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CREATIVE INQUIRY PROJECTS
***The following
Creative Inquiry Projects are currently seeking new participants for
the Fall 2008 semester. If you are interested in participating
in one of these projects, please email the Faculty Mentor(s).
Overview
of Creative Inquiry at Clemson
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Ongoing
Creative Inquiry Projects in Political Science |
Faculty Mentor(s) |
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Project
Title: Comparative
Counter-Terrorism:
Perspectives, Prescriptions, and Prospects for the Global War
against Terror
Project
Description:
How do states in the international
system view the threat of terrorism by transnational
non-state actors and what legal/political initiatives do
they create to combat it? How much diversity is there across
initiatives in regions as varied as the United States, the
European Union, the Middle East, and Eurasia? In this ‘new
war’ against a ‘unique enemy,’ how ‘new and unique’ are
states’ proposals for defeating this threat? What
opportunities and obstacles exist for bilateral and
multilateral cooperation based on this danger? Can
counter-terrorism be a foundation for establishing broader
ties between states, even those which typically have
strained relations (i.e. the US and China, the US and
Russia)? The answers to these questions provide the backbone
of an ambitious project that will fill a major gap in the
field of conflict resolution.
Course Number:
POSC 305-005 | Matt Crosston
mcrosst@clemson.edu
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Project
Title:
Congressional Voting Project: How Members of the House and
Senate Vote, and Why Project
Description:
This project examines the factors that determine how members of
Congress vote. We will investigate how well various groups
(racial/ethnic, religious, and age groups) are represented
through congressional voting. We will also consider the
interaction between Congress and other actors (namely the
president and courts).
Meeting times:
There is no regular meeting time for the course. Instead, each
student will meet occasionally with the instructor and we will
meet as a group periodically.
Other information:
Up to nine (9) students will be admitted to this project, for
anywhere from 1 to 3 credit hours. Contact the instructor directly for
more details about this course including enrollment.
Course Number:
POSC 305-006 |
Jeff Fine
jfine@clemson.edu
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Project
Title: The Changing Dynamics of
China’s Development and the U.S.-China Relations
Project Description:
“While the attention of the U.S. has been
fixed on Iraq and the war on terrorism, a new superpower has
been rising in the East. Fueled by its astonishing economic
success, China is flexing its muscles from North Korea and
Africa. Can we learn to live with the new China – or are China
and the U.S. destined to be bitter rivals?” These are among the
fundamental questions the U.S. and the world have to face this
century.
The objective of this project is to engage the students in
on-going debates over these and other China issues that affect
or will soon affect all of us in one way or another. The issues
that students can examine include the politics, the economy, the
culture, the business and markets in China and their
relationship with the United States.
In this project, the students will track current news events and
news analyses, which will prepare them for a meeting with either
Chinese diplomats, business leaders, or scholars and students,
or American business leaders doing business with China.
For one hour of credit (POSC 305), the students will work on their own or in teams, with
instructions from the professor. Only a few group meetings will
be scheduled. The students have an option to explore different
issues in the following semester.
As TIME magazine put it recently, “There is no bigger story
than… China’s extraordinary rise [and] how America and China
will interact in the 21st century.” In this project, the
students will investigate this biggest story and how it will
affect all of us.
Course Number:
POSC 305-003 |
Xiaobo Hu
xhu@clemson.edu |
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Project
Title: Comparative
Country Profiles
Project
Description: The
course objective is to encourage undergraduate research in
international relations by having several multidisciplinary
student teams focus on single countries followed by
comparison of findings of each team. For example, an
undergraduate research group of no more than ten students
with about three students per country team would allow
profiles of three different countries. Alternatively,
students may choose to be a one-person team tracking a
country. Countries selected will be from different regions
at different stages of development, say, France, India and
Mexico.
In the first semester, undergraduate
researchers will track current news and short news articles
about their selected country, and on this basis will identify
key economic, political and military trends. In optional
successive semesters, undergraduates will build on research by
making sustained country comparisons and formulating policy
recommendations.
Meeting times:
There is no regular meeting time for the course, but each
student will meet occasionally with the instructor and several
group meetings will be scheduled.
More details including enrollment:
Up to ten (10) students will be admitted to Political Science
305, “Selected Topics.” Contact the instructor directly for
more details about this course including enrollment
Course Number:
POSC 305-001 |
Michael
Morris
morrism@clemson.edu
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Project
Title:
Preaching from the Bully Pulpit: Religion and the Public
Presidency Project
Description: Scholars
assume that religious values, attitudes, and discourses have
shaped American politics since the founding era despite official
adherence to the principle of church-state separation. Many
presidents have used religious symbolism and rhetoric as a
political strategy for electoral gain, to influence public
policy, and to justify military action. Presidents are also
widely viewed as the “high priests” of America’s “civil
religion,” because they perpetuate the widely shared American
perception that God has particularly blessed the United States (Bellah
1967). Nevertheless, our knowledge about the nature and role of
religious rhetoric that emanates from the White House is
extremely limited at this time.
Our project seeks to
bridge the religion and politics, sociology of religion,
communication, and presidency literatures to analyze ways in
which presidents strategically employ religious rhetoric. We
are principally concerned
with the question of whether and how the use of religious
rhetoric by modern presidents has varied over time.
Specifically, we focus on the nature and frequency of religious
rhetoric that comprises the public speeches and statements made
by modern presidents from Harry S Truman through the George W.
Bush administration.
