Empire didn't end when the flags came down — this course traces how the unraveling of European colonial rule restructured the international system and why its afterlives still shape questions of migration, aid, sovereignty, and counter-insurgency today. You'll work through case studies like Algeria and the New International Economic Order, read scholars from Nkrumah onward, and produce a research paper alongside quizzes and a project that test how well you can weigh local agency against global structure. It sits in the historical-theoretical wing of the IR curriculum, giving you the lens you'll need before tackling upper-level work on global political economy, postcolonial theory, or contemporary North-South relations.
→ STARS müfredatı (resmi syllabus)
İlk dosyayı sen atarsan — not, slayt, geçmiş sınav, çözüm, cheat-sheet, ne varsa — defter ekibi öğrenci paylaşımlarından bu dersin notlarını yazar. Drive linki / PDF / ZIP, hepsi olur.
Course Learning Outcomes: Course Learning Outcome Assessment Develop an understanding of key events, people, and processes related to the history of decolonization Participation Evaluate the relative significance of local/particular and global/structural dimensions in key events in the history of decolonization Diary Identify the role of empire in key fields of international relations Diary Think critically about academic works and the questions that their authors raise Diary