Class Notes for Political Sociology, Fall 2003, Goertzel
December 5: Is George Bush an International Terrorist as Bretton
Barber, a high school junior in Dearborn Heights, Mich., who is
deeply interested in civil
liberties, argued
with a T-shirt that got him
sent home from school on Feb. 17. Noam Chomsky, MIT
linguist, is known for denouncing
the US as terrorist. He blames global
capitalism for the 9-11 attacks. But the Turkish
Government is prosecuting Chomsky as a terrorist. People on
the left such as Ed
Herman and Noam
Chomsky tend to define "terrorism" as repression by the state,
based on the fact that this causes more misery for people.
They argue that the U.S. is a terrorist state. Governments tend
to define terror as action by non-governmental, clandestine groups.
Velupillai
Prabhakaran wanted by Interpol
- Abimael Guzmán
- Osama
binLaden
- Bommi
Baumann
Nov 24: DeTocqueville Democracy
in America site. Summary of DeTocqueville's
Democracy in America Bowling Alone.
Nov 19: work on country powerpoints
Nov 17: Why
Brazil Isn't Argentina. Arab Human
Development Report. Bush
speech.
Nov 12. Discussion of Huntington's "Class of Civilizations"
World Map.
How many "civilizations" are there in the world? In particular,
is the Moslem world a different civilization? History of Clash
Between West and Arabs. Bin Laden's speech
October 2001. Mark
Helprin on the war with militant Islam. Some comments on
Huntington.
Nov 10: Six billion people on the planet, 900 million
in wealthy countries. Per capita income about $25,000.
3,2
billion in low income countries with a percapit GNP of $430. 1.6
million in middle income . Infant mortality, in the US 8 out of
1000. Finland, Scandinavian 4 or 5. 179 out of 1000 die in
the first year. 108 in Cambodia. Overpopulation, population
growth. We find that economic growth comes first, then
populationi growth goes down.
Economic organization. Marx. Profit and greed
is the source of poverty. Poverty came from capitalism.
Capitalist countries were the wealthiest in fact, so the theory was
modified to say that it was "imperialism" - European exploitation of
Africa and Asia. Asian Tigers: S. Korea, Taiwan, Singapore,
Thailand. Very rapid development by integrating into the world
economy. India & China ran into problems when they isolated
themselves from the world economy.
Globalization and Development: Tanganyika
case debate
between The Nation and The Economist on the WTO. WTO Seattle Videos
The "Doha" round was two years ago, most recent round was in Cancun
which broke down.
The Economist's view: free trade reduces poverty, the breakdown
of the Cancun talks was a setback that will hurt the poor more than the
rich. Trade helps prosperity. Trends in the 30s was down,
after WWII was up, due to free trade. More globalization rather
than less is the route out of history. Look at Korea
(South). Globalizing countries grew 5% p er head in the
1990s. Africa is getting poorer because it is being marginalized
from the world economy. Benefit outweight the costs. THE
WTO is the best forum have, not a corporate dominated dictatorship, it
is forum where governments negotiate. It is highly
dekocratic, one country can block votes there. Poor countries can
challenge the rich.
The Nation's view: Economist is the "home of high church free
traders" vs. "Nation "proud and feisty voice of dissent". The
present global system is in peril. The Nation thinks this is a
good thing. Globalization as we know it cannot endure. A
top-downs ystem dominated by institutions in washignton DC.
Designed to serve global finance and multinational corporations.
People will resist the "immoral practices allowed in the system."
Growing crisis of overcapacity, insufficient purchasing power.
Morality: "like waving a crucifix at vampires" A race to
the bottom, exploitation of poorest people. Americans are
implicated as the consumer nation tht buys good produced under
circumstances we would not tolerate. Workers are glad to have
jobs but know they are exploited for lower costs and lower
prices. There are many strikes in poor countries. Laws for
corporate governance were written by corporate lawyers and
bankers. Poor countries stood up against the rules. A
heroic and promising moment. Will this system survive if the US
economy collapses due to excessive borrowing from abroad. This is
the end of an era, we are in crisis.
Nov 5 - Democrats to Control Senate, Assembly. See: Courier-Post Online.
Trenton Times. NJ.com. Philadelphia
Inquirer.
Nations ranked: http://www.gritty.org/Pages/Projects/Terrorism/RightsRanking.htm
Sources of international Statistics:
http://www.lib.umd.edu/MCK/STATS.html
CIA world factbook; http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/
Rankings of 200 countries: http://siteresources.worldbank.org/ICPINT/Resources/GNIPC.pdf
World Bank
methods:
The Economist Country
Profiles.
