Friday, December 26, 2008
Careers in Political Science, Foreign Service Officer
“So, in the last several months — with a new president on the horizon and new funding from Congress — both the State Department and Usaid, are ramping back up. A supplemental war funding bill has provided money for Foreign Service hiring. And President-elect Barack Obama “has talked explicitly about the need to increase the Foreign Service and we hope he will make that a priority,” said John Naland. The State Department has asked for funding for 1,500 new positions for the current fiscal year.”
UIC maintains an Office of International Affairs (OIA) with a career Foreign Service Officer stationed on campus. Consult him at if you wish to setup a meeting to find out about more opportunities.
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Academic BCS
"Every year, college football fans get caught up in some "major" controversy with the BCS rankings. They spend hours talking about obscure statistics and cursing computer formulas. This year, it was Oklahoma and Texas fans battling it out for the right to play in the Big 12 and National Championship games. Texas fans were devastated when they lost the rankings fight.
But the real tragedy for this team is that only 40 percent of its players, and only 27 percent of its black players, will graduate. Texas' football players put the University on the national stage. And what do they get in return? Besides the precious few that will make it to the NFL, most will leave school without a degree and with few career prospects."
Sunday, December 7, 2008
Change of Cuban Politics
"Three generations on from the revolution, being a Democrat is no longer equated by Cuban-Americans with being a Communist. The fixation on removing Fidel, the dreams of return and the raw anger of loss have faded. “We have gone from the politics of passion to the politics of reality,”
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Extra Credit Repost
You may choose to either write a report on a movie or a book (treat an event or lecture as a book) for extra credit. This report is due when you turn in your final paper. The movie review will be worth up to 7 points; a book/event review will be worth up to 15 points.
Details:
Movie: The movie must deal with international issues (or international Latino issues if that is your class) including anything we have covered in class. No movies on interpersonal relationships or tenuous connections to international events will be accepted (Borat). The movie can come from any time period. It would be best to get the movie approved before you watch. You must write at least a 4 page paper that will include one half review of the movie and the issues it covers. The second half will consider how it is relevant to the class and what lessons we can take from it. This assignment will be graded like any other essay, 7 points are not guaranteed. I do NOT want a recap of the movie.
Book: The book must deal with contemporary international issues (see above). It should be published after 9/11. The same issues mentioned in the movie option are fair game. It would be best to get the book approved by me before attempting to write a review. Your review must be at least 7 pages. It should be completed as your normal required book report (1/3 review, 1/3 connection to international issues, and 1/3 criticisms or support). This assignment will be graded like any other essay, 15 points are not guaranteed. I do NOT want a recap of the book/event.
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Changing the Game
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Murder Rate in Latin America
"The comparative study found that the murder rate for young people was 36.6 for every 100,000 people in Latin America while in Africa it was 16.1, North America 12, Asia 2.4, Oceania 1.6 and Europe 1.2, although there are variations within a particular region. "
Friday, November 28, 2008
Where is the change?
“Ironically, Obama is likely to show more fidelity to George H.W. Bush's approach to foreign affairs than did the former president's own son. That's change, maybe even change we can believe in, but it's not the change so many expected.”
This article also supports Richardson for secretary of state. The main argument should be, and is, that he is the most qualified to be secretary of state. He has served in a previous cabinet level post, was ambassador to the UN, served in the House, and was special envoy to many international problem spots. On top of that, the choice of Hilary over Richardson is insulting to Hispanics who choose to buck institutional leadership and go with Obama. It’s a slap in the face to so many who stuck their necks out for Obama. It is also a slap in the face to Latin America, which might have received greater engagement with Richardson had he been appointed.
“This isn't about Richardson, who might be very happy heading for ribbon cuttings in Toledo while Clinton heads for blue-ribbon summits in Tel Aviv. This is about something larger. Richardson is the nation's only Hispanic governor and the most prominent Hispanic elected official in the country. And the way he was treated doesn't say much about Obama's respect for the Hispanic community. Nor does the fact that Obama seems to have filled his top four Cabinet posts — justice, treasury, defense, and state — and couldn't find a single Hispanic to put in any of them. America's largest minority took a chance on Obama despite the fact that the president-elect had no track record in reaching out to them and didn't break a sweat trying to win their votes. They deserve better.”
