IR200 Course Outline
IR200 Course Outline
IR200 Course Outline
(IR200)
Course duration: 54 hours lecture and class time (Over three weeks)
LSE Teaching Department: International Relations, Government and Society
Lead Faculty: Dr Mathias Koenig-Archibugi (Dept. of Government) and Dr Ulrich Sedelmeier (Dept. of
International Relations)
Pre-requisites: Candidates must have passed at least one university-level course in the social sciences (politics,
sociology, economics, history, law). The course is of particular interest to undergraduate students in politics
and international relations, and those with a professional interest in international institutions.
Course Description:
International organizations (IOs) are created and expected to provide solutions whenever governments face
transnational challenges, such as international and civil wars, humanitarian emergencies, flows of refugees,
outbreaks of infectious diseases, climate change, financial market instability, sovereign debt crises, trade
protectionism, and the development of poorer countries. But their role in world politics is controversial. Some
perceive them as effective and legitimate alternatives to unilateral state policies. Others regard them as fig
leaves for the exercise of power by dominant states. Others yet are regularly disappointed by the gap between 1
the lofty aspirations and their actual performance in addressing global problems, and want to know the causes
of that gap. While some commentators tend to lump all international organizations together, in reality there
are big difference in how IOs function, how much power they have, and in how effective they are – across
organisations, issues, regions, and over time. A key aim of the course is to understand these differences and
their implications for the solution of transnational problems. The goals of the course is to provide participants
with a comprehensive toolbox that will allow them to perform sophisticated analyses of international
organizations and the opportunity to see these analytical tools applied to several of the most important IOs
operating today, such as the United Nations, the World Trade Organization, the World Bank, the World Health
Organization and the International Criminal Court.
The course will start by introducing the central analytical approaches that help us to understand key aspects of
international organisations: their creation and design, their decision-making processes, their impact and policy
effectiveness, and their interactions with other international organizations. This analytical toolbox is then used
to explain the role of the main international institutions in specific policy domains, including security, human
rights, trade, finance, health, environment, migration and workers’ rights. For each of those domains, the
course will analyse the construction of global policy problems, the creation or selection of international
organisations aimed at addressing them, the way in which policies are negotiated and decided within those
institutions (with special attention to the exercise of various forms of power), the impact of the institutions on
the behaviour of states and other actors, and their ability to solve the problems that motivated their creation.
The twelve daily sessions for the course consist of a 3-hour lecture in the afternoon that includes discussion,
followed by a 1.5-hour class the following morning, which will allow for further group work.
Reading:
Textbooks you might want to consider purchasing:
- Hurd, Ian (2014) International Organizations: Politics, Law, Practice, 2nd edition (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press).
- Rittberger, Volker, Bernard Zangl and Andreas Kruck (2012) International Organization, 2nd edition
(Basingstoke: Palgrave).
Course Structure:
- Lectures: 36 hours
- Classes: 18 hours
Assessment:
The assessment consists of:
- An essay of 1500 words (bibliography does not count, word-count must be stated on the first page of
the essay), submitted as an email attachment to be sent to the class teacher by Monday 24 July at
10:00. The essay will count for 25% of the final mark. Students must choose a question from among
those provided for class discussion.
- A two-hour written exam at the end of the programme (students will be asked to answer two out of
eight questions). The exam will count for 75% of the final mark.
Lecture Schedule:
Day 1 – Introduction and Overview
Ulrich Sedelmeier
- Introduction to the Summer School
Day 5 – Environment
Mathias Koenig-Archibugi
- The regime for the protection of the ozone layer
- International treaties on climate change
Day 6 – Health
Mathias Koenig-Archibugi
- The World Health Organisation
- Sectoral regimes of global health governance
Day 7 – Security
Ulrich Sedelmeier
- The United Nations
- The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
Day 10 – No lecture
Day 11 – Finance
Mathias Koenig-Archibugi
- The International Monetary Fund
- The World Bank 4
Day 13 – Migration
Mathias Koenig-Archibugi
- The International Organisation for Migration
- The UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Day 14 – No lecture
Day 15 – EXAM
Additional Reading:
7
- Barrett, S. (2007) Why Cooperate?: The Incentive to Supply Global Public Goods, Chapter 3: Aggregate
Efforts. Oxford University Press. [e-book]
- Dimitrov, R.S. (2003) 'Knowledge, Power, and Interests in Environmental Regime Formation',
International Studies Quarterly 47(1):123-50.
- Dimitrov, R.S. (2010), Inside UN Climate Change Negotiations: The Copenhagen Conference. Review of
Policy Research, 27: 795–821.
- Newell, P. (2008). "The Political Economy of Global Environmental Governance." Review of
International Studies 34(3): 5-7-529.
Required Reading:
- Rittberger, V., Bernard Zangl and Andreas Kruck (2012) International Organization, 2nd edition,
Basingstoke: Palgrave, ch.9: 173-192, 202-210.
Additional Reading:
- Wallace, H., Pollack, M., Young, A. (2010), Policy Making in the European Union. 5th edition (Oxford
University Press), ch. 4.
- Burley, Anne-Marie and Walter Mattli (1993) “Europe Before the Court: A Political Theory of Legal
Integration” International Organization, 47(1): 41-76.
- Lewis, J. (2005) 'The Janus Face of Brussels: Socialization and Everyday Decision Making in the
European Union', International Organization 59(4): 937-71.
- Hurd, I. (2010). International Organizations: Politics, Law, Practice, Cambridge: Cambridge
UniversityPress, chapter 3.
Zangl, Bernhard (2009) ‘Judicialization Matters! A Comparison of Dispute Settlement Under GATT and the
WTO’ International Studies Quarterly, 52(4): 825-854.
Credit Transfer: If you are hoping to earn credit by taking this course, please ensure that you confirm
it is eligible for credit transfer well in advance of the start date. Please discuss this directly with your
home institution or Study Abroad Advisor.
As a guide, our LSE Summer School courses are typically eligible for three or four credits within the
US system and 7.5 ECTS in Europe. Different institutions and countries can, and will, vary. You will
receive a digital transcript and a printed certificate following your successful completion of the
course in order to make arrangements for transfer of credit.
If you have any queries, please direct them to summer.school@lse.ac.uk