PředmětyPředměty(verze: 945)
Předmět, akademický rok 2023/2024
   Přihlásit přes CAS
Economic Systems from a Historical-Sociological Perspective - YMH505
Anglický název: Economic Systems from a Historical-Sociological Perspective
Zajišťuje: Program Historická sociologie (24-HS)
Fakulta: Fakulta humanitních studií
Platnost: od 2023
Semestr: letní
E-Kredity: 4
Způsob provedení zkoušky: letní s.:
Rozsah, examinace: letní s.:2/0, Zk [HT]
Rozsah za akademický rok: 26 [hodiny]
Počet míst: neurčen / neurčen (20)
Minimální obsazenost: neomezen
4EU+: ne
Virtuální mobilita / počet míst pro virtuální mobilitu: ne
Kompetence:  
Stav předmětu: nevyučován
Jazyk výuky: angličtina
Způsob výuky: prezenční
Způsob výuky: prezenční
Úroveň:  
Je zajišťováno předmětem: YMH730
Další informace: https://dl1.cuni.cz/course/view.php?id=7660#section-0
Poznámka: předmět je možno zapsat mimo plán
povolen pro zápis po webu
při zápisu přednost, je-li ve stud. plánu
student může plnit i v dalších letech
Garant: doc. JUDr. PhDr. Jan Štemberk, Ph.D.
doc. Ing. Inna Čábelková, Ph.D.
Neslučitelnost : YMH005, YMH105
Termíny zkoušek   Rozvrh   Nástěnka   
Anotace -
Poslední úprava: doc. Ing. Inna Čábelková, Ph.D. (09.01.2020)
Cílem kurzu je 1) poskytnout přehled historického vývoje ekonomických systémů na makroúrovni analýzy na přednáškách; 2) diskutovat o konkrétních aspektech ekonomických a sociálních procesů v historicko-sociologickém kontextu při prezentaci studentů a skupinových diskusích; 3) analyzovat konkrétní faktory, které byly spojeny s konkrétními historickými fázemi socioekonomického vývoje a jejich vzájemnými vztahy v studentských dokumentech; 4) zlepšit prezentační a psací dovednosti studentů. Přednášky budou čerpat z vybraných textů z dějin ekonomických teorií i ze sociologických textů týkajících se modernizačních procesů. Budeme také používat existující vysoce kvalitní videoobsah. Kurz bude kombinovat přednášky se studentskými prezentacemi a diskusemi.
Sylabus -
Poslední úprava: doc. Ing. Inna Čábelková, Ph.D. (14.02.2022)

The first two classes will be online in Moodle to leave students enough time to come to the Czech Republic. The rest of the course will be face-to-face

Harmonogram 2022

 

 

 

 Topic Lecture/seminar

 Milestones for the final paper, and deadlines for homework

1

21.02.

Lect.

 Medieval ec. Systém – in Moodle

 HW4

2

28.02.

Lect.

 Ancient ec. System – in Moodle

 HW5

3

7.03.

Lect.

 Introduction, description of the course, final paper, grading requirements

 

4

 14.03.

Lect.

 Current economic system 1.

 Milestone 1. Topic of the paper

5

21.03.

Lect.

 Current economic system 2.

 HW1, Milestone 2. Aim of the paper

6

28.03.

Lect.

Current economic system 3.

 HW2

7

4.04.

Lect.

World economic system

Milestone 3.  Literature survey, HW3

8

11.04.

Sem.

Presentation 1, 2

 HW6

9

18.04.

State holiday

 

 

10

25.04.

Sem.

Presentation 3, 4

 

11

2.05.

Sem.

Presentation 5, 6

Milestone 4. The main part, argument and discussion

11

9.05.

Sem.

Presentation 7, 8

 

12

16.05.

Exam

 

Milestone 5.  Final paper submitted

 

 

 

 

Structure of the course

 

Class 1. Lecture 1. Introduction. The structure of the course, organisation of the course, lectures, seminars and readings, papers, requirements.

 

Part I The current economic systems.

 

Class 2. Lecture 2. The market system versus command system. Main mechanisms and players. The circular flow. Economic cycles. The zero milestone for the final paper – the topic.

