教學大綱 Syllabus

科目名稱:拉丁美洲政府與政治

Course Name: Latin American Governments & Politics

修別:選

Type of Credit: Elective

3.0

學分數

Credit(s)

10

預收人數

Number of Students

課程資料Course Details

課程簡介Course Description

Latin American Governments and Politics

Fall 2025

General Building of Colleges 270726

Wednesday 9:10 – 12:00 p.m.

 

Instructor: Yen-Pin Su (yenpinsu@nccu.edu.tw)

Office: General Building of Colleges 270747

Office Hours: By appointment

Description

This course is an introduction to the empirical research of comparative politics. Through thematic discussions of theory-driven research on various issues of Latin American politics, the questions we address in this course include: What leads to regime change? Why do some countries achieve a higher level of economic development than others? Why do some political parties successfully adapt to the changing environment while others collapse? Why do some countries experience more protests while other countries do not? Why does China dominate infrastructure development in some countries but not others? To address these questions, we use analytical tools and theoretical orientations provided by political science and Latin American studies.

核心能力分析圖 Core Competence Analysis Chart

能力項目說明


    課程目標與學習成效Course Objectives & Learning Outcomes

    Objectives

    The objective of this course is twofold. First, it helps students learn about issues and comparative politics approaches. Second, it helps students prepare for their thesis/dissertation proposals on topics about comparative politics. This course is divided into two sessions. The first session (Week 1 to Week 4) provides intensive training for students to get familiar with the elements of empirical research design, which is the basis for completing the required assignments for this course. The second session (Week 5 to Week 15) comprises seminars for empirical research papers about Latin American politics. The training helps students enhance their ability to wrestle with different ideas, read empirical papers effectively, and compose thoughtful literature reviews for their thesis/dissertation proposals.

     

    By the end of this semester, students will be able to:

     

    1. Apply empirical theories to analyze various political issues facing Latin American countries.

    2. Conduct critical reviews of empirical political studies.

    3. Propose reasonable research questions in comparative politics and develop a well-structured, theoretically relevant, methodologically sound research plan to address these questions.

    每周課程進度與作業要求 Course Schedule & Requirements

    Class Schedule

     

    Week 1 (9/3): Introduction

    Organization of the course schedule; academic ethics, Turnitin, and AI tools; formalities for academic writing; download EndNote software from the NCCU campus-authorized software website through iNCCU.

     

    Week 2 (9/10): Basics for Empirical Research

    Understand the difference between a thesis, a textbook, and a Wikipedia page; how a research topic and a research question differ; explanatory vs. descriptive research questions.

     

    Week 3 (9/17): Basics for Designing an Empirical Research Project

    Elements of a well-structured research design; research puzzle (causes vs. consequences); variable measurements; hypotheses building and testing; research strategies (different combinations of the use of theory, data, and method)

     

    Week 4 (9/24): How to Write a Critical Literature Review Assignment

    Read p.2-p.5 of the syllabus; check the sample theses and Ph.D. dissertations on Moodle; warm-up presentations

     

    **Theme (I): Political Institution**

     

    Week 5 (10/1): Executive Branch and Presidents

    1. Corrales, Javier. 2016. "Can Anyone Stop the President? Power Asymmetries and Term Limits in Latin America, 1984–2016." Latin American Politics and Society 58(2): 3-25.
    2. Couto, Lucas. 2025. “Government Formation in Presidentialism: Disentangling the Combined Effects of Pre-Electoral Coalitions and Legislative Polarization.” Latin American Politics and Society 67(1): 36-55.
    3. Arana Araya, Ignacio. 2022. "The Quest for Uncontested Power: Presidents' Personalities and Democratic Erosion in Latin America, 1945–2012." Political Psychology 43(3): 511-528.

     

    Week 6 (10/8): Executives, Legislature, and Judiciary

    1. Shair-Rosenfield, Sarah, and Alissandra T. Stoyan. 2017. "Constraining Executive Action: The Role of Legislator Professionalization in Latin America." Governance 30(2): 301-319.
    2. Carreras, Miguel. 2014. "Outsiders and Executive-Legislative Conflict in Latin America." Latin American Politics and Society 56(3):70-92.
    3. Helmke, Gretchen, Yeonkyung Jeong, and Jae-Eun C. Kim. 2022. “Insecure Institutions: A Survivalist Theory of Judicial Manipulation in Latin America.” Journal of Law and Courts 10(2): 265-285.

