Please see the following website for more information on the course content, schedule and materials: http://www.uta.fi/kirjasto/en/courses/basicsofil.html
In cases where more students register for a course than space allows, priority is assigned as follows:
1. First priority is given to the degree students of the University of Tampere.
2. Second priority is given to the exchange students of the University of Tampere.
3. Third priority is given to the Tampere3 students and to the high school students of the UTA Teacher Training School.
In addition, there is a quota of 5 for the Open University students in every group.
In cases where more students register for a course than space allows, priority is assigned as follows:
1. First priority is given to the degree students of the University of Tampere.
2. Second priority is given to the exchange students of the University of Tampere.
3. Third priority is given to the Tampere3 students and to the high school students of the UTA Teacher Training School.
In addition, there is a quota of 5 for the Open University students in every group.
This module is made up of class sessions including group work (20 hours), as well as independent out of class tasks (61 hours). The module will be two periods long and will take place in the autumn semester of the first year of the master’s degree programme.
If you wish to complete the course during the academic year 2017-2018, contact the teacher no later than March 15, 2018.
This module (54 hours) is online apart from individual teacher-student tutorials for discussion of the submitted thesis extract. The work consists of readings, group analysis tasks and thesis writing work. Students should take the module after their research proposal has been accepted by their programme and they are about to embark upon the writing of their thesis.
We see and hear about globalization all the time: in the media, in statements by politicians, and buzzing around our social networks. We have a broad sense that politics, cultures, people, and organizations are all connected around the world. Yet, most people are hard-pressed to define what, precisely, globalization means. This course provides students with the basis for making sense of globalization and transnational connections in the contemporary world. It will go beyond popular, political and media rhetoric about globalization, and build a basis for students to gain a critical understanding of transnational connectivity. We will understand how events and forces outside national borders inform local trends, by examining global aspects of politics, policies, economics, environment, migration, history, popular culture, and religion. To do this, the course will unpack the three major social theoretic perspectives on making sense of globalization in these areas of modern life, with a spotlight on the emerging, cutting-edge, World Society Theory. We will also focus on the global-local interface: on how the local becomes global and how the global in turn, shapes what we think about as entirely local. By the end of the course, students will be able to describe how globalization impacts their own life, and to apply social theories of globalization to an empirical case of their interest.
In order to be able to participate in the course, students are required to complete either
(a) the lectures (5 ECTS), or (b) the lectures plus seminars (10 ECTS). It is not possible to attend only the seminars.
Students of the Master's Degree Programme on Global and Transnational Sociology are required to complete full course (10 ECTS).
Please note that you must enroll separately for the lectures and the seminar.
Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP Global and Transnational Sociology
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
We see and hear about globalization all the time: in the media, in statements by politicians, and buzzing around our social networks. We have a broad sense that politics, cultures, people, and organizations are all connected around the world. Yet, most people are hard-pressed to define what, precisely, globalization means. This course provides students with the basis for making sense of globalization and transnational connections in the contemporary world. It will go beyond popular, political and media rhetoric about globalization, and build a basis for students to gain a critical understanding of transnational connectivity. We will understand how events and forces outside national borders inform local trends, by examining global aspects of politics, policies, economics, environment, migration, history, popular culture, and religion. To do this, the course will unpack the three major social theoretic perspectives on making sense of globalization in these areas of modern life, with a spotlight on the emerging, cutting-edge, World Society Theory. We will also focus on the global-local interface: on how the local becomes global and how the global in turn, shapes what we think about as entirely local. By the end of the course, students will be able to describe how globalization impacts their own life, and to apply social theories of globalization to an empirical case of their interest.
In order to be able to participate in the seminar, students are required to complete the lecture part of this course. It is not possible to attend only the seminars.
Students of the Master's Degree Programme on Global and Transnational Sociology are required to complete full course (10 ECTS).
Please note that you must enroll separately for the lectures and the seminar.
Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP Global and Transnational Sociology
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
This course is designed to familiarise students with conceptual tools relating to the sociology of knowledge that they need for studying topics such as global and transnational sociology. The course begins by examining varied respects in which human beings have observed connections between different cultures and the ways in which their inhabitants see the world; it then traces developments in the analysis of language and meaning that have led to specific understandings of social construction in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. In later stages of the course, students will be encouraged to collect and analyse examples from their own reading and experience.
Lectures + field trip to The Finnish Labour Museum Werstas.
This course is an introduction to peace mediation as an approach to conflict resolution in the international political sphere. We will look at the practice of mediation, its methods and analyze the opportunities and challenges in applying mediation in peace processes. The course seeks to simplify the field and bridge theoretical approaches with institutional frameworks and policy approaches on the one hand and equip students with practical tools and skills in mediation that can be applied in diverse policy fields on the other.
This course is not a certification in mediation and is not an all-encompassing coverage on the topic. Instead this is an introduction to the practice of mediation, complementing the existing theoretical courses at the university. As such it aims to give a broad overview of the issues related to applying mediation from the macro to the micro level, introduce the main actors conducting mediation in the international sphere and analyze the multiple stakeholders in peace-building processes and the different ways to approach them.
Mediation has been around for centuries and depending on culture, ideology, context and personal background and character there are many valuable ways of approaching it. There is no such thing as the “right way” of applying mediation. What is important is that future mediators have options in their tool box of mediation that help them reach a sustainable solution.
The course is built around a one-week block seminar. Your presence, ideas, and active engagement are required throughout for its successful competition. The course is based on experiential learning, which means that we will practice mediation and try to generalize conclusions, as well as look into theoretical frameworks and try to practically apply them. It is built on student participation, supplemented short lectures. The course includes the following components:
• Lectures: Each lecture gives an introduction and presents different aspects of a given topic. Students are expected to have read and engage in the discussion.
• Seminar: In this round, students will discuss together with the instructors the subject matter and raise questions for consideration
• Exercises: Students will be asked to form smaller groups and work interactively.
• Role-plays: These are meant to practice the lessons learned in the lectures and seminars.
• Small Group Discussions: Students are expected to read the newspaper and other social media and to come prepared to discuss current affairs
Upon successful completion of the course, students are awarded 5 credit points (ECTS). Students must register for the course to be eligible to earn these credits.
Only for the degree students of the MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research.
Juan Diaz-Prinz is the Berlin Representative for the European Forum for International Mediation and Dialogue (mediatEUr) and former Director of CSSP: Berlin Center for Integrative Mediation (2005-2012). He is tri-lingual (English, German, and Spanish) conflict resolution specialist with over 14 years of experience managing mediation and negotiations in conflicted regions. His key accomplishments include accompanying the establishment of the European Institute of Peace (2013-2014); being the Senior Mediator in over 30 integrative mediation (2005-2012); assisting and co-mediating in over 50 divided communities in Bosnia and Herzegovina (2008-2004); training over 200 political and civil society leaders in integrative mediation (2002-Present); advising government ministries and institutions on developing mediation: training representatives of the EU and international institutions (UN, UNDP, ICO, and OSCE) on mediation: creating mediation strategies for multi-country and multi-donor projects; and providing training, coaching, and consulting on international projects.
This course introduces students to the testing of causal hypotheses with statistical methods, focusing on social-science applications. Causal inference in this setting requires melding the language of mathematical statistics with the reality of human decision-making. Successfully testing a social-science hypothesis thus requires both facility with the mathematics, as well an understanding of how people actually behave. This course gives students an introduction to the math, and experience in translating the math to reality.
The course is timed according to the scripted schedule of the masters’ program in Public Choice, and is tailored to the needs of that program. As a result, non-PCP students should be aware that the course will proceed at a substantially faster pace than other courses.