Is this really what we voted for? While I support the choice of Gates on practical grounds, it will not be the choice that will push for withdrawal from Iraq like so many expected and hoped. Clinton is an effective choice for the State department if Obama wants a free hand to deal with internal economic problems, but she does not represent the choice that many of us hoped for when we were expecting a new and different vision of American external relations. So I will ask again, where is the change? Why should we have hope if things will just remain the same with the same old people in charge? Don’t go to D.C. in January 2009 to celebrate the election of our first black president, go to D.C. to celebrate the retention of the old guard and the state quo.
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Environmental Conflict
The "Global Trends 2025: A Transformed World" is getting a lot of news coverage for the wrong reasons. Some of the prescriptions and claims the report makes are accurate, others are not. This claim identified by the NYTimes really bugs me since it is not based on facts at all.
"The new report describes a world riven by increased conflict over scarce food and water supplies and threatened by so-called rogue states and terrorists, widening gaps between rich and poor and an uneven impact of global warming."
I recently found this piece online written by Idean Salehyan and it provides a simple review of the literature on environmental conflict and the dangers of focusing on the potential of enivromental conflict rather than practical political solutions. He notes: "Additionally, focusing on climate change as a security threat that requires a military response diverts attention away from prudent adaptation mechanisms and new technologies that can prevent the worst catastrophes."
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Jobs for Lawyers
Here is another article from last year with stats. Keep them coming
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Int Latino Politics Schedule
Nov 18
Great Power Involvement (Read: Latin America’s Wars, Ch. 33, 21, 35)
Drug Wars (Read: Latin America’s Wars, Ch. 38)
Latin American Rivalries and the Making of a State (Read: Thies)
Test Today
Dec 2
International Migration Patterns (Read: Age of Mig. Ch 2, 3, 4)
Final Papers Due on Dec 10th at NOON
Monday, November 10, 2008
Bill Ayers Comes Out Hiding
EDUCATION POLICY PRIORITIES FOR THE NEW PRESIDENT:
A PANEL OF EXPERTS AND THEIR "TOP TEN" LISTS
Thursday, December 4, 2008
6:00-8:00 pm
UIC Forum, Event Center (725 W. Roosevelt, Chicago, IL)
Confirmed Speakers:
-Professor WILLIAM AYERS, University of Illinois at Chicago, College of
Education, and lead editor of "The Handbook of Social Justice in
Education"
-Professor SUMI CHO, DePaul University, College of Law; and Board member
of the Asian American Justice Center, African American Policy Forum, and
Latina and Latino Critical Legal Theory
-Professor CARL GRANT, University of Wisconsin at Madison, School of
Education; former President of the National Association for Multicultural
Education; and author of "Doing Multicultural Education for Achievement
and Equity"
-Professor CAROL LEE, Northwestern University, School of Education and
Social Policy; President-Elect of the American Educational Research
Association; and author of "Culture, Literacy, and Learning"
-Professor PAULINE LIPMAN, University of Illinois at Chicago, College of
Education; Director of the Collaborative for Equity and Justice in
Education; and author of "High Stakes Education"
-Professor HAKI MADHUBUTI, Chicago State University, College of Arts and
Sciences; and Publisher of Third World Press
-Professor ERICA MEINERS, Northeastern Illinois University, College of
Education; and author of "Right to be Hostile"
-Moderator: KEVIN KUMASHIRO, Chair of Educational Policy Studies, Interim
Co-Director of the Institute for Research on Race and Public Policy,
University of Illinois at Chicago; and author of "The Seduction of Common
Sense"
This event is free and open to the public. A booksigning by the
presenters will immediately follow.
Please direct inquiries to Zell Williams, Assistant to the Chair, UIC
Department of Educational Policy Studies, 312-413-2414, zellw@uic.edu.
Co-sponsors include the Department of Educational Policy Studies, the
Institute for Research on Race and Public Policy, the Collaborative for
Equity and Justice in Education, and the Powell Memorial Fund.