We are
conducting this research for a book project that requires a
significant amount of data collection and analysis. We will
offer our research team the opportunity to content-analyze the
texts of all presidential speeches and statements published in
Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States for
each of the modern presidents.
Specifically, our team will identify every statement
that contains religious rhetoric
in the
Public Papers
for each presidential administration.
We will record all of the specific religious keywords used in a
particular statement, including Bible (or other holy scripture),
bless/blessings, Christians, church, clergy (generic or
specific), divine, faith, God (and any other references to an
almighty being), Heaven, pray/prayer, preach, Providence,
religion/religious, and worship. An additional dimension of our
analysis examines whether a particular president used religious
rhetoric in the context of a substantive, policy-relevant
statement or in the context of political symbolism.
We
will provide our research team with a set of formal coding rules
to identify whether a sentence uses religious rhetoric
substantively or symbolically.
Course Number:
POSC 305-002 |
Laura Olson
laurao@clemson.edu
Adam Warber
awarber@clemson.edu
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Project
Title: Pee Dee Competitive
Analysis Project Description: The
purpose of this research endeavor is to identify and analyze the
assets and liabilities for creative community and economic
development policies for ensuring a sustainable future in the
nine-county area known as the Pee Dee region of South Carolina.
Students will explore the political, economic, social, and
demographic forces shaping municipal, county, and regional
growth patterns in the Pee Dee. The region is anchored by
Myrtle Beach/Grand Strand and the Florence area, along with
small towns and rural communities elsewhere in the area.
Students will conduct research and engage in analyses, including
policy recommendations, focused on issues related to community
and economic development such as the environment, rural
development, urbanization, patterns of growth and decline,
tourism, education, health care, land use and sustainable
growth, etc. Special emphasis will be devoted to exploring the
nexus between local/county plans and policies and areawide
planning and development.
Course Number:
POSC 305-007 |
Bruce Ransom
bii@clemson.edu
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Project
Title: Management and Analysis
of Local Governments Project
Project Description: The
Southeast Local Government Laboratory is a recently developed
and funded project headed by the Master of Public Administration
program in the Department of Political Science. This newly
created laboratory will identify projects in local governments
throughout the southeast for study and analysis by laboratory
staff and faculty. Under the direction of a dedicated graduate
assistant the undergraduate participants will become fully
involved in the start-up, identification and analysis of
projects to be undertaken by the laboratory. In the Fall of
2007 five students will help develop the governance structure of
the laboratory (as a nonprofit entity), begin the process of
outreach to and identification of local government projects for
the laboratory to pursue and help develop the infrastructure and
support capacity of the laboratory to undertake the ongoing work
of the lab.
Students
will function as staff analysts for the laboratory under the
direction of the assigned graduate assistant (MPA) and under the
overall supervision of the Director of the Master of Public
Administration program.
Meeting
Times: Meeting times for the
course/project will be determined by the undergraduate
participants and the supervising graduate assistant. Several
group meetings will be scheduled. Each student will meet
periodically with the faculty instructor.
Student
Outcomes and Evaluation:
Student outcomes will be determined by the nature of the
assignments given to the students during the semester. Each
student will be guided by an individual performance plan
developed by the faculty instructor/Laboratory director and the
supervising graduate assistant. As part of this individualized
plan, students will develop specific outcomes with both
professional and academic components. Grading will be based
upon fulfillment of performance plans each semester.
More Details
on Enrollment: Up to five (5)
students will be admitted to Political Science 305-5. Contact
the instructor directly for more details about this course
including enrollment.
Course Number:
POSC 305-008 |
Robert Smith
rws@clemson.edu
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Project
Title:
Domestic Violence &
Civil Wars in IR Project
Description: Civil
wars are widespread incidences of domestic political conflicts
that are characterized by high levels of violence and human
suffering. They not only produce economic and political
devastation and pose challenges to neighboring states, regional
security, and stability, but also have broader implications for
political order and human rights, as we have witnessed in the
cases of Lebanon, Cyprus, Bosnia, Kosovo, Sudan and Rwanda.
Civil wars with massive human rights violations (e.g.
Yugoslavia), and the protracted civil wars with substantial
refugee flows (e.g. Congo, Sudan) have attracted a great deal of
media attention in recent years. As a result, people all around
the world have become more aware of the destructive nature of
civil wars. Despite the fact that civil wars have been the most
common and deadly form of military conflict since the end of
Second World War, they have been understudied and, in turn, we
are far from a thorough understanding of the main determinants
of civil wars.
In all states, there
are some citizens who are dissatisfied or frustrated with the
existing political, economic or social conditions. However, only
in some societies does this latent unrest cross a certain
threshold and transform itself into a massive civil war. Why do
some states experience political violence in the form of civil
wars while others do not? What factors lead to domestic civil
violence, more specifically, to civil wars? Which countries are
more prone to violent domestic conflict? What is the direct
impact of grievances on the emergence of civil wars? Do they
increase the risk of civil war? These questions are the backbone
of the investigation. In short, the goal is to uncover the
universal factors that best account for political violence.
We
will start by reading the published academic articles and books
on domestic violence both in the field of comparative politics
and international relations. After learning the basics, students
are expected to do in depth research about individual countries,
prepare reports, collect data and write a paper at the end of
the data collection. The overall purpose of this course is to
provide students the opportunity to experience all aspects of
the academic research and expand their understanding of domestic
violence.
Course Number:
POSC 305-004
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Zeynep Taydas
ztaydas@clemson.edu |
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