The first week is the program’s Math Camp, consisting of 10 lecture hours (no quarters) and nightly group homework assignments. The following three weeks form the Statistics component, consisting of 24 lecture hours (no quarters), twice-a-week group homework assignments, and a final exam.
Enrolments by 4.9.2017
Tämä opintojakso on maisterivaiheen opintojakso ja on tarjonnassa joka toinen vuosi.
The students familiarize themselves with the practicalities of the programme: its structure and pedagogy.The course maps and discusses the points of departure of the students, teachers and the institutions involved in the programme. Furthermore, it consists of reading and independent work.
The students become familiar with current discussions in gender, sexuality and body research. The course provides knowledge of the ways, in which gender, sexuality and society are interconnected with each other, and the ways, in which the interconnections may change. The course deals with a variety of the theoretically informed empirical research on social inequalities and the research of the gendered and sexualized social divisions and practices.
Programme
6.9 Introduction - Katariina Mäkinen & Marja Vehviläinen
12.9 Meyda Yegenoglu: Headscarf debate in Europe
19.9 Hanna-Kaisa Hoppania: Gender, Care, and Economy
26.9 Luca Tainio: Transgender in Cisnormative Society
3.10 Tuula Juvonen: How lesbians queered the Finnish society
10.10 Rebecca Lund: Gender, Class and Knowledge Production
17.10 Johanna Kantola: Gendered effects of the economic crisis in Europe
The course work includes active participation in the lectures; weekly readings and tasks in the moodle; and a learning diary or an essay.
Please see the following website for more information on the course content, schedule and materials: http://www.uta.fi/kirjasto/en/courses/basicsofil.html
In cases where more students register for a course than space allows, priority is assigned as follows:
1. First priority is given to the degree students of the University of Tampere.
2. Second priority is given to the exchange students of the University of Tampere.
3. Third priority is given to the Tampere3 students and to the high school students of the UTA Teacher Training School.
In addition, there is a quota of 5 for the Open University students in every group.
This module is made up of class sessions including group work (20 hours), as well as independent out of class tasks (61 hours). The module will be two periods long and will take place in the autumn semester of the first year of the master’s degree programme.
This module is made up of class sessions including group work (20 hours), as well as independent out of class tasks (61 hours). The module will be two periods long and will take place in the autumn semester of the first year of the master’s degree programme.
If you wish to complete the course during the academic year 2017-2018, contact the teacher no later than March 15, 2018.
This module (54 hours) is online apart from individual teacher-student tutorials for discussion of the submitted thesis extract. The work consists of readings, group analysis tasks and thesis writing work. Students should take the module after their research proposal has been accepted by their programme and they are about to embark upon the writing of their thesis.
We see and hear about globalization all the time: in the media, in statements by politicians, and buzzing around our social networks. We have a broad sense that politics, cultures, people, and organizations are all connected around the world. Yet, most people are hard-pressed to define what, precisely, globalization means. This course provides students with the basis for making sense of globalization and transnational connections in the contemporary world. It will go beyond popular, political and media rhetoric about globalization, and build a basis for students to gain a critical understanding of transnational connectivity. We will understand how events and forces outside national borders inform local trends, by examining global aspects of politics, policies, economics, environment, migration, history, popular culture, and religion. To do this, the course will unpack the three major social theoretic perspectives on making sense of globalization in these areas of modern life, with a spotlight on the emerging, cutting-edge, World Society Theory. We will also focus on the global-local interface: on how the local becomes global and how the global in turn, shapes what we think about as entirely local. By the end of the course, students will be able to describe how globalization impacts their own life, and to apply social theories of globalization to an empirical case of their interest.
In order to be able to participate in the course, students are required to complete either
(a) the lectures (5 ECTS), or (b) the lectures plus seminars (10 ECTS). It is not possible to attend only the seminars.
Students of the Master's Degree Programme on Global and Transnational Sociology are required to complete full course (10 ECTS).
Please note that you must enroll separately for the lectures and the seminar.
Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP Global and Transnational Sociology
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
We see and hear about globalization all the time: in the media, in statements by politicians, and buzzing around our social networks. We have a broad sense that politics, cultures, people, and organizations are all connected around the world. Yet, most people are hard-pressed to define what, precisely, globalization means. This course provides students with the basis for making sense of globalization and transnational connections in the contemporary world. It will go beyond popular, political and media rhetoric about globalization, and build a basis for students to gain a critical understanding of transnational connectivity. We will understand how events and forces outside national borders inform local trends, by examining global aspects of politics, policies, economics, environment, migration, history, popular culture, and religion. To do this, the course will unpack the three major social theoretic perspectives on making sense of globalization in these areas of modern life, with a spotlight on the emerging, cutting-edge, World Society Theory. We will also focus on the global-local interface: on how the local becomes global and how the global in turn, shapes what we think about as entirely local. By the end of the course, students will be able to describe how globalization impacts their own life, and to apply social theories of globalization to an empirical case of their interest.
In order to be able to participate in the seminar, students are required to complete the lecture part of this course. It is not possible to attend only the seminars.
Students of the Master's Degree Programme on Global and Transnational Sociology are required to complete full course (10 ECTS).
Please note that you must enroll separately for the lectures and the seminar.
Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP Global and Transnational Sociology
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
The course deepens the students' understanding of the functioning of world society and the role of epistemic governance in it. In addition to showing how world culture is seen in the global spread of world models, the course approaches the circulation of global ideas from the perspective of national actors, especially policymakers. In the national political fields, actors justify new policies by international comparisons and by the successes and failures of models adopted in other countries. Consequently, national policies are synchronized with each other. Yet, because of the way such domestication of global trends takes place, citizens retain and reproduce the understanding that they follow a sovereign national trajectory. The lectures introduce the key ideas of the neoinstitutional global sociology coupled with perspectives from studies on epistemic governance.
Lectures look at conflicts in the post-Soviet space, including the sources of conflicts, role of “ethnic factor”, nationalism and religion, development of conflicts, contested problems of foreign interventions (legitimization of peacekeeping operation and use of force), peace negotiations, and actual state of play. The course critically evaluates effectiveness of actions of various state and non-state actors participating in the mitigation, settlement, mediation, negotiation, arbitration, management, and resolution of the conflicts. Apart of the introductory lecture devoted to basic theoretical aspects of regional conflicts and methodology for applied analysis of regional conflicts, each succeeding lecture presents a case study of a specific conflict cluster. The main focus in class discussion is the actual peace processes involving various actors and “windows of opportunity” for conflict resolution which can be opened up in the mutual interplay of the actions and approaches of the conflict parties supported by the appropriate policies of international actors. The main goal of the course is to provide students with the methodological framework for applied empirical analysis of the regional conflicts that could fit various contemporary and historical regional conflicts around the world.
Teaching methods
Teaching methods include lectures, class discussions and students’ presentations in seminars. Students will also be required to write short critically reflective learning diary. The case study lectures are given by the guest teachers from the region in focus.