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Review of Latino Impact on Election
Pew Hispanic Center Releases a Report on the Hispanic Vote in the Presidential Election |
Hispanics voted for Democrats Barack Obama and Joe Biden over Republicans John McCain and Sarah Palin by a margin of more than two-to-one in the 2008 presidential election, 66% versus 32%, according to a new report from the Pew Hispanic Center, a project of the Pew Research Center. The report finds that 8% of the electorate was Latino, unchanged from 2004. Nationwide, the Latino vote was significantly more Democratic this year than in 2004, when President Bush captured an estimated 40% of the Hispanic vote, a modern high for a Republican presidential candidate.1 Obama carried the Latino vote by sizeable margins in all states with large Latino populations. His biggest breakthrough came in Florida, where he won 57% of the Latino vote. President Bush carried 56% of the Latino vote in Florida in 2004. Obama's margins were much larger in other states with big Latino populations. He carried 78% in New Jersey, 76% of the Latino vote in Nevada, 74% in California, and 73% in Colorado. This report contains an analysis of exit poll results for the Latino vote nationally and in the states of Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico and Texas. The report is available on the Center's website at www.pewhispanic.org. |
Friday, October 31, 2008
The World Says Elect the Black Guy
Is Mr Obama any better? Most of the hoopla about him has been about what he is, rather than what he would do. His identity is not as irrelevant as it sounds. Merely by becoming president, he would dispel many of the myths built up about America: it would be far harder for the spreaders of hate in the Islamic world to denounce the Great Satan if it were led by a black man whose middle name is Hussein; and far harder for autocrats around the world to claim that American democracy is a sham. America’s allies would rally to him: the global electoral college on our website shows a landslide in his favour. At home he would salve, if not close, the ugly racial wound left by America’s history and lessen the tendency of American blacks to blame all their problems on racism.
DNI speaks, the world trembles
"Strategic rivalries are most likely to revolve around trade, demographics, access to natural resources, investments and technological innovation. There will be a struggle to acquire technology advantage as the key enabler for dominance," he said.
*The above factors are not likely to cause rivalry future and have not in the past. It is possible that these issues will become important to rivals, but that is only after the rivalry starts in the first place.
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Everyone Hide, the Mexicans are coming
"Although many Mexicans support and aid these terrorists, Mexicans have an agenda all their own: reconquista, the retaking of the Southwest United States. They believe they have a right to be in the Southwest, and plan to recolonize it. Their intentions are transparent, their success rate increasing...If retaliation is not forthcoming, Aztlan will live again. Every single white person will be removed from the Southwest or eliminated."
Thursday, October 16, 2008
UIC Soccer on ESPN
ESPN on UIC soccer
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Latino Hate
"Indecent Proposals: Top 10 Most Offensive Quotes from Anti-Immigrant Leaders"
1.) "We need the National Guard to clean out all ourcities and round them up...They have no problem slitting your throat and taking your money or selling drugs to your kids or raping your daughters, and they are evil people."[1]
Chris Simcox, co-founder of the Minuteman Project and president of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps. As quoted in the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Report magazine, Summer 2005.
2.) "Mexican men have a reputation for leering and worse at little girls, which shouldn't surprise us, since sex with children is socially acceptable in Mexico."[2]
Brenda Walker, California anti-immigrant leader and publisher. From VDARE.com article titled "Top Ten Reasons Why the US Should Not Marry Mexico," January 1, 2007.
3.) "My message to them is, not in two weeks, not in two months, not in two years, never! We must be clear that we will not surrender America and we will not turn the United States over to the invaders from south of the border."[3]
Rep. Virgil Goode (R- VA), at the March for America, Washington, DC, June 18, 2007.
4.) "I don't care if Mexicans pile up against that fence ... just run a couple of taco trucks up and down the line..."[4]
Neal Boortz, anti-immigrant talk radio host on WSB-AM in Atlanta on June 18, 2007.
5.) "Terrorists are also walking in unopposed; our southwestern border is littered with Arabic papers and Islamic prayer rugs."[5]
Jim Gilchrist, founder of Minutemen Project. From a press release announcing the forthcoming publication of a new book co-authored with Jerome R. Corsi, February 2006.
6.) "The brown toxic cloud strangling Los Angeles never lifts and grows thicker with every immigrant added. One can't help appreciate the streets of Paris will soon become the streets of LA. However, Paris' streets erupted while LA's shall sink into a Third World quagmire much like Bombay or Calcutta, India. When you import that much crime, illiteracy, multiple languages and disease-Americans pick up stakes and move away."[6]
Frosty Wooldridge, anti-immigrant author and activist. Summarizing an address by a KABC-AM talk radio host to the Federation for American Immigration Reform director's meeting, Fall 2005.
7.) "What we'll do is randomly pick one night every week where we will kill whoever crosses the
border...step over there and you die. You get to decide whether it's your lucky night or not. I think that would be more fun."[7]
Brian James, anti-immigrant talk radio host with KFYI-AM in Phoenix. Suggesting a solution to the immigration problem in Arizona while filling in for the regular host, March 2006.
8.) "Shoot him."[8]
Phil Valentine, anti-immigration talk radio host, WWTN in Nashville. Advising Border Patrol agents to shoot undocumented immigrants during an anti-immigrant rally in Franklin, Tennessee, April 27, 2006.
