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Political Studies

The Master of Arts in the field of Political Studies is a 1 year full-time or 2 years part-time degree.

Overview


The programme consists of three semester-length taught units, which should normally be completed within the Department, and a research report, which students are expected to work on throughout the year. 

 Students may select any unit from the range offered in this booklet, including, subject to the approval of the Co-ordinator of the Masters programme, a unit taught in another discipline.  

Examinations

Students will write an exam on each of the three units taken. 

Assessment

Unit work submitted during the year will count 25% towards the final mark and examinations 25%.  The research report counts 50% towards the final mark. 

Research Report

All MA students have to submit for examination a research report on a topic of their choice. Students are expected to work on their research report throughout the year, and especially in the July and December vacations. 

Students may choose to combine “empirical” and “theoretical” material. Other students may choose to write purely library-based dissertations. 

MA students will be expected to present a fully developed proposal, which includes aims and objectives and a research question, background and rationale, chapter outline and bibliography,  to members of the Department before the mid-term vacation. 



Curriculum


POLS7006 - Development Theory

The aim of this course is to introduce students to the major social, economic, and political, assumptions underpinning ‘development studies’, and, most importantly, to the strategies that might best be adopted to ‘promote’ or ‘manage’ development. In this way, the ‘problem of development’ in three loosely defined and inter-connected areas of social life—the market, the state, and the community—is placed into sharper relief.  

POLS7044 - Democratic Theory

This course examines key issues in democratic theory. Democratic theory is concerned with understanding democracy as a concept and ideal. It poses questions such as: what is democracy? What forms does it take? Is it desirable? What are its limitations? How can it be improved? 

The course examines both the theory and practice of democracy and proposals for extending and deepening democracy. 

The first block looks at basic questions about democracy: its definition, rival traditions and approaches, justification and key problems. This is the more theoretical block. Topics covered here include liberal versus radical and African democracy, deliberative democracy, theories of representation and the relationship between democracy and rights. 

The second block focuses on institutional details and examples. It examines democratic models and techniques, especially those that are said to constitute new or more advanced forms of democracy compared to standard representative democracy. Some newer and/or ostensibly more advanced forms include direct democracy (referendum, popular initiative), participatory democracy (assembly democracy), functional and proletarian democracy (soviets, workers’ councils, guild socialism, syndicalism), eco-anarchist communes, sortition and citizen juries. 

POLS7050 - African Politics: African Political Theory 

The course, African Political Theory, takes as its foundation the analytical study of ideas and doctrines that have been central to African political thought in the late 19th century to the present. Similar to other political theory courses, this analytical study will take the form of a history of political thought, including a focus on a list of “major thinkers” and a “canon of classic texts.” Primarily, the course is interested in examining what major thinkers said, how they developed or justified their views, and the intellectual context within which they developed their ideas, including how such ideas continue to have relevance today. The list of thinkers includes, but is not limited to: Chinua Achebe, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Cheikh Anta Diop, Nawal El Saadawi, Archie Mafeje, Chabani Manganyi, Achille Mbembe, John Mbiti, V. Y. Mudimbe, Kwame Nkrumah, Sam Nolutshungu, Julius Nyerere, Wole Soyinka, Awa Thiam, Rick Turner, and Kwasi Wiredu to name a few.  As a normative course, African Political Theory concerns itself with African political thinkers and their approaches to questions of freedom, justice, liberty, and the state – all of which are key concepts in Political Theory. 

POLS7049 - Justice and Democracy: Freedom in South Africa

The course analyses the origins of the notions of justice, democracy and freedom. 

The first half of the course examines the history of justice, democracy and freedom. The second half of the course analyses the manner in which these ideas relate to the reality of the acquisition of freedom in Africa and South Africa. The course includes analysis of the ideas (and intellectual and historical contexts) of the following core thinkers, Hobbes, Rousseau, Marx, Fanon, Biko, Mandela, Sen and Geuss, amongst others. 

