James Cook University Subject Handbook - 2002

PL2003:04

*NOTE* Governance, Democratisation and the State

Townsville, Cairns

HECS Band 1

26 hours lectures, 26 hours seminars. Semester 1.

Staff: Dr S Maisrikrod.

No individual can escape the state. But how pervasive or dominant is the state? What is the relationship between the state, globalisation, democratisation and governance. This subject will first discuss the development of the modern state and examine state power and competing modern state theories: Liberal-Pluralist, Elitist/Managerialist, Corporatist and Marxist. It will also discuss the role of the state in the economy and its relationship with civil society. This will cover both the advanced industrial countries and countries in the developing world. Second, the subject will focus on the relationship between state power and democratisation and globalisation, particularly the debates about the declining strength of states in the developing world as the result of the globalisation pressures and the rise of global civil society. The third part of the subject will deal with the issues of governance, which in recent years has gained prominence in the reform agenda promoted by such international bodies as the World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Organisation for Economic Cooperation of Development (OECD) and the United Nations (UN).

Learning Objectives:

  1. provide students with an understanding of the nature, development and the roles of the state;
  2. enable students to conceptualise the state and to identify various forms and functions of the state;
  3. equip students with more advanced skills in comparative politics;
  4. enhance students’ skills appropriate to analysing politics and public policy.

Assessment by a combination of a seminar presentation, essay and an examination, weightings to be decided after consultation with students.