Ders Planı /

Ders Bilgileri

Dersin Kredisi
Dersin AKTS Kredisi
Dersin Öğretim Dili İngilizce
Dersin Düzeyi Lisans , TYYÇ: 6. Düzey , EQF-LLL: 6. Düzey , QF-EHEA: 1. Düzey
Dersin Türü
Dersin Veriliş Şekli Yüz-Yüze Eğitim
Ders zorunlu veya opsiyonel iş deneyimi gerektiriyor mu ?
Dersin Koordinatörü
Dersi Veren(ler)
Dersin Yardımcıları

Amaç ve İçerik

Dersin Amacı Bu ders, ekonomik politikalar ve sonuçları siyasi değişkenlerle açıklamaya çalışan Karşılaştırmalı Politik İktisat alanına odaklanır. Dersin hedefi, kalkınmakta olan ülkelerin politik iktisadına ilişkin konuları analiz etmektir. Amaçları, (i) ülkeler ve ülke içindeki gruplar arasındaki gelir ve yaşam koşulları arasında neden farklılık olduğunu anlamak ve (ii) farklı ülkelerin neden farklı ekonomik politikalar izlediklerini incelemektir.
Dersin İçeriği Bu ders, kalkınmakta olan ülkelerin politik iktisadına ilişkin konulara odaklanır. Derste işlenecek konulardan bazıları şunlardır: küresel ekonomik krizler ve bunların gelişmekte olan ülkelere etkileri; popülist politikalar; yoksulluk; kıtlık ve açlık; nüfus artışı; toplumsal cinsiyet ve kalkınma; çevre kirliliği; yolsuzluk; sağlık.

Haftalık Ders Konuları

1Giriş
2Ekonomi politik: temel kavramlar
3Ekonomi politik yaklaşımlar
4Klasik ve çağdaş kuramlar
5Kapitalizmin çeşitleri
6Neoliberalism
7Finansallaşma
8Kalkınma
9Ara sınav
10Küresel örgütler
11Ekonomi politik ve toplumsal cinsiyet
12Hanehalkı ve toplumsal yeniden üretim
13Türkiye'nin ekonomi politiği
14Tekrar dersi

Kaynaklar

James A. Caporaso and David P. Levine (1992) Politics and Economics. In Theories of Political Economy. Cambridge University Press, Chapter 1, pp. 7-32.

Allan Drazen (2000) What Is Political Economy? In Political Economy in Macroeconomics. Princeton University Press, Chapter 1, pp. 3-19.

Mark Blyth (2009) An Approach to Comparative Analysis or a Subfield within a Subfield? Political Economy. In Mark Lichbach and Alan Zuckerman (eds.), Comparative Politics: Rationality, Culture, and Structure. Cambridge University Press, Chapter 8, pp. 193-219.

Darel E. Paul and Abla Amawi (2013) Theories of International Political Economy. In The Theoretical Evolution of International Political Economy: A Reader. Oxford University Press, Introduction, pp. 1-39.

Optional: Geoffrey R. D. Underhill (2000) State, Market, and Global Political Economy: Genealogy of an (Inter-?) Discipline. International Affairs, 76(4): 805-824.

Peter A. Hall and David Soskice (2001) An Introduction to Varieties of Capitalism. In P. Hall and D. Soskice (eds.), Varieties of Capitalism: The Institutional Foundations of Comparative Advantage. Oxford University Press, Chapter 1, pp. 1-36.

Ian Bruff and Matthias Ebenau (2014) Critical Political Economy and the Critique of Comparative Capitalisms Scholarship on Capitalist Diversity. Capital & Class, 38(1): 3-15.

Matthew Eagleton-Pierce (2019) Neoliberalism. In Timothy M. Shaw, Laura C. Mahrenbach, Renu Modi, and Xu Yi-chong (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Contemporary International Political Economy, Chapter 8, pp. 119-134.

David Harvey (2006) Neo-liberalism as creative destruction. Geografiska Annaler: Human Geography, 88(2): 145-158.

Costas Lapavitsas (2013) The Financialization of Capitalism: ‘Profiting without Producing’. City, 17(6): 792-805.

Eric Helleiner (2017) The Evolution of the International Monetary and Financial System. In John Ravenhill (ed.), Global Political Economy, Chapter 8, pp. 199-224.

Nicolo Phillips (2017) The Political Economy of Development. In John Ravenhill (ed.), Global Political Economy, Chapter 13, pp. 356-386.

Gilbert Rist (2010) Development As a Buzzword. In Andrea Cornwall and Deborah Eade (eds.), Deconstructing Development Discourse: Buzzwords and Fuzzwords. OXFAM, pp. 19-27.

A. Saad-Filho (2005) From Washington to Post-Washington Consensus: Neoliberal Agendas for Economic Development. In A. Saad-Filho and D. Johnston (eds.), Neoliberalism, Chapter 12, pp. 113-119.

Paul Cammack (2004) What the World Bank Means by Poverty Reduction, and Why It Matters. New Political Economy, 9(2): 189-211.

Penny Griffin (2019) Gender. In Timothy M. Shaw, Laura C. Mahrenbach, Renu Modi, and Xu Yi-chong (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Contemporary International Political Economy, Chapter 39, pp. 633-649.

Özlem Altan-Olcay (2016) The Entrepreneurial Woman in Development Programs: Thinking Through Class Differences. Social Politics, 23(3): 389-414.

Optional: Suzanne Bergeron (2004) The Post-Washington Consensus and Economic Representations of Women in Development at the World Bank. International Feminist Journal of Politics 5(3): 397-419.

Lena Pellandini-Simanyi (2021) The Financialization of Everyday Life. In Christian Borch and Robert Wosnitzer (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Critical Finance Studies, Chapter 14, pp. 278-299.

Adrienne Roberts (2013) Financing Social Reproduction: The Gendered Relations of Debt and Mortgage Finance in Twenty-first-century America. New Political Economy, 18(1): 21-42.

Galip Yalman (2019) The Neoliberal Transformation of State and Market in Turkey: An Overview of Financial Developments from 1980 to 2000. In Galip L. Yalman, Thomas Marois and Ali Rıza Güngen (eds.), The Political Economy of Financial Transformation in Turkey. Routledge, Chapter 3, pp. 51-87.

Ayşe Buğra (2020) Politics of Social Policy in a Late Industrializing Country: The Case of Turkey. Development and Change, 51(2): 442-462.

Optional: Korkut Boratav and Erinç Yeldan (2006) Turkey, 1980–2000: Financial Liberalization, Macroeconomic (In)Stability, and Patterns of Distribution. In Lance Taylor (ed.), External Liberalization in Asia, Post-Socialist Europe, and Brazil. Oxford University Press, Chapter 14, pp. 417-455.