Nov 3- New Jersey
Voter Information: Eagleton Institute. The Battle for the
Legislature '03 Legislative
Districts. Guide
to NJ Politics (Governor, US Legislature). Does
local politics matter? The Camden
Master Plan presents a plan for what we would like to have
happen in the City. The North Camden Plan
presents a vision for one neighborhood in Camden. Are political
forces needed to make this happen? Does the choice of a leader
matter in this regard? The DEP has a plan
for stopping sprawl in NJ, but they took down the "BIG MAP" Do
the politicians address this? Do they address the other issues that
tax payers want resolved?
Oct 29: Work on Force
Field Analysis assignment.
Oct 27 - Future Analysis. Force field analysis.
Another WEB site
on Force Field Analysis. An
example.
Oct 22 - Viewing of video Faces
of the Enemy. Some information on this video is available in
a critical
review of the book that went with it. There is also a Study Guide
available. Malaysian
Leaders speech about Jews. Bush's
critique of Malaysian leaders comments on Jews. Paul
Krugman's commentary.
Oct 20. Discussion of mid-term. Essays were
problematic. Answers are in WEBCT.
Discussion of a project which I since decided to make an extra-credit
project. It will
involve using a PowerPoint
Template and incorporating data from online Data Sources.
Examples could be in New Jersey, e.g., , unpopularity
of McGreevy paralleling
Gray Davis? Or for an even more difficult challenge, consider the
situation in Bolivia
this week. What would you advise the
Governor of New Jersey or the new President of Bolivia?
If we have time we will see part of the video Faces of the Enemy.
We are interested in
this for the insight it gives into the psychology of politics.
Oct 13: Washington Post Exit
Poll on California Recall. Republicans
Ponder the Center. Schism
at Rutgers over Israel/Palestine. Review for Midterm
In
studying for the exam,
remember that the readings on this page were assigned and
should be studied carefully. The links on the Class Notes
page illustrate and expand on points made in class - you are not
responsible for everything in them, just for the points made in
class.
The reading on Theoretical
Models in Political Sociology
is an important starting point, and it would be good to go over the
online quiz we had on that reading. The theoretical models are
outlined in the Guide to Using
Theoretical Models in Political Sociology. There will
be short answer
and
essay questions as well as multiple choice. Here are some review
questions:
- How would the California recall elections be analyzed from the
perspectives of class, elite and pluralist theories?
- What were the four reasons Thomas Friedman (on the same file with
Charles Krautheimer) gave for our
invasion of Iraq?
- Why does Paul Krugman think the tax cut movement is a "con"?
- What was the key issue in the Alabama gubernatorial election, and
what happened?
- What are the four types of generations in Strauss and Howe's
model of generational change?
- What trends in American society tend to be progressive?
Which tend to be cyclical? What variables seem to be stable over
time?
- What are the two conflicting strategic approaches to winning an
election in the U.S.?
Oct 8: The California Recall Election (Oct 7) as a case
study. This election will be covered extensively today's
newspapers, so check for recent coverage. Ny
Times Coverage. LA Times
Hummers
to Harleys. California's
New Trend: Big-Tent Republicans. Joan Didion, review of
"Where
I Was From" NYT Book Review, Sept 28, 2003.
Oct 6: Today, we are looking at trends. The 2001
Strategic Environmental Report offers an overview of this topic,
although the applications are for Interior Designers. Here are some
points from the Report:
p. 2 trends are changes over long periods of time in social,
technological, economic, ecological and politica areas
The future is determined by
choices, trends and events
Trends include: 2 - the aging of America; 6 - increasing racial
and ethnic diversity; 9 generational cycles; 14 convergence of
technology; 15 integration of technologyh into new
environments; 19 wireless computing; 25
ergonomics; 29 declining environmental concern; 30
global warning; 35 e-economy; 38 productivity increases; 42
occupational change; 50 declining national sovereignty;
51 regional diversity in US increasing; 56 energy gap.
Trend Graphs: Here are some on the Internet courtesy of the Del
Mar College Dept. of Social Sciences: Sociology
charts and graphs.
And here are ones done
by students in our class:
Bertha Boateng: Would you vote for a black president?
Donna Gamble - Belief that blacks are inherently inferior
Indoreel Ghosh - fear of walking in one's neighborhood
Elizabeth Joseph: Part Time Work
Emine Klick: Divorce
Russell Lolar: Confidence in the Supreme Court
Anne Meletiche: Abortion after a rape.
Andrew Milloy: Faith in the Military
Stephen Napoli - money spent on drug rehabilitation
Robert Pferisch - children not living at home
Kerra Russell - unemployment
Kristina Rauer - educational achievement
Sylvia Tadros - confidence in congress
Kristina Taylor - Veterans years of service
Andrew Wilson - Vocabulary Words
Quiana Young - school prayer in the public schools.