POLS7051 - The Politics of Slavery and Human Trafficking 

Slavery and enslavement have been recurring themes throughout human history, having been practiced by most peoples at most times over the course of thousands of years. This historical pedigree raises many challenging questions. If slavery represents a straightforward crime against humanity, as current legal and moral opinion maintains, why was it sanctioned by all major civilizations and religions for such an extended period? On what grounds can we connect modern individuals and organizations to the history and legacies of various past injustices? Similar challenges also extend to anti-slavery activism, which has beenwidely celebrated as a major watershed in the history of human rights. In this context, organised anti-slavery has been approached as both a strategic template (which offers a tactical model for more recent campaigns), and as an historical inspiration (which effectively demonstrates the potential of modern human rights activism). It is also clear, however, that many aspects of the history of slavery offer little or no cause for celebration. 
Over the life of the course, students should be able to 

  • Critically assess a variety of approaches to the study of slavery and abolition, both past and present.
  • Critically assess patterns of political activism that have been associated with efforts to combat various examples ofslavery and human bondage.
  • Critically assess the relationship between historical slave systems and contemporary forms of slavery.
  • Gain an appreciation of the key issues and events that have defined transatlantic slavery, other forms of legal slavery, the history and legacies of the legal abolition of slavery in Africa and the Americas, the contemporary problems of ‘classical slavery’, bonded labour, wartime enslavement, and recent debates over reparations and public commemoration of slavery.
  • Understand and evaluate the various methods used to research various forms of slavery and human bondage.
  • Evaluate competing representations of slavery and abolition, and assess the ramifications of these competing representations for how slavery has been conceptualised and discussed.
  • Explore linkages between slavery and other human rights abuses, legal regimes, and structural issues ofpoverty, migration, inequality, racism and discrimination.
  • Evaluate competing ethical, legal and political positions regarding the causes and consequences of slavery, and relatedstrategies for eradication and prevention. 
POLS7052 - Politics and Utopia

This course will provide graduate students with an introduction to key ideas and theories in the development of political thought. Utopian visions, and their impact on political thought and practice are studied. The course explores the relationship between political theory and practice. 

POLS7052 - Research Methods and Research Ethics in Political Studies

This course introduces a range of debates and approaches regarding the how’s and why’s of research methods. The specific focus of the course is political studies, but the social sciences more generally also provides a larger backdrop to a number of topics and debates. In addition to providing an introduction to research methods and research ethics, this course will provide targeted instruction on how to develop a research proposal to guide the completion of your honours/MA dissertation. We begin the course with a consideration of the role of empirical research in political studies, and then critically engage with notions of method and science when planning research projects. This in turn helps to introduce a series of discussions around the use of common research methods, including case studies, discourse analysis, law and its applications, comparative analysis, ethnography, archival sources and research ethics. In each session we will examine prominent examples of methods, and consider their strengths and weaknesses. Towards the end of the course students will present their plans to their peers and other members of the department, building upon ideas put together in a research proposal.  

POLS7030 - Selected Topics in Political Studies: Afro-politics and Religion

The course examines religion's role in shaping African society. Part of the aim of the course is to critique contemporary conflict theories and narratives of nation-states in their failure to account for religion's influence on the development of the African state and society. The interaction between the various religious outlooks and the constant invention of new belief systems is explored.

POLS7036: The State in Africa: Democratisation and Crisis

This unit draws upon debates about the birth and development of the African state. Furthermore, It explores the various views of the African state.

POLS7072 - Violence, Identity and Transformation

This is an interactive research seminar. It is intended to be a laboratory for mutual learning and collective transdisciplinary research. By accessing archives of the global South And North key questions regarding the politics of violence will be explored. One such question is, 'in which ways have progressive, inclusive and diverse new social orders been imagined and how could we or should we (not?) imagine them today?

POLS7059 - An Introduction to Biopower

In 1975 Michel Foucault published Discipline and Punish, a book that quickly established itself as a modern classic and which focused his research on what he later described as biopower. Over the next decade, this line of research gave rise to an influential set of critical practices that establish new strateg