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PoGo 100: Introduction to American Government

9/5, 9/10, 9/16, 9/24, 10/1, 10/8, 10/15, 10,22 10/29, 11/5, 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/3,  12/10, 12/16

 

Sep

Sep 10

Introduction

 

Objective: Establish justice.

Justice

Objective: Develop a defensible position on distributive justice.

Online Reading:

John Rawls, "Two Principles of Justice," in Michael Rosen and Jonathan Wolff, eds., Political Thought (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 241-245. Excerpts from A Theory of Justice (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972).
Robert Nozick, "The Entitlement Theory," in Rosen and Wolff, eds., Political Thought, 245-248. Excerpts from Anarchy, State, and Utopia (New York: Basic Books, 1974).
Joan C. Tronto, "Care as a Political Concept," in Nancy J. Hirschmann and Christine Di Stefano, eds., Revisioning the Political: Feminist Reconstructions of Traditional Concepts in Western Political Theory (Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1996), 142-147.

Sep

Sep4

Political Culture and Ideology

Objective: Understand the varieties of American ideology, the ramifications of radical individualism, the power of public opinion, and the spiral of silence.

Hudson, ch. 2
David Brooks, "One Nation, Slightly Divisible," The Atlantic (December 2001). 

 

Democracy

Objective: Understand four models of democracy.

Hudson, Introduction
Wasserman, ch. 1

 

 

 

Oct 1

Oct 8

Constitutional Convention

Objective: Understand the power politics and compromises involved in the convention of 1787.

Online Reading:

J. Allen Smith, "The Constitution a Reactionary Document," from The Spirit of American Government (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press, 1965), pp. 27-39.

 

The Constitution

Objective: Understand the issues of responsiveness and accountability raised by the separation of powers.

Wasserman, ch. 2
Hudson, ch. 1

Online Reading:

James Madison, Federalist 51, New York Packet (Friday, February 8, 1788). 

Oct 15

Oct 22

Civil Rights and Civil Liberties

Objective: Understand the role of the court in shaping civil liberties and understand the roles of the court, congress, and mass movements in shaping civil rights.

 
Wasserman, ch. 6

Online Reading:

Anderson, Amending the Constitution

 

 

Midterm

Oct 29

Nov 5

Equality

Objective: Understand the nature of and challenges posed by inequality in American politics.

Hudson, ch. 6

Reserve Reading:

Barbara Ehrenreich, "Nickel-and-Dimed: On (not) getting by in America," Harper’s Magazine (January, 1999), pp. 37-52.

 

 

The Policy Process

Objective: Understand the basic mechanics of policymaking institutions including the centrality of interest groups and issue networks.

Wasserman, chs. 3 , 4, 8 (only pp. 210-221)

 Hudson, ch. 5

 

 

 

 

Nov 12

Nov 19

The Policy Process

Objective: Understand James Madison’s argument concerning how the "problems of faction" can be overcome in the American system of government.

Online Reading:

James Madison, Federalist 10, New York Packet (Friday, November 23, 1787).
Henry Jenkins, "Professor Jenkins Goes to Washington," Harper’s Magazine (July, 1999), pp. 19-23.

 

The Courts

Objective: Understand the power of judicial review.

Wasserman, ch. 5

Online Reading:

D. Graham Burnett, "Anatomy of a Verdict," New York Times Magazine (August 26, 2001).
Paul Butler, "Black Jurors: Right to Acquit?" Harper’s Magazine (December, 1995), pp. 11-16.

Nov 26

Dec 3

The Press

Objective: Understand the lost art of argument. 

Wasserman, ch. 8 (only 221-242)

Online Reading:

Christopher Lasch, "The Lost Art of Argument," from The Revolt of the Elites and the Betrayal of Democracy (New York: W. W. Norton, 1996), pp. 161-175.

 

Parties and Elections

Objective: Understand the role of money in American elections and the political significance of American reliance on the single-member winner-take-all plurality system.

Wasserman, ch. 1 & 7

Hudson, ch. 3 & 4

 

 

Dec 10

Dec 16

Amendment Debate

Objective: Present a compelling political argument to the class.

Wasserman, ch. 9
Hudson, Conclusion

 

 

Final Exam

11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.