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PS360 Syllabus - Political Parties and Voting Behavior
Professor Russell Renka - Fall 1999
| PS360-01 - Political Parties and Voting Behavior | Professor Russell D. Renka |
| Fall 1999 | Campus Office: Social Science (Carnahan) 211-L |
| MF 12:00 - 1:15 p.m. | Office Hours: MWF 11-11:50, TR 10-10:50 |
| Classroom: Carnahan 210 | Office Telephone: 573/651-2692 |
| Home Website: http://cstl-cla.semo.edu/renka/ | Office FAX: 573/651-2695 |
| email: rdrenka@semo.edu |
Introduction
PS360 Course Books and Readings
Course
Requirements
Course
Expectations
Journal
Resources
Reaching
me
Weekly
Topics and Readings
This is a mainline upper-division political science course on topics at the very core of the practice of democratic politics: the creation and maintenance of political parties, and the conduct of competitive elections for public office. These are not separate topics, for parties are essential in every democracy (but not in non-democracies) to running elections and governing the polity. Parties are currently regarded with great suspicion by most middle-class Americans, yet we have found no alternative to them.
First up is why political parties are essential parts of a democracy. We start with answers to that, emphasizing the peculiar 160-year American tradition of having just two national political parties with a realistic chance for each to elect a President and control the national Congress. It is fairly unusual among democracies to do this, as we shall see. We take a comparative look at party systems (contrasting American to foreign systems) and a historical one (evaluating past American party practices). We distinguish parties from other political entities such as interest groups, factions, and ad hoc political coalitions. We look at parties as organizations, which run elections, including the complicated American national primary system. We look at the byzantine financing arrangements of parties and candidates. We look directly at national and state elections, with intensive review of recent national results. We study voters and nonvoters, together with the business of polling by which we learn about it. We look at parties-in-government, as the central organizing entity of the national legislature and most state assemblies. Finally, we look closely at the current and future relevance of political parties in the American polity.
Course Books and Readings: Top
The text, available through Textbook Service, is: Beck, Paul Allen. 1997. Party Politics in America, 8th ed. New York: Addison Wesley Longman. In Readings list, this is labeled "Beck".
The reader, available at Southeast Bookstore, is: Maisel, L. Sandy, ed. 1998. The Parties Respond: Changes in American Parties and Campaigns, 3d ed. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. In Readings list, this is labeled "Maisel."
Additional readings come from reserve readings at Kent Library, website materials, journal articles, and occasional in-class handouts.
One can earn up to 500 credit points in the course. These divide among three categories:
300 points - three exams, including a final that is exam no. 3 (at 100 points each)
100 points - term paper
100 points - classroom assignments, classroom participation, roundtables
Examinations: Each examination has two 50-point sections. First is an in-class objective type of exam consisting of multiple-choice questions derived from readings and class lecture/discussion. Second is a take-home essay of some two and a half to three pages on a specified topic. The final is not comprehensive; rather, it is really exam no. 3 on the third and last section of the course. Total valuation of exams is 300 points.
Term Papers: Follow the "ten and ten"; rule. A term paper should be an honest 10-pager with ten or more sources. Shorter papers and those with few sources are typically the result of casual or last minute efforts. No one could use that approach to successfully perform in a play, run well in a distance race, maintain a great love relationship, or rise to a new and higher job in the work world. Neither can a good paper be written that way. I expect you to select a topic and clear it with me. You can start this at any time not later than times outlined below. Here are dates for steps toward completion of the term paper:
Monday, September 20 (start of Week 5): due date for topic selection (Note: This is Yom Kippur. If that intervenes, turn it in ahead of time.)
Monday, October 18 (Week 9): deadline for topical outline plus sources (with a minimum of ten separate sources).
Monday, November 22 (Week 14): deadline for submitting drafts (I will review and amend a draft if you choose to turn one in. This is not required and does not involve a grade, but is just about guaranteed to make for a better final paper!)
Monday, November 29: final paper deadline (Seem far away? It really isnt!)
In-class assignments: I do evaluate class participation, usually by posing a problem or question derived from readings and asking you to respond. I illustrate something using websites and ask for judgment about it in the next session. Theres no substitute for being on hand when this happens.