Teaching
II and III Periods 2017/2018 (31.10.2017-25.01.2018)
Lectures: Tuesdays and Thursdays at 12.00-14.00 (14 hours)
1. Introduction to the course: basic theoretical aspects of regional conflicts, methodology for applied analysis of regional conflicts; main characteristics of the post-Soviet regional conflicts (Vadim Romashov, TAPRI). Tuesday 31.10.2017
2. Ethnic clashes between Kyrgyz and Uzbeks: National and international perspectives (Asel Myrzabekova, Bonn International Center for Conversation/American University of Central Asia). Tuesday 7.11.2017
3. Regional conflicts and history as conflicting resource: Abkhazia and different interpretations of history (Ketevan Gurchiani, Institute of Philosophy, Ilia State University). Thursday 9.11.2017
4. Politics of history, conflict and war in Ukraine (Artem Kharchenko, Politic History Department of National Technical University “Kharkiv Polytechnic Institute”/NGO “Center for Interethnic Relations Research in Eastern Europe”). Tuesday 5.12.2017
5. Regional conflicts, peace processes and mediation in Moldova: Transnistria and Gagauzia (Valentina Teosa, Department of International Relations, Moldova State University). Thursday 7.12.2017
6. North Caucasus: Stable instability (Magomed Gizbulaev, Institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnography, Dagestan Scientific Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences). Tuesday 16.1.2018.
7. Karabakh conflict and the current regional affairs (Artur Atanesyan, Faculty of Sociology, Yerevan State University). Thursday 18.1.2018
Seminars:
The course is organized in cooperation with Aleksanteri Institute's Russian and East European Master's School.
This module examines intersectional approaches to human mobility in peace and conflict research. Violent conflicts, ethnic, religious and gender-based discrimination and human rights abuses produce forced displacement. In this course, we will explore the global phenomenon of human mobility in a two-fold manner. We will start by introducing multiple perspectives and actors together with key theoretical and methodological debates. The course then proceeds by situating these debates in a local context. This will be done by engaging the students with migrants and refugees living in the Tampere region.
The course structure will give the students a possibility to connect large-scale phenomena to their local manifestations and implications. The course seeks to facilitate understanding on how theories and abstract concepts shape, direct and resonate with people’s self-conceptions, how conflicts gain transnational dimensions and how forced migration enters into different people’s lives in multiple ways. What kind of connections are formed between peaceful societies and conflict zones through human mobility?
The course work will be preceded by a preliminary task in which students will reflect on their personal connection on the phenomenon of human mobility. Students have to return the assignment before the first lecture. The course consists of lectures, assigned readings, a practical project conducted outside the classroom and a final seminar. The students will carry out these practical projects in groups in the supervision of the teachers. The practical partners and possible working methods have been agreed by the teachers before the course. The results of the student projects will be presented in the final seminar (21st February 2018).
25.10.2017 Contextualizing mobilities and introduction to the course work
1.11.2017 Defining people on the move; international, regional and national frameworks
8.11.2017 Politics, governance and solidarity action
16.11.2017 Intersectionality as a concept, intersectionality as a perspective
22.11.2017 How to study mobilities?
29.11.2017 Ethical issues in mobility research
1.12.-20.12.2017 Independent study period: Preparing an idea paper on the empirical project
Feedback via Moodle platform
10.1.2018 Discussion on how to develop the projects
External partners participate in the session (tbc)
17.1.2018 Visiting lecture by professor Hassen Boubakri (University of Sousse): The role of CSOs in influencing migration and asylum policies
31.1.2018 Workshop on the on-going projects
14.2.2018 Optional: Teachers available for discussing any last minute issues on the projects
21.2.2018 Final seminar 4h
Student of MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research can include this course either to "PEACE045 Understanding Conflicts and Violence in Global Society" or to "Professional and Transferable Skills".
Max. 25 students. Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in Global and Transnational Studies, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students (Master's level exchange students will be given priority)
This course is an introduction to peace mediation as an approach to conflict resolution in the international political sphere. We will look at the practice of mediation, its methods and analyze the opportunities and challenges in applying mediation in peace processes. The course seeks to simplify the field and bridge theoretical approaches with institutional frameworks and policy approaches on the one hand and equip students with practical tools and skills in mediation that can be applied in diverse policy fields on the other.
This course is not a certification in mediation and is not an all-encompassing coverage on the topic. Instead this is an introduction to the practice of mediation, complementing the existing theoretical courses at the university. As such it aims to give a broad overview of the issues related to applying mediation from the macro to the micro level, introduce the main actors conducting mediation in the international sphere and analyze the multiple stakeholders in peace-building processes and the different ways to approach them.
Mediation has been around for centuries and depending on culture, ideology, context and personal background and character there are many valuable ways of approaching it. There is no such thing as the “right way” of applying mediation. What is important is that future mediators have options in their tool box of mediation that help them reach a sustainable solution.
The course is built around a one-week block seminar. Your presence, ideas, and active engagement are required throughout for its successful competition. The course is based on experiential learning, which means that we will practice mediation and try to generalize conclusions, as well as look into theoretical frameworks and try to practically apply them. It is built on student participation, supplemented short lectures. The course includes the following components:
• Lectures: Each lecture gives an introduction and presents different aspects of a given topic. Students are expected to have read and engage in the discussion.
• Seminar: In this round, students will discuss together with the instructors the subject matter and raise questions for consideration
• Exercises: Students will be asked to form smaller groups and work interactively.
• Role-plays: These are meant to practice the lessons learned in the lectures and seminars.
• Small Group Discussions: Students are expected to read the newspaper and other social media and to come prepared to discuss current affairs
Upon successful completion of the course, students are awarded 5 credit points (ECTS). Students must register for the course to be eligible to earn these credits.
Only for the degree students of the MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research.
Juan Diaz-Prinz is the Berlin Representative for the European Forum for International Mediation and Dialogue (mediatEUr) and former Director of CSSP: Berlin Center for Integrative Mediation (2005-2012). He is tri-lingual (English, German, and Spanish) conflict resolution specialist with over 14 years of experience managing mediation and negotiations in conflicted regions. His key accomplishments include accompanying the establishment of the European Institute of Peace (2013-2014); being the Senior Mediator in over 30 integrative mediation (2005-2012); assisting and co-mediating in over 50 divided communities in Bosnia and Herzegovina (2008-2004); training over 200 political and civil society leaders in integrative mediation (2002-Present); advising government ministries and institutions on developing mediation: training representatives of the EU and international institutions (UN, UNDP, ICO, and OSCE) on mediation: creating mediation strategies for multi-country and multi-donor projects; and providing training, coaching, and consulting on international projects.
Enrolments by 4.9.2017
Tämä opintojakso on maisterivaiheen opintojakso ja on tarjonnassa joka toinen vuosi.
The multidisciplinary TAPRI series of workshops on Peace are conducted by visiting teachers from Georgia, Moldova and Armenia with various academic backgrounds. They have research expertise, among other fields, in history, culture, religion, education, media, human rights, gender, security, international relations, migration, economy, and politics. The geographic focus of their researches varies from the former Soviet areas and European Union to Turkey and Middle East. During the workshop, the teacher together with students discuss virtues and challenges of peace by analyzing its manifestations through practices of diverse local communities, state policies, politics of religion, media and education. By the end of workshop, the teacher and students jointly develop a model of understanding how peace is performed and confronted at different scales of social life.
Before each workshop session, the student is required to read literature provided by the teacher and write a short (1-2 pages) discussion paper in which s/he presents his/her view on peace based on the readings. After the session, the student is also required to write a 1-page reflection paper in which s/he critically describes the model for interpreting peace practices and their challenges developed during the class. The workshop teacher considers pre-assignments. Reflection papers are considered by the teacher responsible of the course. The student receives 1 ECTS per workshop and is free to attend as many workshops as s/he wishes.
Teaching
Friday from 10 am to 2 pm
Monday from 12 to 4 pm
Tuesday from 10 am to 2 pm
Enrolment
By emailing Vadim Romashov at vadim.romashov@staff.uta.fi
The deadline for enrolment is two weeks before each workshop session.
After sending the email, the student receives further instructions about the course and the enrolment key to the course Moodle webpage from where s/he can access to the required readings. As sooner message sent more time for preparation for the workshop students has. There will be a limited number of students accepted to the course.
