POLS 4524-01 Farah

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POLS 4524

Fall 2014

Dr. NADIA FARAH

Office: 2012

Email: nfarah@aucegypt.edu

AMERICAN UNIVERSITY IN CAIRO

POLITICAL SCIENCE DEPARTMENT

POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE MIDDLE EAST

Class hours: UW 2:00-3:15

Room: C 135

Office Hours: 3:30-4:45

After independence, Middle Eastern countries embarked on a process of development relying on state-led development strategies. The most noticeable characteristic of these strategies is that they are extremely politicized. Political factors intervene to alter planned investments and/or expenditures. Sometimes the outbreak of violent conflict, either internal or external leads to the interruption of implementation of development targets and the discarding of any efforts to rationalize the economic process.

In this course we will focus on the emergence of the modern ME states, with a special focus on Egypt, especially after WWII and the Growth of state power to the degree that the political structure came to dominate ME socio-economic system. The ME states are largely authoritarian either under the rule of single party regimes or under family rule.

This domination of the political structure led to an economic structure dominated by the state, i.e., Access to economic resources rest on the access to political power. This led to the dominance of the state sector as the major force for economic growth and development.

However, starting from the 1990's most ME states were reintegrated in the global economic system. Globalization and necessary economic reforms led to the emergence of major problems in ME including high unemployment and inflation rates; the increase in poverty levels; increasing income inequalities that led in some

cases to the eruption of intense conflicts within ME states and finally to the eruption of revolutions requiring both democracy and development

Since 2011 a revolutionary wave did topple many ME regimes. One of the developments was the emergence of ethnicity and violent conflict that is leading to a real threat of state fragmentation and a long and violent process of state reconstruction in the Arab world.

Accordingly, this seminar will focus on the following:

1) The Growth of State Power in the ME;

2) Economic Growth and Structural Change and the Role of the State in the

Economy;

3) Globalization, Economic Reform and the type of ME State;

4) The Arab Spring : Revolutions development and democracy

COURSE REQUIREMENTS

Participation

Two Assignments; Week 4 & Week 8

Mid Term Exam Week 7

Final Exam

10%

30%

30%

30%

Class Policies

1.

No one is to enter the classroom after the instructor

2.

Cell phones are to be switched off

3.

No taping of lectures

4.

Cheating during written exams is heavily penalized. A student caught cheating will earn an F for the Whole course and will be referred to AUC Academic

Integrity Committee.

5.

Students are required to submit written assignments. Plagiarism is a serious academic offense. To avoid the suspicion of plagiarism, the instructor may ask students to present the rough work used in preparation and submit to an oral exam.

If evidence of plagiarism is found, the student will automatically earn an F grade for the whole course and he/she will be referred to AUC Academic Integrity

Committee.

6.

Late assignments will be penalized by a subtraction of 5% of the grade for each day of the first week. No assignments will be accepted after the first week of determined date for submission and the student will earn an F grade on the assignment.

7.

10% of the grade of every written assignment will be based on “Adequacy of

English Usage.”

Textbooks:

Main Textbook

Richards, Alan & John Waterbury: A Political Economy of the Middle East . Third

Edition; Boulder Colorado: Westview Press, 2007

Other Textbooks

Henry, Clement M & Robert Springborg: Globalization and the Politics of

Development in the Middle East. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 2001

Owen, Roger: State, Power and Politics in the Modern Middle East.

Third Edition,

New York; Routledge 2004

Farah, Nadia: Egypt's Political Economy: Power Relations in Development.

Cairo:

AUC Press, 2009.

Course Outline

Week 1: Introduction

Week 2 & 3: Economic Growth, Structural Transformation and Growth. Richards &

Waterbury, Chapters 1 & 2

Week 4: Demographic Change. Richards & Waterbury, Chapter 4

Week 5: Human Capital. Richards & Waterbury, Chapter 5

Week 6: State and Economy: Richards & Waterbury, Chapters 7 & 8

Week 7: Economic Reform: Richards & Waterbury, Chapter 9

Week 8: The Case of Egypt, Farah, Chapter 1

Week 9: Bunker States, Henry & Springboard, Chapter 4

Week 10: Bully Praetorian States, Henry & Springboard, Chapter 5

Week 11: Globalizing Monarchies, Henry & Springboard, Chapter 6

Week 12: The Emergence of the Modern ME States. Owen Chapter 1

Week 13: The Growth of State Power: Single Party Regimes. Owen, Chapter 2

Week 14: The Arab Spring

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