     

    Week 7 (10/15): Political Parties

    1. Burgess, Katrina, and Steven Levitsky. 2003. “Explaining Populist Party Adaptation in Latin America: Environmental and Organizational Determinants of Party Change in Argentina, Mexico, Peru, and Venezuela.” Comparative Political Studies 36(8): 881-911.
    2. Otero-Felipe, Patricia, and Leticia Ruiz Rodríguez. 2024. "Party Discipline in Latin America: The Role of Party Ideology." Political Studies Review 22(3): 608-626.
    3. Su, Yen-Pin, and Fabricio A. Fonseca. 2021. “Explaining the Party Unity of Governing Parties in Mexico.” Revista de Ciencia Política 41(3): 515-537.

     

    Week 8 (10/22): Party System Development

    1. Su, Yen-Pin. 2015. “Party Registration Rules and Party Systems in Latin America.” Party Politics 21(2): 295-308.
    2. Su, Yen-Pin. 2018. “Personal Vote, Spatial Registration Rules, and Party System Nationalization in Latin America.” International Political Science Review 39(2): 192-208.
    3. Su, Yen-Pin. 2022. “Rules for Party Subsidies and Electoral Volatility in Latin America.” Latin American Research Review 57(1): 151-169.

     

    **Theme (II): Regime Change**

     

    Week 9 (10/29): Democratization and Democratic Backsliding

    1. Schenoni, Luis L., and Scott Mainwaring. 2019. “US Hegemony and Regime Change in Latin America.” Democratization 26(2): 269-287.
    2. Mantilla, Luis Felipe. 2010. “Mobilizing Religion for Democracy: Explaining Catholic Church Support for Democratization in South America.” Politics and Religion 3(3): 553-579.
    3. Pérez-Liñán, Aníbal and Scott Mainwaring. 2014. “Democratic Breakdown and Survival in Latin America, 1945-2005.” In Reflections on Uneven Democracies: The Legacy of Guillermo O’Donnell, eds. Daniel Brinks, Marcelo Leiras, and Scott Mainwaring, 21-43. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. (See the scanned chapter on Moodle)

     

    Week 10 (11/5): Preparing for: 1. Research proposal; and 2. Country-level dataset assignment

     

    Week 11 (11/12): Post-Authoritarian Challenges

    1. Lessa, Francesca, Tricia D. Olsen, Leigh A. Payne, Gabriel Pereira, Andrew G. Reiter. 2014. “Overcoming Impunity: Pathways to Accountability in Latin America.” International Journal of Transitional Justice 8(1): 75-98.
    2. Martínez, Christopher A. 2021. “Presidential Instability in Latin America: Why Institutionalized Parties Matter.” Government and Opposition 56: 683–704.
    3. Pérez-Liñán, Aníbal and John Polga-Hecimovich. 2017. "Explaining Military Coups and Impeachments in Latin America." Democratization 24(5): 839-858.

     

    Week 12 (11/19): Explaining Levels of Democracy and State Capacity

    1. Rhodes-Purdy, Matthew and Raúl L. Madrid. 2020. "The Perils of Personalism." Democratization 27(2): 321-339.
    2. Grassi, Davide and Vincenzo Memoli. 2016. "Political Determinants of State Capacity in Latin America." World Development 88 (1): 94-106.
    3. Albertus, Michael and Mark Deming. 2020. "Branching Out: Consequences of the Dispersion of Authoritarian Elites across State and Government in Latin America.” Democratization 28(3): 539–561.

     

    **Theme (III): Political Behavior **

     

    Week 13 (11/26): Country-Level Analysis

    1. Murillo, María Victoria, Virginia Oliveros, and Milan Vaishnav. 2010. “Electoral Revolution or Democratic Alternation?” Latin American Research Review 45 (3): 87-114.
    2. Rau, Eli Gavin, Radha Sarkar and Susan C. Stokes. 2025. "Why Is Participation Low in Referendums? Lessons from Latin America." Latin American Research Review 60(2): 275-297.
    3. Iacoella, Francesco, Patricia Justino, and Bruno Martorano. 2024. “Lockdown and Unrest: Inequality, Restrictions and Protests During COVID-19.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 69(7-8): 1309-1339.