IR students: it is possible to compensate part of the "POLKVS40 Workshop in International Relations" by actively participating in the workshops and by writing a learning diary. Please agree about the compensation with Professor Tuomas Forsberg (tuomas.forsberg@uta.fi) beforehand.
This participatory course begins by choosing an acute international crisis. After a theory lecture, the selected conflict will be interpreted through Edward Said’s ‘contrapuntal reading’. In this type of analysis, a phenomenon is examined on multiple directions simultaneously, with the aim of finding a mutual understanding (‘reading’) of the conflict that takes into consideration the contrasting perspectives.
The course is composed of an obligatory theory lecture, seminar sessions, group work and an extended final seminar where the concluding contrapuntal reading of the conflict will be performed.
In order to pass the course, the participants need to attend the theory lecture, final extended seminar as well as three other seminar sessions. Furthermore, the participants are required to produce a group presentation and an essay. Places are limited in this course (max 15) and filled in the order of registration.
We can still accept a few more students to this course! If you are interested, please send a message to eveliina.permi@uta.fi
The course focuses on feminist approaches to knowledge production, both earlier and current, and with different areas of feminist philosophy. Special focus is on contemporary discussions of differences and similarities between various feminist strands and theories.
Preliminary program with themes for lectures:
24.10. Marianne Liljeström: Identity knowledges
31.10. Marianne Liljeström: Gender and sexuality
07.11. Sade Kondelin: Trans issues
14.11. Katariina Kyrölä: Embodiment
21.11. Salla Tuori: Postcoloniality and intersectionality
28.11. Marianne Liljeström: Affects
05.12. Taru Leppänen: Discourses and representations
12.12. Taru Leppänen: Materialisms
The course is meant for Master's students and other students who have preliminary knowledge in Gender Studies, and it can be done either as a 5 credit course (lectures, articles and weekly assignments) or a 10 credit course (available for master's students, includes also study group work, Tuesdays 12.30-14, L4026, and a book exam).
The lectures will be broadcasted from the University of Turku, Gender Studies on Tuesdays at 10-12. Tampere students gather together to listen to the lectures, ask questions and discuss in Pinni B3107, and their assignments will be evaluated by the Tampere teacher.
Assignment: Learning diaries of assigned articles before each lecture
Please see the following website for more information on the course content, schedule and materials: http://www.uta.fi/kirjasto/en/courses/basicsofil.html
This module is made up of class sessions including group work (20 hours), as well as independent out of class tasks (61 hours). The module will be two periods long and will take place in the autumn semester of the first year of the master’s degree programme.
This module is made up of class sessions including group work (20 hours), as well as independent out of class tasks (61 hours). The module will be two periods long and will take place in the autumn semester of the first year of the master’s degree programme.
If you wish to complete the course during the academic year 2017-2018, contact the teacher no later than March 15, 2018.
This module (54 hours) is online apart from individual teacher-student tutorials for discussion of the submitted thesis extract. The work consists of readings, group analysis tasks and thesis writing work. Students should take the module after their research proposal has been accepted by their programme and they are about to embark upon the writing of their thesis.
The course gives an introduction into the methodology and practices of quantitative research, ways of analyzing quantitative data, deeper understanding about one specific quantitative research method and practices of analyzing data. This course focuses on quantitative research methods in general, and on specified methods such as regression and variance analysis.
Only for the students of the following programmes:
- MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research
- MDP in Global and Transnational Sociology
- MDP in Public Choice
- MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare
- MDP in Gender Studies
An introduction into methodology of qualitative research and ways of analysing qualitative data. Deeper understanding about one specific qualitative research method and practices of analysing data.
The course has three parts:
1) Introduction focuses on the methodology of qualitative research. Different ways to interpret the reality and understand knowledge are discussed. Students learn how the research questions and findings are related to the scientific assumptions on which the research methods are based.
2) Students will examine one specific, established qualitative research method (discourse analysis/ narrative analysis/ ethnography etc.). The focus will be on the methodological basis, the forms of data and the ways of analysing the data. The selection of the covered qualitative methods will be based on the interests of the students.
3) The analysis of the data will be exercised. Basic rules of qualitative research method are practiced with a data by step-by-step process. The end result will be a well-grounded argument based on the analysis.
As an outcome students will have methodological skills needed in her/his masters thesis writing.
Only for the students of the following programmes:
- MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research
- MDP in Global and Transnational Sociology
- MDP in Public Choice
- MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare
- MDP in Gender Studies
The course departs from the idea that the media is one of the central actors through which national actors become aware of far-away events and through which these events become integrated with domestic policy discourses. However, this process is a complex one. On one hand, the journalists are central players in it as they decide what is topical or newsworthy for domestic audiences. They also frame the events so that they make good sense to domestic addressees. On the other hand, in domestic contexts there are many other actors that aim to influence the public understanding of the reported events. These actors bring far-way events into their political argumentation in their attempts to advance their own political interests and desires. Interpretations that appear widely convincing are typically taken up and reported by the media.
Starting from these premises, the course suggests, the media serve not merely as an arena through which far-away events are introduced to local audiences. If anything, the media can be seen as a political arena in which different accounts of the reported events meet thus constructing public understanding of these events. Sooner or later, these understandings convert into domestic policy decisions and practices.
The course approaches the above phenomenon especially from the perspective of the traditional news media institution, i.e. of how the national media serve as a forum through which foreign news events are incorporated into domestic policy discourses. Additionally, the course discusses the role of social media in processes in which far-way news events are brought into local political argumentation, thus affecting domestic policies.
In order to be able to participate in the course, students are required to complete either
(a) the lectures (5 ECTS), or (b) the lectures plus seminars (10 ECTS). It is not possible to attend only the seminars.
Students of the Master's Degree Programme on Global and Transnational Sociology are required to complete full course (10 ECTS).
Please note that you must enroll separately for the lectures and the seminar.
Max. 40 students. Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP Global and Transnational Sociology
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
The course departs from the idea that the media is one of the central actors through which national actors become aware of far-away events and through which these events become integrated with domestic policy discourses. However, this process is a complex one. On one hand, the journalists are central players in it as they decide what is topical or newsworthy for domestic audiences. They also frame the events so that they make good sense to domestic addressees. On the other hand, in domestic contexts there are many other actors that aim to influence the public understanding of the reported events. These actors bring far-way events into their political argumentation in their attempts to advance their own political interests and desires. Interpretations that appear widely convincing are typically taken up and reported by the media.
Starting from these premises, the course suggests, the media serve not merely as an arena through which far-away events are introduced to local audiences. If anything, the media can be seen as a political arena in which different accounts of the reported events meet thus constructing public understanding of these events. Sooner or later, these understandings convert into domestic policy decisions and practices.
The course approaches the above phenomenon especially from the perspective of the traditional news media institution, i.e. of how the national media serve as a forum through which foreign news events are incorporated into domestic policy discourses. Additionally, the course discusses the role of social media in processes in which far-way news events are brought into local political argumentation, thus affecting domestic policies.
In order to be able to participate in the seminar, students are required to complete the lecture part of this course. It is not possible to attend only the seminars.
Students of the Master's Degree Programme on Global and Transnational Sociology are required to complete full course (10 ECTS).
Please note that you must enroll separately for the lectures and the seminar.
Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP Global and Transnational Sociology
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
Lectures look at conflicts in the post-Soviet space, including the sources of conflicts, role of “ethnic factor”, nationalism and religion, development of conflicts, contested problems of foreign interventions (legitimization of peacekeeping operation and use of force), peace negotiations, and actual state of play. The course critically evaluates effectiveness of actions of various state and non-state actors participating in the mitigation, settlement, mediation, negotiation, arbitration, management, and resolution of the conflicts. Apart of the introductory lecture devoted to basic theoretical aspects of regional conflicts and methodology for applied analysis of regional conflicts, each succeeding lecture presents a case study of a specific conflict cluster. The main focus in class discussion is the actual peace processes involving various actors and “windows of opportunity” for conflict resolution which can be opened up in the mutual interplay of the actions and approaches of the conflict parties supported by the appropriate policies of international actors. The main goal of the course is to provide students with the methodological framework for applied empirical analysis of the regional conflicts that could fit various contemporary and historical regional conflicts around the world.
Teaching methods
Teaching methods include lectures, class discussions and students’ presentations in seminars. Students will also be required to write short critically reflective learning diary. The case study lectures are given by the guest teachers from the region in focus.
Teaching
II and III Periods 2017/2018 (31.10.2017-25.01.2018)
Lectures: Tuesdays and Thursdays at 12.00-14.00 (14 hours)
1. Introduction to the course: basic theoretical aspects of regional conflicts, methodology for applied analysis of regional conflicts; main characteristics of the post-Soviet regional conflicts (Vadim Romashov, TAPRI). Tuesday 31.10.2017
2. Ethnic clashes between Kyrgyz and Uzbeks: National and international perspectives (Asel Myrzabekova, Bonn International Center for Conversation/American University of Central Asia). Tuesday 7.11.2017
3. Regional conflicts and history as conflicting resource: Abkhazia and different interpretations of history (Ketevan Gurchiani, Institute of Philosophy, Ilia State University). Thursday 9.11.2017
4. Politics of history, conflict and war in Ukraine (Artem Kharchenko, Politic History Department of National Technical University “Kharkiv Polytechnic Institute”/NGO “Center for Interethnic Relations Research in Eastern Europe”). Tuesday 5.12.2017
5. Regional conflicts, peace processes and mediation in Moldova: Transnistria and Gagauzia (Valentina Teosa, Department of International Relations, Moldova State University). Thursday 7.12.2017
6. North Caucasus: Stable instability (Magomed Gizbulaev, Institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnography, Dagestan Scientific Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences). Tuesday 16.1.2018.
7. Karabakh conflict and the current regional affairs (Artur Atanesyan, Faculty of Sociology, Yerevan State University). Thursday 18.1.2018
Seminars:
The course is organized in cooperation with Aleksanteri Institute's Russian and East European Master's School.
This module examines intersectional approaches to human mobility in peace and conflict research. Violent conflicts, ethnic, religious and gender-based discrimination and human rights abuses produce forced displacement. In this course, we will explore the global phenomenon of human mobility in a two-fold manner. We will start by introducing multiple perspectives and actors together with key theoretical and methodological debates. The course then proceeds by situating these debates in a local context. This will be done by engaging the students with migrants and refugees living in the Tampere region.
The course structure will give the students a possibility to connect large-scale phenomena to their local manifestations and implications. The course seeks to facilitate understanding on how theories and abstract concepts shape, direct and resonate with people’s self-conceptions, how conflicts gain transnational dimensions and how forced migration enters into different people’s lives in multiple ways. What kind of connections are formed between peaceful societies and conflict zones through human mobility?
The course work will be preceded by a preliminary task in which students will reflect on their personal connection on the phenomenon of human mobility. Students have to return the assignment before the first lecture. The course consists of lectures, assigned readings, a practical project conducted outside the classroom and a final seminar. The students will carry out these practical projects in groups in the supervision of the teachers. The practical partners and possible working methods have been agreed by the teachers before the course. The results of the student projects will be presented in the final seminar (21st February 2018).
25.10.2017 Contextualizing mobilities and introduction to the course work
1.11.2017 Defining people on the move; international, regional and national frameworks
8.11.2017 Politics, governance and solidarity action
16.11.2017 Intersectionality as a concept, intersectionality as a perspective
22.11.2017 How to study mobilities?
29.11.2017 Ethical issues in mobility research
1.12.-20.12.2017 Independent study period: Preparing an idea paper on the empirical project
Feedback via Moodle platform
10.1.2018 Discussion on how to develop the projects
External partners participate in the session (tbc)
17.1.2018 Visiting lecture by professor Hassen Boubakri (University of Sousse): The role of CSOs in influencing migration and asylum policies
31.1.2018 Workshop on the on-going projects
14.2.2018 Optional: Teachers available for discussing any last minute issues on the projects
21.2.2018 Final seminar 4h
Student of MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research can include this course either to "PEACE045 Understanding Conflicts and Violence in Global Society" or to "Professional and Transferable Skills".
Max. 25 students. Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in Global and Transnational Studies, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students (Master's level exchange students will be given priority)
Themes:
PART 1: BAKCKGROUND: CRISIS OF LIBERAL PEACE ORDER
1) Beyond Liberal Peace: Liberal Peace and its critic (incl. Liberal Peace as Governing Practice, Peace New Standard of Civilization, Popular Peace, Peace Formation)
2) Crisis of Peace Mediation (incl. transformation of peacemaking tools and agency)
PART 2: LOOKING FOR NEW THEORETICAL APPROACHES TO PEACEMAKING:
3) Complexity of Conflicts (incl. critique on rational management)
4) From Conflict Resolution to Transformation (incl. Agonistic Peace and Dialogues)
5) Transforming Antagonism: Mediating Identities and Collective Memories (incl. how is possible to transform identities as part peace process)
6) Inclusive and Locally Owned Peace Process (incl. increasing women’s role, participatory dialogues, role of civic society actors)
PART 3: MAPPING NEW PRACTICES OF DIALOGIC APPROACH TO PEACE MEDIATION
7) Introduction to Independent Peacemakers
8) Peace through Dialogues: National Dialogues
9) Peace through Dialogues: Reconciling Dialogues
10) Peace through Dialogues: Dialogic Mediation
SEMINAR:
Conflict Analysis Exercise
Teachers
Marko Lehti, Teacher responsible
Guests lecturers:
Representatives from a Finnish based peacemaking organisations CMI, Finn Church Aid, Felm and the Network of Religious and Traditional Peacemakers
Representative from Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Representative from Mediation Support Unit of the United Nations
Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in Global and Transnational Studies, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Gender Studies, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
Peace and conflict studies, following international relations studies, have almost always used the national frame to analyze uprisings and other instances of collective violence. Many factors can explain this tradition. Peace and conflict analysis has for a long time been dominated by an international relations paradigm that considered states as the main and most relevant actors in instances of violence, and that consequently saw national boundaries as ‘naturally’ relevant for delimiting the analysis of conflicts. Another more practical factor lies in the fact that most researchers have been using national statistics and other national sources of data for building their analyses, and therefore also giving a national frame to their results.
Over the past few years, however, literature in this field has increasingly been taking stock of recent geopolitical developments highlighting the relevance of other units of analysis. In many cases violence cannot be explained if one does not take into account its transnational character and source, like in the case of the tribal regions of Afghanistan and Pakistan, for instance. As a result, analyses exploring the transnational and international patterns of conflicts have become increasingly popular. The emergence of concepts such as ‘international terrorism’ or the observation of ‘contagion’ or ‘domino’ effects induced by social networks or migration waves, have also contributed to this methodological shift. This widening of the scope of analysis allows for a more accurate picture, accounting for complexity and for elements that would otherwise be difficult to trace, such as regional factors and transnational actors.
In this perspective, the objective of the course is to describe, analyze and understand the transnational dynamics of current conflicts, starting with conflict diffusion, transnational militancy, refugee flows and forced migration, diasporas, links between transnational criminal networks and insurgent groups. The module is inter-disciplinary in nature, drawing on sociological, anthropological, legal, but also international relations works and debates.