9.) "We've got to make it in this country so (immigrants) can't exist here...We've got to rattle
their teeth and put their feet to the fire!"[9]
Terry Anderson, anti-immigrant talk radio host with KRLA in Los Angeles. Speaking at a "Hold Their Feet to the Fire" anti-immigrant rally organized by the Federation for American Immigration Reform, April 22, 2007.
10.) "Our enemies are bloodied and beaten. We cannot relent. Our boot is on their throat and we must have the willingness to crush their ‘throat' so that we can put our enemy down for good. The sovereignty of our nation and the future of our culture and civilization is at stake. The United States is a beacon of salvation unto the rest of the world. Our freedoms, our culture is mans salvation. If we perish, man perishes."[10]
Joseph Turner, Save Our State (S.O.S), now a staff member with the Federation for American Immigration Reform. Message sent to Save Our State supporters on October 7, 2006.
Monday, October 6, 2008
Latino Scholarships
Los Angeles, CA. Latino College Dollars, a website offering interactive, no-cost information about scholarships available to Latino students, received over 110,000 unique visitors in the first eight months of 2008.
"We are continually updating the website," said Corina Espinoza, Director of the Tomás Rivera Policy Institute (TRPI) Kids to College program. "And the 2008-09 directory will be coming out in late October."
Latino College Dollars currently offers over 325 sources that students may contact for college scholarship information. The website grew from a TRPI research project assessing information available on the web to Latino students. "Curiously, we found that half of the websites on Latino scholarships were not functional," stated Wendy Chavira, Associate Director of Operations at the Institute. "However, the remaining websites offered relevant information. Rather than saving the information, we decided to publish it."
According to TRPI research, lack of information on college financing options is widespread among Latino youth and parents. Latinos lag behind in college preparation, resulting in only 7.2 % of Latinos between the ages of 18-24 enrolled in a 4-year college institution.
Please click here to visit TRPI's Latino College Dollars website.
Click here to view the 2007-2008 directory.
TRPI encourages organizations offering scholarships for Latino students to contact the Institute to be included in the next Latino College Dollars directory.
Internship Oppurtunity
v Interns receive a stipend of $2,026 per month with health insurance included.
v Interns earn 8 graduate credits in political studies from the University of Illinois at Springfield.
v Interns work as legislative staff with either the partisan staffs of the Illinois General Assembly or the Legislative Research Unit.
Interning with the Illinois Legislature prepares interns for a variety of career paths. Interns work closely with seasoned professionals in the unique environment of the State legislature.
v Interns provide research and analytical support to committee leaders and members.
v Interns analyze agency budgets and take part in crafting the state budget.
v Interns handle press and newsletters for assigned legislators.
v Interns gain personal access and build relationships with legislators, lobbyist and other state contractors.
Interning with Legislative Research Bureau primarily prepares interns for research career paths, while working with seasoned legal and communication professionals.
v Interns gain legal research skills.
v Interns respond to research requests from state legislators.
v Interns help write official state documents and resources.
Upon completion of the program, interns pursue a number of professional avenues.
v Interns are offered full-time positions on a legislative staff.
v Interns pursue careers in public policy with a state agency or lobbying firm.
v Interns pursue law degrees.
v Interns continue their educational pursuits.
The Illinois Legislative Staff Intern Program has a 35- year history and is considered one of the top ten internship programs in the United States.
v Applicants must complete their undergraduate degree by September 1, 2009.
v Applicants with advanced degrees are preferred.
v Applicants with a 3.0 GPA are preferred.
v Applications must be postmarked by February 1, 2009.
v Internships start August 16, 2009 and end June 30, 2010.
If you know a student or others interested in an internship with the Illinois General Assembly, please share this email. Application materials are available online or I can send them to you directly by email or post. For more information, please contact me at 217.206.6579 or visit the ILSIP website at http://ilsip.uis.edu.
Sincerely,
Barbara Van Dyke-Brown
Director, Legislative Internships and Advocacy Programs
P.S. Recruiters will be in attendance at your upcoming graduate/career fair on October 2, 2008. We would appreciate your efforts to encourage interested students to attend the fair and learn more about the Illinois Legislative Staff Intern Program.
Monday, September 29, 2008
So Proud of Vandy
Friday, September 26, 2008
Super Extra Cool Long Distance Russian Jets That Take the Long Way to a Target
By her criteria of trade missions being foreign policy experience, any border states near Mexico should give us our next President. I am pretty sure I see more foreign reps at the Mexican consulate on Ashland than Russians in Alaska.