     

    **Country-level dataset assignment due in class**

     

    Week 14 (12/3): Individual-Level Analysis

    1. Reyes-Housholder, Catherine. 2019. “A Theory of Gender’s Role on Presidential Approval Ratings in Corrupt Times.” Political Research Quarterly 73(3): 540-555.
    2. De Ferrari, Ignazio. 2015. “The Successor Factor: Electoral Accountability in Presidential Democracies.” Comparative Political Studies 48 (2): 193-230.
    3. Morgenstern, Scott and Asbel Bohigues. 2021. "Battling for the Hearts and Minds of Latin Americans: Covariance of Attitudes toward the United States and China." Latin American Research Review 56(2): 280-299.

     

    Week 15 (12/10): Polarization and Populism

    1. Moraes, Juan A., and Sergio Béjar. 2023. “Electoral Volatility and Political Polarization in Developing Democracies: Evidence from Latin America, 1993–2016.” Party Politics 29(4): 636–647.
    2. Doyle, David. 2011. “The Legitimacy of Political Institutions: Explaining Contemporary Populism in Latin America.” Comparative Political Studies 44(11): 1447-1473.
    3. Huber, Robert A., and Christian H Schimpf. 2016. “Friend or Foe? Testing the Influence of Populism on Democratic Quality in Latin America.” Political Studies 64(4): 872–889.

     

    Week 16 (12/17): Research Design Proposal Presentations

     

    授課方式Teaching Approach

    15%

    講述 Lecture

    80%

    討論 Discussion

    0%

    小組活動 Group activity

    5%

    數位學習 E-learning

    0%

    其他: Others:

    評量工具與策略、評分標準成效Evaluation Criteria

    Course Materials

    All required readings for this course can be downloaded for free on NCCU Libraries Discovery System using NCCU’s WIFI or VPN (off campus).

     

    Evaluation and Requirements

    Weekly review assignments

    60%

    Data analysis assignment

    5%

    Research proposal (final paper)

    25%

    Submitted abstract for an international conference

    5%

    Class participation

    5%

     

    1. Weekly review assignments. Beginning from Week 5, we have three assigned readings for every class meeting. All students must write review assignments for each assigned reading in every class meeting. The review must be structured into the following sections:

     

    (1) The specific research question that the article explicitly addresses

    (2) The broader research question that the article could address

    (3) Unit of analysis and research scope (specific cases and time periods analyzed in the article)

    (4) The dependent variable(s), independent variable(s), and how they are measured

    (5) The gap in the literature that the article aims to fill

    (6) The main theory proposed by the article (key concept, testable hypotheses/arguments, and their theoretical reasoning)

    (7) Main findings

    (8) Critical review

     

    Identifying the specific RQ in section (1) and the broader RQ in section (2) can be confusing for fresh graduate students. The good news is that all assigned readings in this course are empirical research papers. One common feature of the empirical papers is that the title is almost always organized in the manner of “the relationship between the explanatory factors and the outcome to be explained for particular cases.” Let’s take two imaginary papers, for example:

     

    Article #1: “Natural Resource Revenues and Corruption in Latin American Democracies.”

     

    Article #2: “Political Scandals and Electoral Performances of 175 Political Parties in 10 South American Countries (2000-2019).”

     

    In section (1), the specific RQ can be specified in the article’s title. For article #1, the specific RQ could be: How do natural resource revenues affect levels of corruption in Latin American democracies? Or, it could be: What is the relationship between natural resource revenues and corruption in Latin American democracies? For article #2, the specific RQ could be: How do political scandals affect the electoral performances of 175 parties in 10 South American countries (2000-2019)? Or, it could be: What is the relationship between political scandals and electoral performances of 175 parties in 10 South American countries (2000-2019)?

     

    Identifying the broader RQ for section (2) can be challenging. It is because most articles do not mention it explicitly, either in the title or the text. The key point here is to figure out what kind of outcome the article aims to explain. For article #1, the outcome to be explained is the level of corruption. Therefore, the broader RQ is: Why do some countries have higher levels of corruption than others? Or, it could be: What explains the variation in levels of corruption among different countries? For article #2, the outcome to be explained is the electoral performance of political parties. Therefore, the broader RQ is: Why do some parties have better electoral performances than others? Or, it could be: What explains the variation in electoral performances of parties? Identifying the broader RQ is a crucial training exercise for developing critical literature review skills for your research project.