Lecture topics will include:
Modes of study
Seven two-hour sessions combining lectures and discussions, and five two-hour sessions of case study presentations.
All students are expected to keep up with the readings for each lecture, and to contribute to class discussions.
Students will be asked to prepare a one-page reading note on one of the readings listed in the syllabus, critically presenting and assessing it. The choice of the reading will have to be agreed upon at the beginning of the course.
Towards the end of the course collective presentations and discussions of contemporary case studies will be organized.
Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in Global and Transnational Studies, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Gender Studies, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
Forced and voluntary forms of migration are current and challenging issues in an increasingly globalized world. Various crises force people to leave their homelands as refugees. Polarizing social conditions in Central Africa and the Middle East feed into the migration crises we are seeing in the Mediterranean region. Migration has its own demographics which may affect the health of the migrant in many ways, both short and long term. Also multicultural encounters within health care are explored in this course. The migration of health workers redistributes skilled health professionals and contributes to health-related disparities. The course analyses the dynamics of the global health work crisis and investigates mitigation strategies, such as skills transfer and local capacity building.
The course is offered every other year.
The multidisciplinary TAPRI series of workshops on Peace are conducted by visiting teachers from Georgia, Moldova and Armenia with various academic backgrounds. They have research expertise, among other fields, in history, culture, religion, education, media, human rights, gender, security, international relations, migration, economy, and politics. The geographic focus of their researches varies from the former Soviet areas and European Union to Turkey and Middle East. During the workshop, the teacher together with students discuss virtues and challenges of peace by analyzing its manifestations through practices of diverse local communities, state policies, politics of religion, media and education. By the end of workshop, the teacher and students jointly develop a model of understanding how peace is performed and confronted at different scales of social life.
Before each workshop session, the student is required to read literature provided by the teacher and write a short (1-2 pages) discussion paper in which s/he presents his/her view on peace based on the readings. After the session, the student is also required to write a 1-page reflection paper in which s/he critically describes the model for interpreting peace practices and their challenges developed during the class. The workshop teacher considers pre-assignments. Reflection papers are considered by the teacher responsible of the course. The student receives 1 ECTS per workshop and is free to attend as many workshops as s/he wishes.
Teaching
Friday from 10 am to 2 pm
Monday from 12 to 4 pm
Tuesday from 10 am to 2 pm
Enrolment
By emailing Vadim Romashov at vadim.romashov@staff.uta.fi
The deadline for enrolment is two weeks before each workshop session.
After sending the email, the student receives further instructions about the course and the enrolment key to the course Moodle webpage from where s/he can access to the required readings. As sooner message sent more time for preparation for the workshop students has. There will be a limited number of students accepted to the course.
IR students: it is possible to compensate part of the "POLKVS40 Workshop in International Relations" by actively participating in the workshops and by writing a learning diary. Please agree about the compensation with Professor Tuomas Forsberg (tuomas.forsberg@uta.fi) beforehand.
The course focuses on methodological questions in feminist research. It comprises an overview of some of the most influential research approaches, which include intersectionality, standpoint theories, affectivities, postcoloniality, gendered practices and new materialisms. Furthermore, the course explores the relationships between different methods (such as discourse analysis, ethnography, close reading, historical research) to questions of knowledge production.
1. Lectures, related readings and independent work (5 ECTS) 9.1.-13.3. Tuesdays at 13-15 Linna K103
9.1. Salla Tuori: Feminist methodology and research process
16.1. Marianne Liljeström: Is all feminist research autoethnographical?
23.1. Gabriele Griffin: Interviewing as feminist research practice
30.1. Katariina Kyrölä: Working with affect and representation
6.2. Lotta Palmgren: Creative writing in feminist research
13.2. Magdalena Kmak: Knowledge production and research methods in human rights
20.2. Kaisa Ilmonen: What is intersectionality?
27.2. Faith Mkwesha: Decolonial research methodology
6.3. Katve-Kaisa Kontturi: Feminist new materialisms
2. Seminars, readings and independent work (5 ECTS), only for master level students, first meeting on Tue 9.1. at 15-16 Linna 5038
1. The Lectures will be broadcasted from Åbo Akademi on Tuesdays at 13-15, from 9.1.2018 to March 13 Linna K103.
--Electronic enrollment, max 25 students from Tampere; Background in Gender Studies required (ie. the basic course and one intermediary level course)
2. The seminar starts on Jan the 9th at 15-16. Other times upon agreement. Teacher: Hanna Ojala
-- Seminars only for Master level students.
Tampere students: through electronic enrolment.
Others: by sending email to the teacher: Meyda.Yegenoglu at uta.fi
The course is meant for Master's level and doctoral students, as well as interested researchers, max 15 participants. All participants are required to do the 'must' readings BEFORE the couse.
All students will write a paper based on readings (4-5 p), present it in the course, and submit a final paper (5-8 p) after the course
DL for final submissions (papers 5-8 p), to be sent in email to the teacher: March the 19th, 2018.
Please see the following website for more information on the course content, schedule and materials: http://www.uta.fi/kirjasto/en/courses/basicsofil.html
This module is made up of class sessions including group work (20 hours), as well as independent out of class tasks (61 hours). The module will be two periods long and will take place in the autumn semester of the first year of the master’s degree programme.
If you wish to complete the course during the academic year 2017-2018, contact the teacher no later than March 15, 2018.
This module (54 hours) is online apart from individual teacher-student tutorials for discussion of the submitted thesis extract. The work consists of readings, group analysis tasks and thesis writing work. Students should take the module after their research proposal has been accepted by their programme and they are about to embark upon the writing of their thesis.
An introduction into methodology of qualitative research and ways of analysing qualitative data. Deeper understanding about one specific qualitative research method and practices of analysing data.
The course has three parts:
1) Introduction focuses on the methodology of qualitative research. Different ways to interpret the reality and understand knowledge are discussed. Students learn how the research questions and findings are related to the scientific assumptions on which the research methods are based.
2) Students will examine one specific, established qualitative research method (discourse analysis/ narrative analysis/ ethnography etc.). The focus will be on the methodological basis, the forms of data and the ways of analysing the data. The selection of the covered qualitative methods will be based on the interests of the students.
3) The analysis of the data will be exercised. Basic rules of qualitative research method are practiced with a data by step-by-step process. The end result will be a well-grounded argument based on the analysis.
As an outcome students will have methodological skills needed in her/his masters thesis writing.
Only for the students of the following programmes:
- MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research
- MDP in Global and Transnational Sociology
- MDP in Public Choice
- MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare
- MDP in Gender Studies
The course departs from the idea that the media is one of the central actors through which national actors become aware of far-away events and through which these events become integrated with domestic policy discourses. However, this process is a complex one. On one hand, the journalists are central players in it as they decide what is topical or newsworthy for domestic audiences. They also frame the events so that they make good sense to domestic addressees. On the other hand, in domestic contexts there are many other actors that aim to influence the public understanding of the reported events. These actors bring far-way events into their political argumentation in their attempts to advance their own political interests and desires. Interpretations that appear widely convincing are typically taken up and reported by the media.
Starting from these premises, the course suggests, the media serve not merely as an arena through which far-away events are introduced to local audiences. If anything, the media can be seen as a political arena in which different accounts of the reported events meet thus constructing public understanding of these events. Sooner or later, these understandings convert into domestic policy decisions and practices.