PS360 Course Expectations: Top
Attendance: You are expected to attend each class session unless theres a valid reason to miss (i.e., personal illness or ill child, death in immediate family, motorcycle wreck, full blown Midwestern blizzard, New Madrid Fault disturbance of 6.0 or greater magnitude on Richter Scale). We often use class discussion for short writing assignments and/or assignments to find relevant information from journals, the library, or websites. Some of these are impromptu, and its often difficult or impossible to compensate by asking later that I email you the assignment details. Use email or telephone voice mail to advise me if you will miss or have missed class. On being late: just come on in. I dont encourage deliberate lateness, but traffic, weather, and professors in earlier classes all can cause you to arrive at six after the hour.
On plagiarism: You should review the Student Handbook on the problem of plagiarism. Most of you are familiar with the chronic problem of someone passing off anothers work as his or her own, yet it still crops up with distressing regularity. I cannot accept any work except your own. In academic circles, proper recognition of authorship is the coin of the realm. We are all required to maintain the currency. Distinguish whats yours from what is borrowed from and attributed to someone else.
The best work on political parties and elections is in the broadly defined political science journals. These are filled with articles on topics relevant to us. Chief among them are American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, Journal of Politics, British Journal of Political Science, American Politics Quarterly, and Political Research Quarterly. Also see Parties and Elections.
Among monthly magazine journals, nuts-and-bolts practice of politics by campaign professionals is shown in Campaigns and Elections. Weekly journals of considerable value for regular Washington watchers are Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report (for stuff from the Hill, chiefly), and National Journal (especially useful for stuff downtown in the executive agencies and White House). All are on KL open shelves except CQWR, which is behind the KL counter.
I have an open door policy, and can very often be found at or near my office computer. My office is located in the new A.J.S. Carnahan Social Science Building, in Room 211-L. The Department of Political Science is also located at SS211; you can leave messages for me there if I am absent. In general, I can be reached as follows:
a) Leave a message at my Department mailbox or with the department office. b) Leave a message at the drop outside my door at 211-L. c) Place a voice mail message at 651-2692. d) Email me at rdrenka@semo.edu. e) If youre out of town and cannot send a paper or assignment by email, then FAX it to 573/651-2695. f) Consult my website at Home Page (or http://cstl-cla.semo.edu/renka) for other details about myself and my courses, including this syllabus.PS360 Weekly Topics and Readings - Fall 1999 Top
University Calendar - Fall 1999
Week 1.
August 23, 27
What are parties?
Why are
they essential in democracies?
Beck, Part One, Parties and Party Systems.....pp. 1-5
Beck Ch. 1 - In search of the parties.....pp. 7-29
Silbey, J. in Maisel Ch. 1 - Rise and Fall of American Parties,
1790-2000.....pp. 3-19
The two-party system and causes thereof;
the SMDP and PR election rules
Beck Ch. 2 -
The American two-party
system.....pp. 30-57
Week 2. August
30, September 3
The American two-party system
Beck Ch. 2 (continued)
Website sources review
A comparative perspective on parties in democracy--presentation by Prof. Alynna Lyon
Week 3. September
10
Note: Mon, September 6:
Labor Day--no
student or faculty labor! Class is held only on F, Sept. 10, this week.
