. The texts and related references used in this course are mostly scholarly publications that are more often linked to standard social science conceptualizations than to descriptive or prescriptive policy orientations. Nevertheless, students should feel free to pursue their studies of cases, (sub-)regional or country-based, that are not included in the list and sources they refer to could be drawn from policy–oriented sources other than those suggested in the reading list.
每周課堂教學時數: 0 小時
每周預習/複習時數: 0 小時
Requirements:
1. In-class participations: 20%
2. Two summary and critical reports: 30% (for MA students One report)
3. Final paper: 50% (written paper (15-20 pages)40%+outline presentation 10%)
Final paper due on Jan.17, 2017
Schedule and Themes: (subject to further revision)
Week 1 (9/13) Introduction:
Week 2 (9/20) Area Studies and Disciplines; Framing “Asia Pacific” Ontology (I): Agents and Structure for International Relations and Development
1. Wallerstein, I. et al. 1996 Open the Social Sciences, chapters 1, 2
2. Wendt, A. 1998 Social Theory of International Politics, chs 1, 2
3. Eisenstadt, S. N. 1992 “Frameworks of the Great Revolutions: Culture, Social Structure, History and Human Agency” International Social Science Journal, no. 133 (August 1992), pp. 385-401
4. David Shambaugh and Michael Yahuda eds. 2014 International Relations of Asia (IRA), Rowman & Littlefield, chs.2, 3 (RSV Social Science Library)
Recommended (on Agency-structure relations)
Anthony Giddens, Central Problems in Social Theory (1979), chapter 2
Week 3 (9/27) Framing “Asia Pacific” Ontology (II): Agents, Structure, Role of Culture and Power in Development
1. Abrams, Philip 1982 Historical Sociology, chs. 1-4
2.Pye, Lucian W. 1985 Asian Power and Politics (APP), chs 1-2 (RSV SS Library)
3.Beeson, Mark 2014 Regionalism and Globalization in East Asia (RGEA), ch. 1 (RSV SS Library)
Week 4 (10/4) Northeast Asia: History, Institutions and Regionalist Construction
1.Beeson, RGEA, ch. 2
2.Calder, Kent E. and Min Ye 2010 The Making of Northeast Asia, ch 1 and Part II
3.Sam-Sang Jo 2015 “The Blind Men, the Elephant, and Regional Order in
Northeast Asia: Towards a New Conceptualization” Japanese Journal of Political Science, Vol. 16, No. 4 (December): 507-31.
4.Shambaugh and Yahuda eds. IRA, ch. 8, 12
Week 5 (10/11) Developmental States in global era: from Northeast Asia to East Asia
1.Beeson, RGEA ch. 7
2.Woo-Cumings, Meredith ed. 1999 The Developmental State, chs 1-5
3.Pempel, T.J. “Japan Dealing with Global Forces: Multilateralism, Regionalism, Bilateralism” in D.H. Claes and C.H. Knutsen eds. Governing the Global Economy (Routledge 2011), pp. 204-222
4.Moon, Chung-in and Dae-yeob Yoon, “Industrial Policy in an Integrated World Economy: South Korean Paradox” in D.H. Claes and C.H. Knutsen eds. Governing the Global Economy (Routledge 2011), pp. 223-243.
5.Wade, Robert. 2003. Governing the Market: Economic Theory and the Role of Government in East Asian Industrialization, Princeton, Princeton University Press, Introduction, at http://press.princeton.edu/chapters/i4724.pdf
Recommended:
1.Evans, Peter. 1992. The State as Problem and Solution: Predation, Embedded Autonomy and Structural Change, in Stephen Haggard and Robert Kaufman eds. The Politics of Economic Adjustment. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Week 6 (10/18) Demoractization and Development: from Northeast Asia to East Asia
1.Beeson, RGEA, ch. 6
2.Pye, APP, chs. 2, 3, 6
3.Oh, John Kie-Chiang, “Adaptations in Korea: Confucianism, Democracy and Economic Development” in John F.S. Hsieh ed. Confucian Culture and Democracy (CCD) (World Scientific 2015), pp. 85-110.
