INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THE COLD WAR AND THE GREAT POWERS
POL3INR
Not currently offered
Credit points: 15
Subject outline
This subject is designed to introduce students to the major developments in international politics that occurred between 1945 and 1991. Emphasis here will be placed on the foreign policies of the United States and the Soviet Union, with a view to outline the key components of the ideological and geopolitical confrontation that so profoundly characterised the Cold War era. Students will be provided with in-depth and detailed analyses of the impact that bipolar confrontation had on two key regions, namely Europe and Asia. The subject will also illustrate a number of competing interpretations of the origins, development and outcome of the Cold War, in order to outline how successive historiography waves understood international politics in the era of the two Superpowers.
Faculty: Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences
Credit points: 15
Subject Co-ordinator: Ben Habib
Available to Study Abroad Students: Yes
Subject year level: Year Level 3 - UG
Exchange Students: Yes
Subject particulars
Subject rules
Prerequisites: 15 credit points of any first year Politics subject and 15 credit points of any Humanities and Social Sciences subject, or subject coordinator's approval
Co-requisites: N/A
Incompatible subjects: POL2INR
Equivalent subjects: N/A
Special conditions: N/A
Learning resources
Readings
| Resource Type | Title | Resource Requirement | Author and Year | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Readings | America, Russia and the Cold War, 1945-2006 | Recommended | LaFeber, W. | BOSTON: MCGRAW-HILL, 2008. |
| Readings | The Cold War: a very short introduction | Recommended | McMahon, R. J. | OUP 2003 |