Political parties as organizations
Beck Part Two - The Political Party as an
Organization, pp. 59-63
Beck Ch. 3 - The State and Local
Party Organizations.....pp. 65-84
Bibby, J. in Maisel Ch. 2 - State
Party Organizations ..., pp. 23-49
Week 4. September
13, 17
The national party organizations
Beck Ch. 4 - National Organizations ..., pp. 85-105
Herrnson, P. in Maisel Ch. 3 - National Party Organizations at the
Century's End, pp. 50-82
Week 5. September 20, 24 **Friday, September 24: Examination No. 1**
Week
6. September 27, October 1
Party activists since 1968
Beck
Ch. 5 - the Political Party of the Activists
Party activists
Stone, W. and Rapoport, R., in
Maisel Ch. 4 - ... Nomination Activists
and the Process of Party Change, pp. 83-105
Week 7. October
4, 8
The electorate of the 1990s
Beck Part Three - The Political Party
in the Electorate, pp. 127-130
Beck Ch. 6 - The Loyal
Electorates.....pp. 131-150
Electorates and party detachment
Miller, W. in Maisel Ch. 5
- Party Identification and the Electorate of the 1990s.....pp. 109-127
Week 8. October
11, 15
Party alignment and ideology
Abramowitz. A. and Saunders, K in Maisel Ch. 6 -
Party Polarization and Ideological Realignment..., pp. 128-143
How the electorate votes
Beck Ch. 7 - The Party within the Voter, pp. 151-167
Week 9. October
18, 22
Why do so many Americans stay home?
Beck Ch. 8 - The Active Electorate,
pp. 168-195
Wattenberg article in October 1998
issue of The Atlantic, entitled
Should Election Day Be a Holiday? - 98.10.
Week 10. October
25, 29
Discussion--on democratic citizenship
**Friday, Oct. 29 -
Examination no. 2**
Week 11. November
1, 5
Nominations
Beck, Part Four - The Political
Parties in the Electoral Process, pp. 193-195
Beck Ch.9 - The Naming of the Party
Candidates, pp. 196-217
Choosing the next president
Beck Ch. 10 - Choosing the Presidential
Nominees, pp. 218-245
Week 12. November 8,12
A candidate-centered system
Dodenhoff,
D. and Goldstein, K.
Resources, Racehorses, and Rules: Nominations in the 1990s.....pp. 170-201
The presidential campaign
Beck
Ch. 11 - Parties and the Campaign for Election, pp. 246-269
Candidates as stars
Crotty, W in Maisel Ch. 9 - ..Parties in the
1996 Election: The Party as Team or the Candidates as
Superstars?.....pp. 202-224
Week 13. November 15,19
Money, money, more money
Sorauf,
F. in Maisel Ch. 10
- Political Parties and the New World of Campaign Finance, pp. 225-242
Any hope for campaign finance reform?
Beck
Ch.12 - Financing the Campaigns, pp. 270-300
The parties in the media
Kerbel, M. in Maisel Ch. 13 - Parties
in the Media: Elephants, Donkeys, Boars, Pigs, and Jackals.....pp. 243-259
Week 14. November
22 Note: Friday, November 26 is part of Thanksgiving
Break; no class in held
The party in the Congress
Beck Part Five, The Party in
Government, pp. 301-304
Beck
Ch. 13 - ... Party and Partisans in the Legislature, pp. 305-330
Policy-oriented parties
Sinclair, B. in Maisel Ch. 12 -
...Policy-oriented Congressional Parties in the 1990s, pp. 263-285
Abandonment of cross-party coalitions
Brady, D. and Buckley, K. in Maisel
Ch; 13 - Coalitions and Policy in the U.S. Congress: Lessons from the
103rd and 104th Congresses.....pp. 286-315
Week 15. November
29, December 3
Party rule in the House, coalition
rule in the Senate
Brady
and Buckley in
Maisel, Ch. 13 (continued from previous week)
The executive and judicial party
Beck
Ch. 14
- The Party in the Executive and the Judiciary, pp. 331-352
Presidential appointments and
prerogatives
MacKenzie,
C. in Maisel, Ch. 14 - Partisan Presidential Leadership: The President's Appointees,
pp. 316-337
The place of parties
Beck Ch. 15 - The Quest for Party
Government, pp. 353-376
Week 16. December 6, 10
Future of parties
Beck, Part Six - Political Parties in
the American Setting, pp. 377-378
Beck Ch. 16 - The Place of Parties in
American Politics, pp. 379-397
Shribman, D. in Maisel, Ch. 15
- Era of Pretty Good Feelings: The Middle Way of Bill Clinton ..., pp. 341-355
Maisel, S. in Maisel, Ch. 16 -
Political Parties on the Eve of the Millennium, pp. 356-371
Final Examination Week: **Examination
is Monday, December 13, 12:00 noon 2:00 p.m.**