Class 3. Lecture 3. The role of money and financial markets in current economic system. The history of money

The first milestone for the final paper – the topic and the aim of the paper

 

Class 4. Seminar 1. Group work and student presentations

·         Inequality

·         Social systems

Class 5. Seminar 2. Group work and student presentations

·         Political systems

·         Civil society

 

Part II Medieval economic systems

Class 6. Lecture. The second milestone for the final paper – the aim of the paper and the literature survey

Class 7. Seminar

Class 8 Seminar

 

Part III Ancient economic systems

Class 9. Lecture

Class 10. Seminar. The third milestone for the final paper – the main part, arguments and discussion.

 

Part IV World economic system according to Immanuel Wallerstein

Class 11. Lecture . World economic system according to Immanuel Wallerstein

Class 12. Seminar. States or corporations as the governing force. History and the current state

Class 13. Exam. The forth milestone for the final paper – the whole paper submission date.

 

 * Required reading:

- Bell, Daniel, The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism, New York, BasicBooks, 2001.
- Cord, Robert, Keynes, London, Haus, 2007.
- Kelbrook, Anthony, Adam Smith, London, Parma, 1998.
- Kornai, János, Economics of Shortage, Amsterdam, North-Holland Publ.Comp., 1980.
- Moore, Barrington, Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy, Harmondsworth, Penguin Books, 1977.
- Schumpeter, Alois, Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, London, Allen&Unwin, 1954.
- Sraffa Piero, Dobb Maurice, The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Indianapolis, Liberty Fund, 2004.
- Staniszkis, Jadwiga, The Ontology of Socialism, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1992.
- Stark, David, Recombinant Property in East European Capitalism, Budapest, Collegium Budapest
(Institute for Advanced Study), 1994.
- Tucker, Robert, The Marx-Engels Reader, New York, Norton, 1978.

* Recommended reading:

- Bell, Daniel, The Coming of Post-industrial society: A Venture in Social Forecasting, Harmondsworth, Penguin Books, 1976.
- Braudel Fernand, The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1995.
- Hayek, Friedrich, The Road to Serfdom, London, Routledge, 1971.
- Kornai, János, From Socialism to Capitalism, Budapest, Central European University Press, 2008.
- Smith, Adam, The Wealth of Nations, London, Everyman's Library, 1966.
- Staniszkis, Jadwiga Post-Communism: The Emerging Enigma, Warsaw, Institute of Political Studies (Polish Academy of Sciences), 1999.
- Wallerstein, Immanuel, Antisystemic movements, London, Verso, 1989.
- Weber, Max, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, London, Routledge, 2001.

Podmínky zakončení předmětu - angličtina
Poslední úprava: doc. Ing. Inna Čábelková, Ph.D. (14.02.2022)

Form of the course: the first two classes will be conducted online, the rest of the course will be face to face. 

The online parts of the course are recorded in Moodle. 

All the information was sent to students via e-mail.

Harmonogram 2022

 

 

 

 Topic Lecture/seminar

 Milestones for the final paper, and deadlines for homework

1

21.02.

Lect.

 Medieval ec. Systém – in Moodle

 HW4

2

28.02.

Lect.

 Ancient ec. System – in Moodle

 HW5

3

7.03.

Lect.

 Introduction, description of the course, final paper, grading requirements - Face-to face

 

4

 14.03.

Lect.

 Current economic system 1.

 Milestone 1. Topic of the paper

5

21.03.

Lect.

 Current economic system 2.

 HW1, Milestone 2. Aim of the paper

6

28.03.

Lect.

Current economic system 3.

 HW2

7

4.04.

Lect.

World economic system

Milestone 3.  Literature survey, HW3

8

11.04.

Sem.

Presentation 1, 2

 HW6

9

18.04.

State holiday

 

 

10

25.04.

Sem.

Presentation 3, 4

 

11

2.05.

Sem.

Presentation 5, 6

Milestone 4. The main part, argument and discussion

11

9.05.

Sem.

Presentation 7, 8

 

12

16.05.

Exam

 

Milestone 5.  Final paper submitted

 

 Requirements for exam

Students are supposed to participate in group presentations and group discussions, as well as hand in a final essay (10 pages), and to write a short final test.

