- Docente: Raffaella Baritono
- Credits: 8
- SSD: SPS/05
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Forli
-
Corso:
Second cycle degree programme (LM) in
International relations and diplomatic affairs (cod. 6058)
Also valid for Second cycle degree programme (LM) in International Relations and Diplomatic Affairs (cod. 9247)
-
from Feb 18, 2025 to May 29, 2025
Learning outcomes
The course aims to provide advanced, interdisciplinary knowledge of the U.S. political, constitutional, and intellectual debate on the problems of peace and war. Emphasis will be also put on the decisional processes concerning the decision to declare war or the use of military force to solve some specific International crisis. The course will, therefore, focus on the analysis of some relevant case studies. At the end of the course, the student knows the main aspects of the American political, constitutional, and intellectual debate on the war and peace dilemma. He/she will be able to identify the main social and political actors involved in decisional political processes and to contextualize those decisions in the American political and intellectual foreign policy traditions.
Course contents
The course focuses on the political processes which legitimize American government decisions to declare war or to pursue peace. Adopting an interdisciplinary approach, the course will concentrate 1) on the constitutional relationship between Presidency and Congress in terms of war powers and the deployment of US armed forces abroad; 2) on the creation and development of the National Security State and the relationship between civil and military powers; 3) on the political and intellectual debate concerning the war and peace dilemma.
Emphasis will also be put on some of the most critical conflicts and wars engaged by the United States during its history, with particular reference to the XX and XXI centuries conflicts.
Please, check Virtuale to download the file concerning the course description and the seminar for attending students.
The course is organized in lectures and seminars, as detailed in the program available on Virtuale.
Students must read in advance the essays assigned for each seminar.
Readings/Bibliography
Non-attending students are required to read three books as follows:
a) Mario Del Pero, Libertà e impero 1776-2016, Bari-Roma, Laterza 2017
b) Two books to be chosen in the following list:
Clair Apodaca, Understanding U.S. Human Rights Policy. A Paradoxical Legacy, New York-London, Routledge, 2006
Carl Boggs, Origins of the Warfare State : World War II and the Transformation of American Politics, New York, Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.
Sarah Burns, Politics of war powers : the theory & history of Presidential unilateralism, Lawrence, University Press of Kansas, 2019
John W. Dower, The Violent American Century. War and Terror since World War II, Chicago, Haymarket Books, 2017
Don H. Doyle,The Cause of All Nations: An International History of the American Civil War, New York, Basic Books, 2013
Dario Fazzi, Eleanor Roosevelt and the anti-nuclear movement : the voice of conscience, New York, Macmillan, 2017.
John Gans, White House Warriors: How the National Security Council Transformed the American Way of War, New York : Liveright Publishing Corporation, 2019
Michael A. Genovese, War power in an age of terrorism : debating presidential power, New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.
David Kieran, ed., The War of My Generation: Youth Culture and the War on Terror, Rutgers University Press, 2015
Randall B. Woods, ed., Vietnam and the American Political Tradition: The Politics of Dissent, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2003
Marilyn Young with Lloyd Gardner, Iraq and the Lessons of Vietnam, New York, The New Press, 2007.
Teaching methods
Lectures and seminars. Students are expected to actively partecipate in class
Assessment methods
Students who attend the course will be asked to pass an oral exam on the topics and readings discussed in class. More details will be provided in class. The final assessment will also consider active participation and involvement in class activities. More details will be illustrated in class.
For non-attending students: oral exam on the readings as required in the section Readings/Bibliography.
Students are expected to have an analytical knowledge of the books chosen, to understand and elaborate causal, theoretical and logical connections, and finally to contextualize them from an historical point of view.
Teaching tools
power point presentations
Office hours
See the website of Raffaella Baritono