     

    Please write the answers to section (1) and section (2) in a question form with a question mark at the end. Do NOT write a declarative statement for the answer to each section. Please note that you can only mention specific cases in your answer for section (1), but NOT for section (2).

     

    In section (3), identify the unit of analysis and specify particular cases and time periods that the article covers. The unit of analysis relates to the “carrier” of the dependent variable, which can be a country, a subnational administrative unit, an organization (e.g., a political party or NGO), or other kinds of unit. For article #1, the unit of analysis is a country, and the research scope is Latin American Democracies from 1960 to 2019. For article #2, the unit of analysis is a party, and the research scope is 175 parties in 10 South American countries (2000-2019).

     

    In section (4), specify what the dependent variable (s) and independent variable(s) are and discuss how these variables are measured in the paper. Then, identify the level of measurement (dichotomous, ordinal, or continuous) and the data sources for the dependent variable(s) and the independent variable(s).

     

    In section (5), specify the research gap this article aims to fill. Such a gap justifies why this article differs from other related studies and suggests this article’s potential contributions to the existing literature. The gap could be theoretical, empirical, or methodological. Most articles explicitly indicate such a gap in the Introduction section by briefly evaluating previous literature and mentioning what has not been done so far. To write the answer to section (5), you can use the following template: “Most previous studies have done such and such, but few studies have done… Therefore, this article aims to fill the gap in the literature by ...,” Identifying the gap in the literature is an essential training exercise for developing skills for figuring out how to make your research project unique.

     

    In section (6), discuss the theory proposed by the article, including the key concept(s), testable hypotheses (or arguments), and the theoretical reasoning (causal mechanism) behind the hypotheses (arguments).

     

    In section (7), summarize the main findings of the article. You can get the information in the abstract and statistical regression tables in the main text. For the presenters, if the reading provides regression tables, please copy and paste the tables into your PowerPoint slides.

     

    In section (8), first briefly praise the article (e.g., what contribution this work can make), then provide critical comments and questions. Thoughts for critiques include, but are not limited to: Is the work theoretically or empirically interesting for other cases? Is the transfer of theory to empirics reasonable? How well are the concepts measured? Is the causal relation between variables proper? Are there missing alternative explanations? How reliable are the data? What are the pros and cons of the methodology used by the author(s)? Is the theoretical argument applicable in other contexts for comparative work? Any suggestions to improve this article? You are welcome to check out other similar studies to get some ideas for writing your assignment.

     

    An assignment should be 2 pages in length. The critical review section must be no less than 30% of the whole assignment. Each assignment is worth 2 points. Whether you will get full points for an assignment depends on its quality. In your assignment, please include your name and the bibliographic information for the reading on the top and insert page numbers at the bottom. The format of an assignment must be: 1) in Word format; 3) 12-point font; 4) single-spaced; and 5) with moderate margins. The assignments for a particular weekly class meeting must be posted one day before the class. Your points will be lowered for late or incomplete post.

     

    In-Class Presentation: Beginning from Week 5, we will have weekly in-class presentations for the assigned readings. A list of presenters will be announced in Week 4. The presenters can use PowerPoint or simply their assignments for presentations. Each presentation must be no longer than 20 minutes. The presenters must lead the discussions by asking questions to the class.

     

    1. Dataset building and empirical analysis assignments. You will build a dataset based on the V-Dem database. Visit Moodle for more details.

     

    1. Final paper. For doctoral students, you are required to write a theory-driven empirical research proposal. For MA students, you can choose to write a data-driven empirical research proposal or a theory-driven one. Your final paper must be structured into five sections:

     

    I. Introduction. First, specify your research topic and propose a broader research question. Second, discuss why it matters for academia and policy makers to study the topic and research question that you propose.

     

    II. Literature review.  First, identify at least two scholarly debates about your DV. Here, you should not limit the literature search by focusing on the cases you are interested in. You have to broaden the search. For instance, if you are interested in studying what explains the variation in levels of corruption in Latin American countries, you should also search for literature about the explanations of corruption in other non-Latin American countries. Second, discuss the main argument of each debate based on a short literature review of at least five studies for each debate. Third, identify the gap in the literature that your project aims to fill. Possible gaps include, but are not limited to, 1) missing explanation, 2) lack of systematic tests of different theories, and 3) lack of examination of certain cases.