The course approaches the above phenomenon especially from the perspective of the traditional news media institution, i.e. of how the national media serve as a forum through which foreign news events are incorporated into domestic policy discourses. Additionally, the course discusses the role of social media in processes in which far-way news events are brought into local political argumentation, thus affecting domestic policies.
In order to be able to participate in the course, students are required to complete either
(a) the lectures (5 ECTS), or (b) the lectures plus seminars (10 ECTS). It is not possible to attend only the seminars.
Students of the Master's Degree Programme on Global and Transnational Sociology are required to complete full course (10 ECTS).
Please note that you must enroll separately for the lectures and the seminar.
Max. 40 students. Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP Global and Transnational Sociology
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
The course departs from the idea that the media is one of the central actors through which national actors become aware of far-away events and through which these events become integrated with domestic policy discourses. However, this process is a complex one. On one hand, the journalists are central players in it as they decide what is topical or newsworthy for domestic audiences. They also frame the events so that they make good sense to domestic addressees. On the other hand, in domestic contexts there are many other actors that aim to influence the public understanding of the reported events. These actors bring far-way events into their political argumentation in their attempts to advance their own political interests and desires. Interpretations that appear widely convincing are typically taken up and reported by the media.
Starting from these premises, the course suggests, the media serve not merely as an arena through which far-away events are introduced to local audiences. If anything, the media can be seen as a political arena in which different accounts of the reported events meet thus constructing public understanding of these events. Sooner or later, these understandings convert into domestic policy decisions and practices.
The course approaches the above phenomenon especially from the perspective of the traditional news media institution, i.e. of how the national media serve as a forum through which foreign news events are incorporated into domestic policy discourses. Additionally, the course discusses the role of social media in processes in which far-way news events are brought into local political argumentation, thus affecting domestic policies.
In order to be able to participate in the seminar, students are required to complete the lecture part of this course. It is not possible to attend only the seminars.
Students of the Master's Degree Programme on Global and Transnational Sociology are required to complete full course (10 ECTS).
Please note that you must enroll separately for the lectures and the seminar.
Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP Global and Transnational Sociology
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare, MDP in Gender Studies)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
Themes:
PART 1: BAKCKGROUND: CRISIS OF LIBERAL PEACE ORDER
1) Beyond Liberal Peace: Liberal Peace and its critic (incl. Liberal Peace as Governing Practice, Peace New Standard of Civilization, Popular Peace, Peace Formation)
2) Crisis of Peace Mediation (incl. transformation of peacemaking tools and agency)
PART 2: LOOKING FOR NEW THEORETICAL APPROACHES TO PEACEMAKING:
3) Complexity of Conflicts (incl. critique on rational management)
4) From Conflict Resolution to Transformation (incl. Agonistic Peace and Dialogues)
5) Transforming Antagonism: Mediating Identities and Collective Memories (incl. how is possible to transform identities as part peace process)
6) Inclusive and Locally Owned Peace Process (incl. increasing women’s role, participatory dialogues, role of civic society actors)
PART 3: MAPPING NEW PRACTICES OF DIALOGIC APPROACH TO PEACE MEDIATION
7) Introduction to Independent Peacemakers
8) Peace through Dialogues: National Dialogues
9) Peace through Dialogues: Reconciling Dialogues
10) Peace through Dialogues: Dialogic Mediation
SEMINAR:
Conflict Analysis Exercise
Teachers
Marko Lehti, Teacher responsible
Guests lecturers:
Representatives from a Finnish based peacemaking organisations CMI, Finn Church Aid, Felm and the Network of Religious and Traditional Peacemakers
Representative from Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Representative from Mediation Support Unit of the United Nations
Students will be accepted to the course in the following order:
1. degree students of the MDP in Peace, Mediation and Conflict Research
2. degree students of the other Global Society programmes (MDP in Global and Transnational Studies, MDP in Public Choice, MDP in Gender Studies, MDP in Comparative Social Policy and Welfare)
3. other degree students of UTA
4. exchange students
Visiting teacher: Giuseppe Attanasi, University of Lille
(LEM: Lille, Economics & Management)
www.giuseppeattanasi.com
(E-mail: giuseppe.attanasi@univ-lille1.fr)
Teaching Method
In each lecture:
(a) we will introduce a specific economic problem and run a 30 minutes classroom experiment representing this problem in the lab;
(b) we will introduce and analyze the theoretical/behavioral model ‘linked’to the proposed experiment, and formulate behavioral hypotheses that the experiment just run was aimed at testing;
(c) we will analyze the experimental results and check whether they verify the behavioral hypotheses. This might lead to behavioral extensions of the proposed model, so as to account for systematic deviations from predicted behavior;
(d) we will discuss the methodological and design issues of the experiment and eventually propose alternative implementations. The interaction between the teacher and the students attending the course is a necessary condition for the implementation of this 4-step teaching method.
Final Project
To get the course credits, a student should participate in at least 6 of the 7 classroom experiments run during the lectures (one per lecture). At the end of the course, each student will be assigned one of the 7 topics analyzed during the course. The student will have 2 weeks to work on an experimental project related to the topic.
The project can consist in:
(a) a review of the most recent literature,
(b) a report on experimental data provided by the teacher,
(c) the proposal of a new experimental design meant to deal with research questions on the topic, not yet analyzed in the experimental literature.
Once assigned the topic, the student will choose one of these three forms— review, report or proposal— for the …nal project, and the teacher will provide, respectively, relevant references, data or suggestions.
Detailed syllabus
We will analyze the methodological issues of key experimental topics in economics, and the behavioral features of recent extensions of related theoretical models of individual and strategic decision making.
We will mainly concentrate on the following topics:
Lecture 1: Puzzles in Risky Decisions
Lecture 2: Risk Aversion in the Lab
Lecture 3: Ambiguity Aversion in the Lab
Lecture 4: First-Price Auctions
Lecture 5: Almost-Competitive Markets
Lecture 6:VoluntaryContributionGames (Monetary andNon-monetary Incentives)
Lecture 7: SocialDilemmaGames (Distributional andBelief-dependentPreferences)
The multidisciplinary TAPRI series of workshops on Peace are conducted by visiting teachers from Georgia, Moldova and Armenia with various academic backgrounds. They have research expertise, among other fields, in history, culture, religion, education, media, human rights, gender, security, international relations, migration, economy, and politics. The geographic focus of their researches varies from the former Soviet areas and European Union to Turkey and Middle East. During the workshop, the teacher together with students discuss virtues and challenges of peace by analyzing its manifestations through practices of diverse local communities, state policies, politics of religion, media and education. By the end of workshop, the teacher and students jointly develop a model of understanding how peace is performed and confronted at different scales of social life.
Before each workshop session, the student is required to read literature provided by the teacher and write a short (1-2 pages) discussion paper in which s/he presents his/her view on peace based on the readings. After the session, the student is also required to write a 1-page reflection paper in which s/he critically describes the model for interpreting peace practices and their challenges developed during the class. The workshop teacher considers pre-assignments. Reflection papers are considered by the teacher responsible of the course. The student receives 1 ECTS per workshop and is free to attend as many workshops as s/he wishes.
Teaching
Friday from 10 am to 2 pm
Monday from 12 to 4 pm
Tuesday from 10 am to 2 pm
Enrolment
By emailing Vadim Romashov at vadim.romashov@staff.uta.fi
The deadline for enrolment is two weeks before each workshop session.
After sending the email, the student receives further instructions about the course and the enrolment key to the course Moodle webpage from where s/he can access to the required readings. As sooner message sent more time for preparation for the workshop students has. There will be a limited number of students accepted to the course.
IR students: it is possible to compensate part of the "POLKVS40 Workshop in International Relations" by actively participating in the workshops and by writing a learning diary. Please agree about the compensation with Professor Tuomas Forsberg (tuomas.forsberg@uta.fi) beforehand.
