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The Anthropology of Globalisation

Study Course Description

Course Description Statuss:Approved
Course Description Version:1.00
Study Course Accepted:19.03.2024 11:50:45
Study Course Information
Course Code:SZF_030LQF level:Level 6
Credit Points:2.67ECTS:4.00
Branch of Science:Politics; The Theory of PoliticsTarget Audience:Political Science
Study Course Supervisor
Course Supervisor:Mārtiņš Daugulis
Study Course Implementer
Structural Unit:Faculty of Social Sciences
The Head of Structural Unit:
Contacts:Dzirciema street 16, Rīga, szfatrsu[pnkts]lv
Study Course Planning
Full-Time - Semester No.1
Lectures (count)12Lecture Length (academic hours)2Total Contact Hours of Lectures24
Classes (count)8Class Length (academic hours)2Total Contact Hours of Classes16
Total Contact Hours40
Study course description
Preliminary Knowledge:
Basic knowledge of politics.
Objective:
To familiarise participants of the course with the advantages of an interdisciplinary approach to the analysis of political processes, the interspace of political science and social anthropology.
Topic Layout (Full-Time)
No.TopicType of ImplementationNumberVenue
1Social anthropology – dimensions and methods of analysisLectures3.00auditorium
2Seminar: “Silent voices” and “dark anthropology” – methods and ethicsClasses1.00auditorium
3Religion, state and politics in the context of globalisationLectures3.00auditorium
4Seminar: Global city and global stateClasses2.00auditorium
5Global economy and consumer society: principles of movement and challenges thereofLectures3.00auditorium
6Seminar: Reciprocity in the global worldClasses2.00auditorium
7Biopower and biopolitics: body and powerLectures3.00auditorium
8Seminar: Global biosocietyClasses1.00auditorium
9Seminar: Bringing microscale to macropicture – fieldwork and conclusionsClasses2.00auditorium
Assessment
Unaided Work:
Fieldwork – analysis of micropolitics. The report reflects fieldwork data according to the plan developed by the student in conjunction with self-assessment criteria. In order to evaluate the quality of the study course as a whole, the student must fill out the study course evaluation questionnaire on the Student Portal.
Assessment Criteria:
Scale 1-10 in accordance with assessment scale developed by students using the feed-up approach. Independent work - 50%; exam - 50%.
Final Examination (Full-Time):Exam (Written)
Final Examination (Part-Time):
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge:Students find their way in social anthropology directions and methods in conjunction with globalisation processes and politics.
Skills:Students use social anthropology methods in the analysis of political processes.
Competencies:Students are able to flexibly and dynamically to apply social anthropology knowledge and skills in an interdisciplinary approach to the analysis of politics and globalisation processes.
Bibliography
No.Reference
Required Reading
1Keane, Webb. 2014. "Affordances and reflexivity in ethical life: An ethnographic stance". Anthropological theory 14 (1): 3–26.
2Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of The Prison. Trans. Alan Sheridan. New York: Vintage, 1979.
3Fuko, Mišels. 1995. Patiesība. Vara. Patība. Rīga: Spektrs. (latviešu plūsmai)
4Scott, James C. 2020. "Cities, People, and Language". No Seeing like a state: how certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed, 53–84. New Haven: Yale University Press.
5Ortner, Sherry B. 2016. “Dark anthropology and its others Theory since the eighties”. Journal of Ethnographic Theory 6 (1): 47–73. doi:10.14318/hau6.1.004.
6Althusser, Louis. 2014. On the Repoduction of Capitalism - Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses. London: Verso.