     

    III. Theoretical arguments and testable hypotheses. Based on the discussion about the gap in the literature, propose an explanation you plan to apply for your empirical analysis. Elaborate on the theoretical reasoning of the explanation. Generate hypotheses based on the explanation.

     

    IV. Research design. First, specify the unit of analysis for the empirical analysis. Second, discuss how you measure the dependent variable(s) and the independent variable(s). Third, discuss the research scope, i.e., the specific cases and time periods that you plan to cover. Fourth, indicate possible data sources. Fourth, discuss the methods that you intend to employ for empirical analysis. Last, provide a summary that indicates how your research project contributes to the existing literature. In this summary, you can reiterate that there is a gap in the literature, and your research project aims to fill the gap.

     

    Before uploading your final paper, make sure to include the title of your project, your name, and page numbers. Moreover, please follow the American Political Science Association (APSA) style to format citations and bibliography/references. Last, the format of this paper must be: 1) in Word format; 3) in 12-point font; 4) single-spaced; and 5) with moderate margins. The length of the paper should be at least 2,000 words in total. Every student will be assigned to make an in-class presentation for the proposals on Week 16. Every student will also be assigned to be a discussant for one classmate’s presentation.

     

    For MA students, the final paper is graded based on its clarity (30%), quality of literature review (30%), quality and feasibility of the design (30%), and formality (10%). For doctoral students, the final paper is graded based on its clarity (30%), quality of literature review (30%), quality and feasibility of the design (20%), originality and potential contributions (10%), and formality (10%).

     

    1. Submitted abstract for an international conference. You will submit a 150-word abstract for an annual conference held by one of the following professional political science associations (submission deadline in parenthesis): European Political Science Association (mid-December), American Political Science Association (mid-January), or International Political Science Association (late January). You are required to upload to Moodle the confirmation email that shows the association receives your abstract.

     

    1. Class participation. In every class meeting, I will make sure that EVERY student speaks. To facilitate the discussion, please have your assignments at hand. If you are not confident about speaking English, read your assignment out loud. Being unable to recall what you have written in your assignment is unprofessional and will seriously affect your grade for class participation.

     

    General Policies

    1. Add/drop the course. Students should drop the course if they 1) miss any of the first three weekly class meetings and 2) plan to skip the last weekly class meeting.
    2. Auditing students. I do not permit students to audit this course except my advisees.
    3. Plagiarism. Plagiarism is strictly prohibited in this course. When writing your critical review assignments and final paper, DO NOT copy and paste sentences from articles you read. Always write in your own words by rephrasing or paraphrasing. You will get a very low grade if I find that your assignments and final paper have severe plagiarism problems.
    4. Using AI tools. Do not use AI tools to produce your assignments and final papers. However, you can use AI tools to proofread your assignments and final paper. You will get a very low grade if I find that AI tools entirely produced your assignments and final paper.
    5. Teamwork. Teamwork for doing the required assignments and the final paper is NOT allowed. However, you can discuss the coursework with me and your classmates.
    6. Requirements for Ph.D. students. I have much higher expectations for doctoral students who take this course. Doctoral students are expected to write better assignments and final papers.
    7. Using laptops and cell phones in class. Using laptops for taking notes is permitted. Using cell phones is strictly disallowed in class. If I see any student using a cell phone, I will stop the class until the student stops using the cell phone or leaves the classroom.
    8. Re-evaluating grades. You have the right to request a re-evaluation of the grading of your work. In doing so, you must draft a one-page memo outlining why you deserve a better grade. Please note that this memo must be entirely based on the merit of your own work (it cannot be based on comparison with the grades of other students). Remember that your grade will be thoroughly re-evaluated so that the revision might involve a downward or upward change in the grade.
     

    指定/參考書目Textbook & References

    已申請之圖書館指定參考書目 圖書館指定參考書查詢 |相關處理要點

    維護智慧財產權,務必使用正版書籍。 Respect Copyright.

    本課程可否使用生成式AI工具Course Policies on the Use of Generative AI Tools

    有條件開放使用:Do not use AI tools to produce your assignments and final papers. However, you can use AI tools to proofread your assignments and final paper. Conditional Permitted to Use

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