"As Putin rears his head and comes into the air space of the United States of America, where do they go? It's Alaska."
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Migrants and Education
"That suggests that any country that figures out how to let incomers shine will reap big benefits. Immigrants, however poor, are a self-selected bunch of ambitious, hard-working people, and their children usually know that, lacking the informal networks that let locals get ahead, they must study hard to succeed. Their varying fates—helped to the top in some places, consigned to the scrapheap in others—show that although what happens outside the school gates is important, what happens in classrooms is too."
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Extra Credit for Fall 08
You may choose to either write a report on a movie or a book (treat an event or lecture as a book) for extra credit. This report is due when you turn in your final paper. The movie review will be worth up to 7 points; a book/event review will be worth up to 15 points.
Details:
Movie: The movie must deal with international issues (or international Latino issues if that is your class) including anything we have covered in class. No movies on interpersonal relationships or tenuous connections to international events will be accepted (Borat). The movie can come from any time period. It would be best to get the movie approved before you watch. You must write at least a 4 page paper that will include one half review of the movie and the issues it covers. The second half will consider how it is relevant to the class and what lessons we can take from it. This assignment will be graded like any other essay, 7 points are not guaranteed. I do NOT want a recap of the movie.
Book: The book must deal with contemporary international issues (see above). It should be published after 9/11. The same issues mentioned in the movie option are fair game. It would be best to get the book approved by me before attempting to write a review. Your review must be at least 7 pages. It should be completed as your normal required book report (1/3 review, 1/3 connection to international issues, and 1/3 criticisms or support). This assignment will be graded like any other essay, 15 points are not guaranteed. I do NOT want a recap of the book/event.
UIC Talk
2008 UIC Political Science Department Colloquium
Professor Brandon Valeriano and graduate student Vitaliy Voznyak will discuss their paper Russia -- United States, 1991--2006: The Transformation of an Interstate Rivalry and its Implications for the "Near Abroad" at the first Department Colloquium of the 2008-09 academic year. The talk will be held on Wednesday, September 24, 2008 at noon in room 1115 BSB. Everyone is invited.
I missed the memo, does that make me unethical
Email I got today. I partially agree, its wrong to display overt signs of allegiance to any candidate while teaching, but to attend a rally on campus??? If that is such an issue the event should be off campus. If the Cubs are a political party, I am in trouble.
To: UI faculty at Chicago, Springfield, and Urbana
This month the University of Illinois Ethics Office informed faculty and staff that it is unethical to attend campus rallies for candidates running for public office, to wear buttons endorsing political candidates or political parties on campus, or to place comparable bumper stickers on cars to be parked in university-owned lots. Faculty are understandably concerned about the administration's critique of such forms of free speech and political expression as they have been exercised without controversy for years. Although these rules are not at present being enforced, the AAUP deplores their chilling effect on speech, their interference with the educational process, and their implicit castigation of normal practice during political campaigns. A prohibition on political bumper stickers can well cross a line and infringe on extramural political speech.
While we are unhappy with how the university has interpreted the state's ethics rules, we also have other fundamental concerns. The Ethics Office has failed to recognize and accurately define both the special context of a university and the role of its faculty members. Campus education requires that faculty and students have comparable freedom of expression on political subjects. This applies not only to obvious contexts like courses on politics and public policy in a variety of departments but also to the less formal settings in which faculty and students interact. Political speech embraces not only buttons and bumper stickers but also the whole range of advocacy and debate that intensifies during political campaigns. As the rules stand, students can exercise their constitutional rights and attend rallies and wear buttons advocating candidates, but faculty cannot. National elections provide w! onderful educational opportunities across a wide range of disciplines. Thus students might attend campus rallies and later analyze them in a classroom. Are faculty members to have no experience of the rallies themselves? Finally, it is inappropriate to suggest that faculty members function as employees whenever they are on campus. Faculty often move back and forth between employee responsibilities and personal acts within the same time frame.
Cary Nelson, AAUP President
Friday, September 19, 2008
US-Russia Arms Race II: This Time Its Personal
The Big NeoCon
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Spain = Latin American Leftists?
"A reporter asked McCain whether, if elected, he would receive Zapatero in the White House. McCain answered, "Honestly, I have to analyze our relationships, situations, and priorities, but I can assure you that I will establish closer relationships with our friends, and I will stand up to those who want to harm the United States." As a result, much of the Spanish press has decided that the Republican candidate, who hails himself as the experienced foreign policy choice in this election, confused Spain - a NATO member and key ally in the fight against terrorism - with one of those troublesome Latin American states. That was certainly the interviewer's impression, for she followed up with a gentle reminder that Spain was a country in Europe."