September 29 -
NY Times Campaign Page. Story on Bush '04
Readying for One Democrat, Not 10
We will go to http://www.icpsr.umich.edu:8080/GSS/homepage.htm
to access the General Social Survey, a nationwide survey which has been
done almost every year since 1972. It has an online statistical
program which can be used to recode and cross-tabulate variables.
We will select one variable as an example: partyid. We will
recode this into three categories : Democrat, Independent and
Republican, then we will do a cross-tabulation by year. To do
these things we click on "analyze" on the GSS instructions and follow
the instructions. We will then copy the resultant trend data into
Excel and use it to plot a graph. Your next assignment is to do
the same two things with one other variable. Instructions for
using Excel are available at: http://www.canberra.edu.au/cts/training/websters/xl97book/Contents.htm
September 24: Generational
Trends in American Society. September 11, 2001 as a Turning
Point. PowerPoint.
Streaming
Video. History
Channel Speeches.
September 22 - Discussion of campaign politics, as illustrated by
the Bush campaign and Karl Rove. Information on candidates is
available at:
http://www.politics1.com/p2004.htm. New
Poll Shows Clark in lead. Survey Results.
NY Times Campaign Page.
Sept. 17 - Discussion of Welfare Reform North Korea cases as
posted by Russell and Andrew (See Discussion Lists, Main on WEBCT)
Discussioin of Tax Reform issue. Krugman and Mitchell argue
opposite sides. Voters don't know which economist to believe,
tend to vote their gut feelings, vote for lower taxes and higher
spending\. NY
Times
Coverage of California Recall Election. Edwin Fulner of
the Heritage Foundation on cutting taxes. Grover
Norquist. Sweden
votes down Euro. Times reporter says: some say the Swedish vote reflected the
emotions of a Continent
whose people feel remote from ruling elites and who sense that the
European project negates their democratic aspirations. "This was an
antiestablishment cry," said Goran Rosenberg, a leading Swedish
columnist. "This was a sign or a warning,
and not just for Sweden."
NYT Sept 10: Alabama voters overwhelmingly
reject $1.2 billion tax increase,
delivering crushing blow to Gov Bob Riley, Republican who had staked
his political career on vote; his ambitious plan was to close $675
million budget deficit, ease taxes on poor and catapult state's school
system from among nation's worst to one of best.
September 15: . Discussion
of Patriot Act. Bush's
CounterTerrorism Proposals Could Be a Hard Sell.
Reading referred to in class: Reading: Patriot Act. Bush's
CounterTerrorism Proposals Could Be a Hard Sell. Discussion
of
issues posted on the class discussion board: Ten Commandments in
Court;
Liberian Invasion. Application of Theoretical Models to
issues
in recent NY Times: Concern
grows about war in Iraq. Poorer
Countries Pull out of WTO Talks. Malpractice
Suits Capped at $750,000 in Texas. Powell
Visits Kurds. Redistricting
in Texas. Union and
Chrysler reach pact.
Sept. 10. Visit from Organizing Institute,
AFL-CIO, lecture on theoretical models.
Sept 8: Can
Dems admit that the Iraq war has been a success? by Anthony
Schiavo
When
will anyone admit that it has been a huge fraud? by Robert
Sheer
These two articles appeared
on the op-ed page of the Sept 4 Philadelphia Inquirer. How can
two intelligent writers reach such opposite conclusions when faced with
the same objective situation?
Bush's
Address last night. Analysis
on NY Times. Ethical Analysis: should we have gone to
war in Iraq? Frameworks
for Ethical Argument.
Sept 5 - We will get acquainted and go over the mechanics of the
course. If need be, we can go to the computer lab and work
on signing up for WEBCT.
The syllabus discusses the nature of political
sociology as an area of sociology. We can begin with policy
choices or decisions or outcomes that are difficult to understand or
that we
would like to be able to influence. These can involve ethical
as well as empirical and tactical questions. Some examples:
* why did the US go to war in Iraq? Why
is the French position different? What should we do?
* why does the US have the kind of health care
system it does, and why does the one in Canada differ? Can or
should we change it? Why did the Clinton reforms change?
* why was welfare reformed in the 1900s? Why
was the system set up in the 1960s? What kind of system should we
have?
* why did Argentina collapse economically in 2001
while Brazil did not and Chile is booming?
* why did Reagan begin a "star wars" system
in the 1970s?
* what caused the terrorist attacks on September
11, 2001?
* why did the Soviet Union and other similar
systems collapse?
* why is North Korea building a bomb and what can
or should be done about it?
* what should or could the Democrats do to win the
presidency from George W. Bush in 2004?
* what can or should be done to: protect the
environment, end abortion or end restrictions on abortion, stop urban
sprawl, lessen poverty and inequality, end terrorism, etc. etc.
* we can go back in history. When I was
a student I was involved in the movement against the Vietnam War, as
recorded in my FBI
File.
What political issues interest you? What
outcomes would you like to help promote?