4.Bellows, Thomas J. “Confucianism and Pluralism in a Meritocratic Society: the Singapore Case” in CCD, pp. 131-60.
5.Cheng, Joseph Y.S. “Confucian Values and Democratic Governance in Hong Kong” in CCD, pp. 161-96.
Recommended:
Rueschemeyer, D. et al. 1992 Capitalist Development and Democracy, chs 1-3
Week 7 (10/25) India in Development and Regional Relations
1.Woo-Cumings 1999, The Developmental State, ch 10
2.Kohli, Atul Democracy and development in India : from socialism to pro-business (2009)
3.Pye, APP, ch 5
4.Shambaugh and Yahuda eds. 2014 IRA, ch. 7
Week 8 (11/1) Southeast Asia: Development and Underdevelopment
1.Beeson, RGEA, chs. 3, 6, 7
2.Kuhonta, E.M. Institutional Imperative: Politics of Equitable Development in Southeast Asia (Stanford UP 2011), chs 1, 4, 6, 7
3.Pye, APP, chs. 4, 9, 10
Recommended: (for theoretical backgrounds)
Mitchell A. Seligson and John T Passe-Smith, Development and Underdevelopment 4th edition ( Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 2008).
Week 9 (11/8) Southeast Asia: Integration and Order in the Making
1.Beeson, RGEA, chs 4, 11
2.Shambaugh and Yahuda eds. 2014 IRA, ch. 9
3.Acharya, Amitav 2012 The Making of Southeast Asia, chs. 1, 4-6
Or, Acharya, Amitav 2014 (or earlier version in NCCU ebook) Constructing a Security Community in Southeast Asia, chs 2, 4, 5
Proposal suggested
Week 10 (11/15) Taiwan and China I: Co-development
1.Beeson, RGEA, chs 6, 8
2.Pye, APP chs. 7, 8
3. Naughton, Barry The Chinese Economy, (MIT Press 2007) chs 4, 5, 12, 14, 18, 20
4. Nee, Victor and S. Opper Capitalism from Below, (Harvard UP, 2012), ch 1
Week 11 (11/22) Taiwan and China II: foreign policy and order-building
1. Rosemary Foot ed. China Across the Divide (Oxford Univ Press 2013), chs. 2, 3, 5, 6
2. Shambaugh and Yahuda eds. IRA, ch. 6
3. Wu, Der-yuan, “Canada and Global Diffusion of `One China’” in Andre Lecours ed. New Institutionalism: Theory and Analysis. Toronto: Univ of Toronto Press, 2005, pp. 319-40.
Week 12 (11/29) Synthesis and Prospect: East Asian Security, Economy and Regionalism
1.Beeson, RGEA, chs 4, 5, 9-11
2.Shambaugh and Yahuda eds. 2014 IRA, ch. 6, 13-15
Week 13 (12/6) The Roles of the US and Other Players in Asia Pacific
Shambaugh and Yahuda eds. 2014 IRA, ch. 6, 10, 13-15
Week 14 (12/13) Concluding and Student Presentations
Week 15 (12/20) Student Presentations
Week 16 (12/27) Student Presentations
Week 17 (1/3) Student Presentations
Week 18 (1/10) Student Presentations
Textbooks (All reserved in Social Sciences Library)
1.David Shambaugh and Michael Yahuda eds. 2014 International Relations of Asia (IRA) (Rowman & Littlefield)
2.Pye, Lucian W. 1985 Asian Power and Politics (APP), (Belknap Press)
3.Beeson, Mark 2014 Regionalism and Globalization in East Asia (RGEA), (Palgrave)
Other References: To Be Announced (TBA)
需經教師同意始得使用