Alliance between Russia and breakaway enclaves
"The treaties also allow Russia to build military bases and station additional troops in the territories. Those steps, if put into effect, would violate the European-brokered cease-fire that ended Russia’s war with Georgia last month."
and for new relating to our Latin American class:
"So far only Nicaragua has joined Russia in recognizing the two as sovereign nations, as has Hamas, the Palestinian faction that controls Gaza. Ms. Rice mocks Russia’s diplomatic efforts in her remarks. “A pat on the back from Daniel Ortega and Hamas is hardly a diplomatic triumph,” she says, referring to Nicaragua’s president."
Monday, September 15, 2008
Link Fixed
Friday, September 12, 2008
America and its fracturing relationship with the Latin 'Left'
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Why Republicans Should Attack Latinos by Frum
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Territorial Claim
Sunday, August 31, 2008
Bush Behind the Surge
"In January 2007, at a time when the situation in Iraq appeared the bleakest, Mr. Bush chose a bold option that was at odds with what many of his civilian and military advisers, including his field commander, initially recommended. Mr. Bush’s plan to send more than 20,000 troops to carry out a new counterinsurgency strategy has helped to reverse the spiral of sectarian killings in Iraq."
And now for a non-IR moment
So I have pretty much moved on full time to baseball. Going back to my first childhood love has been a fun experience. It is nice to remember what it was like to be a kid. To idolize Steve Garvey, then Jim Abbot, then Barry Bonds (yes, I liked him back when he was a skinny kid). By my count I have been to 34 Cubs games this year with four more to go (ain't a sabbatical and a flexible schedule grand).
Baseball brings everything I love together, stats and luck. Statistics are about finding means and averages, knowing what to expect based on the past. That is the whole point of numbers, to tell a story. Baseball is pretty much like that in that most players preform pretty much as expected given a certain amount of at bats and innings. Yet, there are always those that luck out, those that have a career year that no one expected, like Geovanny Soto or Ryan Dempster.
And then there is the other part of baseball I love, the stories, the pain, and excitement of being a fan. Of rooting for your home team, and when they do well, everything is right in life. As my friend said, it must be nice to be a guy and have your whole day made by a sports team. But such is life.
Baseball also is about experiences, good and bad. And this story is one of the best, most heartbreaking, stories I have ever read. It is not a fun read, but sometimes the best ones are like this, as is life. It is what it is.
Saturday, August 30, 2008
The Steps to War
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Thursday, August 14, 2008
The 'Other' as the President
"Penn, the presidential campaign’s chief strategist, wrote in a memo to Clinton excerpted in the article: “I cannot imagine America electing a president during a time of war who is not at his center fundamentally American in his thinking and in his values.”
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
184 Summer Second Set of Readings
Clausewitz, Whole On War Book
Selection on What is War?
Bremer, Dangerous Dyads
Lawrence of Arabia
T.E. Lawrence's Proposed Map of the Middle East
Lawrence the Peril's of State Building
Detterence (Dr. Strangelove)
Herman Kahn's Doomsday Machine
Nuclear Deterrence Theory: Book Review
Deterrence and Dr. Strangelove Teaching Guide
Carol Cohn: Sex and Death in the Rational World of Defense Intellectuals
Gandhi
Means and Ends
Passive Resistance
Cold War Diplomacy
Diplomacy of the Korean Conflict
13 Days (Cuban Missile Crisis)
Cuban Missile Crisis Docs
Conceptual Models of Decision Making
Monday, July 21, 2008
Thursday, July 10, 2008
McNamara's 11 Eleven Lessons
Lesson #1: Empathize with your enemy.
Lesson #2: Rationality will not save us.
Lesson #3: There’s something beyond one’s self.
Lesson #4: Maximize efficiency.
Lesson #5: Proportionality should be a guideline in war.
Lesson #6: Get the data.
Lesson #7: Belief and seeing are both often wrong.
Lesson #8: Be prepared to reexamine your reasoning.
Lesson #9: In order to do good, you may have to engage in evil.
Lesson #10: Never say never.
Lesson #11: You can’t change human nature
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
War Powers Act
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Rice's New Realism
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
War of the World
In Chicago, the first episode is on Wed (technically Thurs) at 3:30am on Channel 11. Second episode is at 10pm on Monday. Listed under War of the World if you do a search.
