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Elective Subject:
In evauating the student´s performance, special emphasis is placed on the extent to which the student
- demonstrates sound knowledge in the shosen area, including its significant issues and academic directions;
- demonstrates skills in locating relevant material;
- demonstrate skills in working methodically and scientfically within an academic fiels;
- has the ability to demarcate and systematise his/her knowledge.
Project:
In evaluating the student´s performance, special emphasis is placed on the extent to which the student
- demonstrates sound knowledge in the chosen area, including its significant issues and academic directions;
- demonstrates skills in locating relevant material in Japanese and Western languages;
- demonstrates skills in working methodically and scientifically within an academic field on the basis of Japanese sources and the ability to demarcate and systematise his/her knowledge.
Globalization is processes that have histories and many of these histories are tied to global networks. During the first section of the course we will read and discuss key aspects of network theory as an innovative tool to analyze a variety of aspects of globalization processes. During section 2, we will discuss specific networks such as the United Nations, missionaries, computers, migration, terrorist, and ODA networks and in section 3, the students will finalize research papers where they choose specific global networks for investigation.
None
Annette Skovsted Hansen
Seminar
Engelsk
Required literature for purchase at Stakbogladen
Buchanan, Mark. Nexus: Small Worlds and the Groundbreaking Theory of Networks. New York and London: W.W. Norton and Company, 2002.
Newman, Mark. The Structure and Dynamics of Networks. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2006.
Monday 14-16, room 1328/014