This course examines novel ways in which economics studies changes in welfare. In doing so, works will be covered using behavioral, experimental, empirical, and theoretical techniques. Behavioral and experimental economics are used to examine the relationship between welfare and non-standard preferences such as time inconsistency, risk aversion, and other-regarding preferences. Topics cover classic issues with multi-player cooperation (e.g. public goods games and common pool resources), as well as introductions to contemporaneous research areas in economics such as two-sided matching markets (e.g. school-choice) and policies that exploit behavioral paradoxes in order to increase welfare (e.g. ``Nudging’’).
Course schedule:
Class 1: Course introduction, Nash Equilibrium, Prisoner’s Dilemma, coordination games
Class 2: Public goods, volunteer’s dilemma, common pool resources, minimum effort game, and Stag Hunt
Class 3: Risk, Prospect Theory, objective versus subjective uncertainty (e.g. Allais and Ellsberg Paradox)
Class 4: Other regarding preferences and time preferences
Class 5: Response time and competitiveness
Class 6: Market successes and failures (e.g. “Lemons” and the Endowment Effect)
Class 7: Influencing behavior: incentives and nudges
Class 8: Two-sided matching markets
Class 9: Z-tree tutorial (program for designing and running laboratory experiments)
Class 10: Final exam
The preliminary topics of lectures are listed below. The lectures will be held at following times:
6.3. at 9-11 Introduction & practicalities (Katri-Maria Järvinen)
13.3. at 9-11 The Nordic Healthcare System(Katri Sieberg)
20.3. at 9-11 Care Policies for Older People in Transition: the Case of Finland (Anneli Anttonen)
22.3. at 14-16 Basic Income and Nordic Welfare State (Johanna Perkiö)
27.3. at 9-11 Gender in/equality in Nordic working life: welfare state paradox revisited (Armi Mustosmäki)
5.4. at 8-10 Universalism (Antti Halmetoja)
10.4 at 9-11 Childcare policies (Katja Repo)
12.4 at 9-11 The Nordic Model of Industrial Relations (Markku Sippola)
17.4 at 9-11 Income inequality and poverty (Elina Tuominen)
to 19.4. at 8-10 Conclusion & essay instructions (Katri-Maria Järvinen)
The course focuses on methodological questions in feminist research. It comprises an overview of some of the most influential research approaches, which include intersectionality, standpoint theories, affectivities, postcoloniality, gendered practices and new materialisms. Furthermore, the course explores the relationships between different methods (such as discourse analysis, ethnography, close reading, historical research) to questions of knowledge production.
1. Lectures, related readings and independent work (5 ECTS) 9.1.-13.3. Tuesdays at 13-15 Linna K103
9.1. Salla Tuori: Feminist methodology and research process
16.1. Marianne Liljeström: Is all feminist research autoethnographical?
23.1. Gabriele Griffin: Interviewing as feminist research practice
30.1. Katariina Kyrölä: Working with affect and representation
6.2. Lotta Palmgren: Creative writing in feminist research
13.2. Magdalena Kmak: Knowledge production and research methods in human rights
20.2. Kaisa Ilmonen: What is intersectionality?
27.2. Faith Mkwesha: Decolonial research methodology
6.3. Katve-Kaisa Kontturi: Feminist new materialisms
2. Seminars, readings and independent work (5 ECTS), only for master level students, first meeting on Tue 9.1. at 15-16 Linna 5038
1. The Lectures will be broadcasted from Åbo Akademi on Tuesdays at 13-15, from 9.1.2018 to March 13 Linna K103.
--Electronic enrollment, max 25 students from Tampere; Background in Gender Studies required (ie. the basic course and one intermediary level course)
2. The seminar starts on Jan the 9th at 15-16. Other times upon agreement. Teacher: Hanna Ojala
-- Seminars only for Master level students.
Only for Master level students
Researching Gender, Work and Transforming Organisations: Methodologies, theories and practices
See the course page: https://coursepages.uta.fi/nordwit1/
Preliminary programme
April 18th, 2018
15.00-18 Workshop on readings, small groups, discussion
Teachers: Rebecca Lund, Marja Vehviläinen
18.30 Dinner (self-paid)
April 19th, 2018
9.00-12 Julia Nentwich: Researching (un)doing gender at work
- Discussion based on the readings and lectures: teachers, participants.
13-18 Thematic seminars based on the papers of course participants. 2 parallel sessions: 5-6 papers and comments from 1. Julia Nentwich & Päivi Korvajärvi; 2. Gabriele Griffin, Marja Vehviläinen & Oili-Helena Ylijoki
April 20th, 2018
9.00-12 Minna Leinonen & Tiina Suopajärvi: Transforming gendered practices, action research approaches.
- Lecture and workshop
13-14.45 Discussion, ending
Guidelines
The course consists of lectures, workshops, readings, tasks and discussions about the readings, a research seminar session, and either a learning diary/essay or a research paper. The course requirements:
1. Active participation in the lectures, workshops, seminars and discussion during the course April 18-20;
2. Readings BEFORE the course: Please, read carefully the readings before the course: all texts in the list of Readings, and the research papers of one (Thursday April the 19th afternoon) session, of your own choice, available in the Moodle in April;
3. Tasks BEFORE the course: Please, write a 'task guided learning diary' on the readings (4 - 7 pages, font 12) and submit it to the course Moodle by Tuesday April the 17th noon (see TASKS); Prepare also comments for research papers in one of the Thursday April the 19th afternoon sessions;
4. Final course work: please write either a learning diary or an essay that covers both the readings and course lectures, seminars and discussions by May the 15th, 2018.
-- OBS. Those who present research papers in the course, please, submit your research papers into the Moodle by March the 31st.
TASKS for reading
1) Analyse the phenomena of gender equality work and/or feminist politics; processes and practices related to gender equality work and/or feminist politics; opportunities and limits of gender equality work and/or feminist politics.
2) What kind of research perspectives do you recognize in readings: What kind of theoretical and methodological argumentation have you detected in the readings? What does the specific approach mean to feminist politics? How do the research perspectives used in readings contribute to formulating feminist politics and action?
Write a "task guided learning diary" as you read, BEFORE the course, and complement the learning diary after the course to include the lectures and discussions during the course.
Credits: Participants get 5-7,5 credits:
5 ECTS: A learning diary/essay (3000 words minimum) based on the lectures, workshops and seminars in the course, and the readings (500 pages), and a 'task guided learning diary' (4-7 p) before the course, and active participation in the course. Obs. one can improve the grade by doing the 'task guided learning diary' carefully (20 % of the grade comes from it and the active course participation), and one can use its text also in the final course work (80 % of the grade). The 5 ECTS module is meant especially for Master's students.
7,5 ECTS are given for active participation, including readings (500 pages) and a 'task guided learning diary' (4-7 p) before the course, and an essay (research paper of 4000-5000 words, graded pass/fail). The 7,5 ECTS module can be taken by any participant who writes a 4000-5000 w essay/research paper.
Fill in application form
https://coursepages.uta.fi/nordwit1/
DL Dec 1, 2017
The course is organised in collaboration with the Nordic CoE Nordwit. The course participants will be Master's Students of the Gender Studies DP, and Doctoral Students and post doctoral researchers accross Nordic countries and beyond. Teachers: Julia Nentwich (St. Gallen), Tiina Suopajärvi, Minna Leinonen, Gabriele Griffin (Uppsala), Päivi Korvajärvi, Rebecca Lund, Marja Vehviläinen, Oili-Helena Ylijoki