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Israel Demonstrating Realism
"He warned that while it would be preferable to have American support and participation in a strike on Iran, Israel will not be afraid to go it alone. When it comes to decisions that have to do with our national security and our own survival, at best we may update the Americans that we are intending or planning or going to do something. It's not a precondition, [getting] an American agreement," he said."
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Soccer in Politics
"Perhaps it’s time to share the Zimbabweans’ pain, to help persuade Mr. Mbeki to bear down on its source by threatening to grab the world’s soccer ball and take our games elsewhere."
Sports rules the world...once again
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Fog of War Report
Assignment:
Propose a documentary movie based on an interview with one person or a group of people. Outline who you are choosing and why. Then explain how you would conduct a critical oral history interview of the subject(s).
What case are you choosing? Why is it important?
What lessons from the Fog of War book would be useful in examining this case? Why?
What new lessons might be learned by doing a critical history project?
How did the Fog of War influence your choice of subject and goals?
(Do not pick a President or similar leader of a state. Stay away from any event since 9/11.)
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Intro to IR Summer Readings, Post 1
Thucydides, Melian Dialogue
Machiavelli, The Prince
Read parts of Chapter 5, 15, 17, 18, 21
Morgenthau, A Realist Theory of International Politics
Kennan, Diplomacy in the Modern World
No clear copy online, use these sources to get some background
Kennan Century
Kennan Obit
Excerpt from Book
Wolfers, National Security as an Ambiguous Symbol
Wilson, World Must be Made Safe for Democracy
14 Points Speech
US National Security Strategy
Tolstoy, Patriotism and Government
Zinn, Setting the Moral Equation
This version refers to Afghanistan, not Vietnam as reader version does
Thursday, February 7, 2008
Colombia Border Dispute
Sunday, January 27, 2008
Talkat UW
WISER Winter 2008
Brown Bag Series
Prof. Brandon Valeriano
Tuesday, February 5th
Gowen 1A
11:45am—1:00pm
W I S E R
“Latino Assimilation, Divided Loyalties, and the World Cup”
Professor Brandon Valeriano
University of Illinois at Chicago, Department of Political Science
Talk at USC
The event is 12:30pm-2pm, and is located in the Social Sciences (SOS) Building, Room B40 (see campus map). To park enter campus through Gate 3 off of Figueroa Blvd (between Jefferson Blvd and Exposition Blvd) and park in Lot PSX. The cost of parking is $8. From the parking lot, they would just have to walk across the quad and the SOS building is right there adjacent to the building with the big globe on top (we are down in the basement of the building). They can use this address if they need to mapquest driving directions: 3520 Trousdale Pkwy, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0037
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Chavez and FARC
FARC and Terrorism in LA Times
"But when Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez proposed this month that Colombia's largest rebel group be recognized as "belligerents," not terrorists, the reverberations reached to Washington and Europe, and relations between the two Latin American nations plunged to what one observer called perhaps the lowest point in their history.
But the Colombian government bitterly protested what it viewed as interference in its affairs. Colombian officials worry that Venezuela might take the further step of recognizing the rebels as a "state in formation," a status that France and Mexico granted the Sandinista rebels during the Nicaraguan civil war in the late 1970s.
Such a move would mean "giving the FARC diplomatic immunity, asylum rights, Venezuelan passports, and freedom from extradition," said former Colombian Defense Minister Rafael Pardo, now a consultant based in Bogota, the capital. "They would be giving the FARC a legitimacy, and that's very grave."
FARC rebels are thought to hold captive for barter or ransom about 700 civilians they have kidnapped in the last decade. Over the course of a 40-year war, they have killed hundreds of local and national politicians who didn't share their views.
In many areas of Colombia where they control the drug trade, rebels force poor farmers to grow coca. They burn vehicles that use roads they say are off-limits and deploy car bombs that sometimes kill passersby."
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
First Strike
"The west must be ready to resort to a pre-emptive nuclear attack to try to halt the "imminent" spread of nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction, according to a radical manifesto for a new Nato by five of the west's most senior military officers and strategists.
Calling for root-and-branch reform of Nato and a new pact drawing the US, Nato and the European Union together in a "grand strategy" to tackle the challenges of an increasingly brutal world, the former armed forces chiefs from the US, Britain, Germany, France and the Netherlands insist that a "first strike" nuclear option remains an "indispensable instrument" since there is "simply no realistic prospect of a nuclear-free world"."
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Columbia's Big and 'Bad' Military
Key points:
"Seven years and $4.35 billion since the advent of a massive U.S. aid program, the Colombian military has been transformed from an outmatched "garrison force" that had yielded huge swaths of terrain to leftist guerrillas, to an aggressive force that has won back territory."
