This course evaluates how this can be--how a crisis can be chronic, and for whom this chronic crisis is a solution. Readings will be drawn from such authors as Adorno, Allen, Arendt, Berlant, Brown, Butler, Connolly, Dean, Foucault, Galli, Honig, Latour, Moten, Rancire, Rawls, Sen, and Sexton. The first part of the course focuses primarily on the Middle East's impact on the international system throughout the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, while the second part of the course examines contemporary issues. Why do people vote or engage in other types of political action? This seminar will focus on the politics of belonging in America. Building on those inquiries, we next take up important twentieth and twenty-first century returns to the cave, engaging such figures as Heidegger, Strauss, Arendt, Derrida, Irigaray, Rancire, and Badiou. The question of what is an image and what images do will run from the beginning of course to the end. Yet to rest on this is too simple as it is, in part, an artifact of historical construction. The third part focuses on religion in the USA. We begin with examinations of these central notions and debates, and then move to investigations of the political thought of four key late modern Afro-Caribbean and African-American thinkers within the tradition: Walter Rodney, Sylvia Wynter, Cedric Robinson, and Angela Davis. itself. Who loses? See the college's, Experiential Learning & Community Engagement, Introduction to American Politics: Power, Politics, and Democracy in America. Hoc Tribunals for crimes in Yugoslavia and those in Rwanda, in Sierra Leone and in Cambodia are giving way to a permanent International Criminal Court, which has begun to hand down indictments and refine its jurisdiction. The contests over power and the values that it should be used to further give politics its drama and pathos. Finally, we will look at arguments that America has been "exceptional"--or, unlike other countries--as well as critiques of these arguments, to help us gain an understanding of future prospects for political transformation. What new political realities might emerge on ground cleared by disaster? States. Or is it the reverse? How does this idea about individual value liberate and entrap? Along the way, we will consider a number of longstanding questions in the study of politics, such as: is the public rational? Our primary questions will be these: Why is transformative leadership so difficult today? [more], We rely on environmental laws to make human communities healthier and protect the natural world, while allowing for sustainable economic growth. But, coastal and ocean-based climate-induced impacts such as sea level rise, ocean warming and acidification pose extraordinary challenges to our coastal communities, and are not borne equally by all communities.
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