The short final test will probe student knowledge on broad tendencies of economic system development according to suggested literature. Presentation and group discussions will aim at particular aspects of economic systems in historical context. The final paper is supposed to analyze particular factors associated with the economic system in a historical line of change. Students are supposed to work on their final essay throughout the semester independently on lectures and seminars and be able to submit the paper at the end of the teaching period. In case of need, students are advised to come to consultation during office hours. The topic of the paper is to be selected before the second class of the course.

 

Grading policy

1.      Presentations and group discussion: 30% of the final grade. Due to COVID epidemy will be substïtuted by weekly homeworks

2.      Final test: 20%

3.      Final essay: 50% of the final grade

4.      Attendance. More than 3 unexcused absences will result in a grade reduction of 1 point (A-B, B-C, C-D) Due to COVID epidemy will be substïtuted by weekly homeworks

 

Requirements for the final essay

 

Suggested topics for final essays are listed below. Note, the topics are very broad, students will need to narrow them down - they may choose a particular aspect, historical period or geographic location. Also, they may take two approaches: the analysis of how the historical change of socio-economic system influenced the factor suggested, or vice versa: how the factor influenced socio-economic development or both. It is not enough just to describe the history of development of a particular factor!!!

 

In the essay the students are supposed to clearly define the topics (for the list of suggested topics see below), the historical period, and the geographic location.

 

The grading criteria include

1.      Structure

2.      Well stated and argued aims of the paper

3.      Correct use of academic literature (APA style) including the literature survey

 

Structure of the essay:

 

Title

Author

Abstract

1.      Introduction:

a.       Motivation – why the topic is important and interesting

b.      Short literature survey – what was published on the topic

c.       Aim of the paper including the main thesis statements the author wants to prove, historical period, geographic location

d.      Structure of the paper

2.      Description and historical development of the factor and the aspects of socio-economic system one wants to relate to (if necessary) or longer literature survey on the topic

3.      The main part: the (inter)relation of the factor in topic to the socio-economic system, main arguments supporting the thesis statement (well-argued and well supported by the literature and relevant data)

4.      Discussion (optional, all your ideas on the topic which you consider to be interesting, but you did not describe in the main part either because it is difficult to  argue or not supported by the literature or data)

5.      Conclusion (summarise aims and the results of the essay, do not write new ideas)

 

Reference style: students are suggested to use the APA style of referencing ( see

https://www.mendeley.com/guides/apa-citation-guide

https://www.usq.edu.au/library/referencing/apa-referencing-guide,

APA  referencing guide enclosed to the course)

 

Length: 10-15 pages including the literature

 

Suggested topics (students may also choose their own)

 

1.                  Inequalities and social systems - from family or clan to state-financed social system

2.                  Roles of community, family, and children and economic force in society from the historical-economic perspective

3.                  The social mobility in historical perspective as a factor of social formation or social stability (aristocracy, merchants, working-class)

4.                  Technological changes and division of labor as a factor of formation of socio-economic systems in historical perspective

5.                  The formation of groups defining socio-economic development throughout history.

6.                  International trade and banking as a factor of socio-economic expansion

7.                  Schooling and skill transfer within the families, communities, guilds, schools as a factor of social change

8.                  Religion as a socio-economic force

9.                  The role of land and/or natural resources as a factor influencing socio-economic systems throughout the history

10.              Institutions in a socio-economic context. Their development throughout the history

11.              The ways of political participation. Ancient democracies and current public voting systems

12.              The role of international trade and corporations as a governing unit above the national level of governance

13.               International institutions as the governing unit of world economic system

14.              Gender as a factor of socio-economic development in history

a.       Employment of women

b.      Political participation of women

c.       Religious participation of women

15.              The influence of socio-economic development on family structures, child upbringing, psychological well being,  cultural settings (choose one a narrow it down)

16.              The improved health care system as a factor influencing socio-economic systems

17.              Birth control pill as a factor of change in society

18.              Information flows as a factor of socio-economic change. The beginning of mass media

19.              Value systems as a factor of socio-economic change.

20.                  The role of the military in economic systems

 

 
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