"The transformation, however, has had a dark side. Soldiers and police officers have committed rising numbers of human rights abuses, even as U.S. training intensifies, rights groups charge. During the five-year period that ended in June 2006, extrajudicial killings increased by more than 50% over the previous five years, according to figures compiled by human rights groups."
According to statistics compiled by the Colombian Commission of Jurists, a human rights group, the armed forces committed 1,035 extrajudicial killings in the five-year period that ended in June 2006, compared with 685 in the previous five years.
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Extra Credit Oppurtunity
Ticketmaster Link
Guidelines for Extra Credit
You may choose to either write a report on a movie or a book (treat an event or lecture as a book) for extra credit. This report is due when you turn in your final paper. The movie review will be worth up to 10 points; a book/event review will be worth up to 20 points.
Details:
Movie: The movie must deal with international latino issues (foriegn policy, conflict in latin america, migration, crime and latinos, or sport and latinos) including anything we have covered in class. No movies on interpersonal relationships or tenuous connections to international events will be accepted (Borat). The movie can come from any time period. It would be best to get the movie approved before you watch. You must write at least a 4 page paper that will include one half review of the movie and the issues it covers. The second half will consider how it is relevant to the class and what lessons we can take from it. This assignment will be graded like any other essay, 10 points are not guaranteed. I do NOT want a recap of the movie.
Book: The book must deal with contemporary international latino issues (see above). It should be published after 9/11. The same issues mentioned in the movie option are fair game. It would be best to get the book approved by me before attempting to write a review. Your review must be at least 7 pages. It should be completed as your normal required book report (1/3 review, 1/3 connection to international latino issues, and 1/3 criticisms or support). This assignment will be graded like any other essay, 20 points are not guaranteed. I do NOT want a recap of the book/event.
Monday, January 14, 2008
International Latino Politics Schedule
Jan 15: Latinos and National Interest
Jan 16: Latin American and the US
Jan 17: Mexico and the US
Jan 18: Importance of Conflict Studies
Jan 21: MLK Day, No Class
Jan 22: TJ Trip, No Class
Jan 23: Interventions
Jan 24: Drugs and Rivalries
Jan 25: International Migration Patterns, Test
Diversity = Good
Friday, January 11, 2008
IR Theory Links
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
Obama solving Kenya's problems
"The political crisis here, which has claimed at least 486 lives and probably many more, seems to be raising wider concerns, with President Bush issuing a statement urging “both sides to engage in peaceful dialogue” and Senator Barack Obama speaking to opposition leaders by telephone.
Mr. Obama, Democrat from Illinois who is running for president, has close ties to Kenya. His father was Kenyan and a member of the same ethnic group as Kenya’s top opposition leader, Raila Odinga. Mr. Obama took a short break from campaigning on Monday and asked Mr. Odinga to meet directly with Kenya’s president without preconditions, a spokesman for Mr. Obama said."
Tuesday, January 8, 2008
Multiculturalism and Foriegn Policy
Obama’s argument is about more than identity. He was intelligent and prescient about the costs of the Iraq War. But he says that his judgment was formed by his experience as a boy with a Kenyan father—and later an Indonesian stepfather—who spent four years growing up in Indonesia, and who lived in the multicultural swirl of Hawaii.
I never thought I’d agree with Obama. I’ve spent my life acquiring formal expertise on foreign policy. I’ve got fancy degrees, have run research projects, taught in colleges and graduate schools, edited a foreign-affairs journal, advised politicians and businessmen, written columns and cover stories, and traveled hundreds of thousands of miles all over the world. I’ve never thought of my identity as any kind of qualification.But any insights I have are thoroughly informed by the perspective and judgment that I’ve gained from being first a foreigner, then a foreign student, then an aspiring immigrant and now an American. My biography has helped me put my book learning in context, made for a richer interaction with foreigners and helped me see the world from many angles. So I understand what Obama means when he talks about his life and its lessons.
Sunday, January 6, 2008
Wow, a candidate who can speak well
“He just trounced her there because all that experience isn’t what they wanted to hear about — they wanted to see somebody who said they would do something new and change Washington,” Mr. Romney said. “And,” he added, “we cannot afford Barack Obama as the next president. He’s a very nice fellow and he’s a well-spoken fellow, but he’s never done it.”
I think I threw up a little in my mouth when I read that. What do people expect from Obama? When is the covert racism and lowed expectations going to end?