September 18, 2005

Political Science 894
Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

Terror

Autumn 2005
Tuesdays, 3:30-6:18
Denney Hall 245

John Mueller
bbbb@osu.edu
614-247-6007

Office hours:
Tuesday, 9:15-10:30, Mershon Center 220D (8th and Neil)
Wednesday, 1:45-2:30, Derby 2112
Or by appointment at bbbb@osu.edu

The course will focus on threat perception in international relations--how nations, particularly the United States, have gone about determining which foreign problems require forceful response, how they have responded to them, and whether there might exist preferable alternative response strategies to the ones chosen. There will be some consideration of threat perception before World War II and during the Cold War, but most of the discussion will deal with contemporary threats, particularly those posed, or apparently posed, by international terrorism and "rogue states." Included will be an examination of some of the literature on the sources of terrorism, the mentality of the terrorist, fear of crime, risk perception, risk analysis, and problems of risk communication.

The course will be conducted as a seminar with much student participation. There will be some general readings as well as weekly reports on books, articles, or topics. There will be no exams, and the grade will be based on participation in the class discussion, on the weekly reports, and on a longer (15-20 page) term paper turned in at the end of the quarter.

Weekly summaries: single-spaced, two pages (not more), sent in by email attachment by noon on the Monday before each class.

September 20 Introduction
September 27 Risk perception
General reading for this class: Sunstein, "Terrorism and Probability Neglect," Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 26:3/4, Mar-May 2003

October 4 Risk communication: the media, politics, risk entrepreneurs, activists, reformers, agitation
October 11 Threat perception: Pearl Harbor, the Cold War
October 18 Weapons of mass destruction
October 25 Rogues: North Korea, Iraq, Iran
November 1 Terror
November 8 More terror
November 15 Yet more terror
November 29 Progress reports on student papers