2011-12 Catalog

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Offering Description

Political Economy and Social Movements: Local, National and Global Transformations

REVISED

Fall 2011 and Winter 2012 quarters

Faculty
Anthony Zaragoza political economy , Jeanne Hahn political economy, political science
Fields of Study
African American studies, American studies, agriculture, community studies, cultural studies, economics, education, gender and women's studies, geography, history, international studies, law and government policy, law and public policy, political economy and political science
Preparatory for studies or careers in
education, labor, community and global justice, social services, history, law, nonprofit work, political economy and informed civic participation.
Description

The world is undergoing profound change at the global, state and local levels. This program will introduce students to the major political-economic concepts and historical developments necessary for a deep and usable understanding of these changes. It is intended to provide a foundation for advanced work in political economy and the social sciences as well as enable students to become effective citizens and social agents. We will examine the historical construction and interrelated nature of the U.S. political economy, including its place in the larger world system and its operation at the local level. We will also consider the role social movements have played and examine possibilities for social justice, self-determination and equality.

The nature, development and concrete workings of modern capitalism will be a major focus. This means our study will draw on a range of social science disciplines, including history, political science, economic history, sociology and cultural studies to develop a multidisciplinary, multilevel understanding of the concepts, historical periods and social movements which will form our curriculum.

In fall, we will study the U.S. political-economic trajectory from the early national period to the current manifestation, neoliberalism. There will be a particular focus on key events, processes and periods such as migrations, social movements, economic crises, privatization, and industrialization, deindustrialization and automation. Throughout we will attempt to include a global and local context. Our studies of transformation will examine the relationship between building movement (ongoing changing conditions) and movement building (responses to these conditions) and constructions of race, class and gender relations in the context of these transformations.

The winter will continue to focus on the interrelationships among the globalization process, the U.S. political economy, and changes at the local level. We will study the causes and consequences of the deepening globalization and technologizing of capital and its effects on daily lives. We will pay attention to the human consequences of imperialist globalization and resistance to it. Beginning in the fall but focused in the winter students will engage in a research project in which they examine the political economy of their own hometowns over the last several decades.

Films will be shown throughout the program. There will be a substantial amount of reading in a variety of genres, which will be discussed in seminars. Workshops and role-playing exercises in economics, globalization, writing and organizing for social change will be used. Students will write a series of analytical essays, and learn about popular education, participatory research, and academic methodologies.

Location
Olympia
Online Learning
No Required Online Learning
Books
Greener Store
Required Fees
$100 per quarter for field trip costs.
Offered During
Day

Program Revisions

Date Revision
November 17th, 2011 This program will not accept new enrollment in winter quarter.