EPOG+ - Economic POlicies for the Global transition - Erasmus Mundus Joint Master Degree

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Minor B1 — International macroeconomics and governance

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    Conferences

    ECTSTeacherSemes­terLan­guageSyl­labus
    1) Inter­na­tion­al macro­eco­nom­ics and eco­nom­ic policies
    Macro­eco­nom­ics6.5Eck­hard HeinS1ENpdf
    Inter­na­tion­al economics6.5Jen­nifer Pedus­sel WuS1ENpdf
    2) Devel­op­ment poli­cies and glob­al governance
    Glob­al governance6.5Christi­na TeipenS1ENpdf
    Devel­op­ment economics6.5Mar­ti­na MetzgerS1ENpdf
    3) Insti­tu­tions, growth and distribution
    Growth and distribution6.5Eck­hard HeinS2ENpdf
    One of the fol­low­ing elec­tive courses:
    * Polit­i­cal econ­o­my of mod­ern capitalism6.5Trevor EvansS2ENpdf
    * Fem­i­nist and eco­log­i­cal economics6.5Han­nah Joelle Say-VolckrickS2ENpdf
    * Econometrics6.5Salmai QariS2ENpdf
    * Inter­na­tion­al polit­i­cal economy6.5Ümit AkcayS2EN
    4) Con­tem­po­rary eco­nom­ic poli­cies and globalization
    Cur­rent issues in Inter­na­tion­al economics6.5Mar­ti­na Met­zger and Christi­na TeipenS2ENpdf
    One of the fol­low­ing elec­tive courses:
    * Pol­i­tics of social cohe­sion in Europe6.5Mar­ti­na SprollS2ENpdf
    * Region­al eco­nom­ic integration6.5Jen­nifer Pedus­sel WuS2ENpdf
    * Econometrics 6.5Salmai QariS2ENpdf
    * Labour and ecology6.5Markus Wis­senS2EN
    5) Tuto­r­i­al sem­i­nar and methodology8Eck­hard HeinS1/S2ENpdf (S1)
    pdf (S2)
    6) Lan­guages (3 ECTS, option­al)
    French, Ger­man, Advanced English 
    S1/S2

    ECTSTeacherSemes­terLan­guageSyl­labus
    0) Induc­tion month (Sep­tem­ber)
    1) Macro­eco­nom­ic and finan­cial poli­cies (spe­cif­ic to Major B)
    Post-key­ne­sian economics4Marc Lavoie, Dany Lang, Michaël LainéS3EN
    Finan­cial insta­bil­i­ty and inter­na­tion­al regulation4Rudy Bouguel­li
    Gary Dym­s­ki
    S3EN
    Mod­el­ing devel­op­ment and the eco­log­i­cal transition4Antoine Godin, Guil­herme Mag­a­cho and the AFD teamS3EN
    2) Two spe­cial focus­es (SF)12
    3) Method­olog­i­cal tools for empir­i­cal work (one of the cours­es below)
    Econo­met­rics6Sahil Chopra
    Riyad Manseri
    S3EN
    Advanced econo­met­rics6Anaïs Hen­neguelleS3EN
    4) Com­mon culture
    Vari­a­tions of cap­i­tal­ism. Con­tem­po­rary devel­op­ment in crit­i­cal polit­i­cal economy1.5Steven KnaussS3EN
    Eco­log­i­cal chal­lenges from a mul­ti­dis­ci­pli­nary per­spec­tive (in asso­ci­a­tion with the Cen­tre for Earth Pol­i­cy and the Insti­tute for Envi­ron­men­tal Transition)1.5Col­lec­tive course by the “Cen­tre for Earth Pol­i­tics”
    (Resp.: Nathalie Blanc and David Flacher)
    S3EN
    Joint sem­i­nars: aca­d­e­m­ic per­spec­tive on eco­nom­ic pol­i­cy and eco­nom­ic pol­i­cy explained by eco­nom­ic actors and pol­i­cy mak­ers (30–40 seminars)8David Flach­er (coor­di­na­tion of invit­ed speakers)S3EN
    Elec­tive “soft skills” ses­sions (no ECTS)-Var­i­ous speakersS3/S4EN/FR
    5) Lan­guages (no ECTS)
    French and pos­si­bly others.
    -
    DALF / DELF

    Semes­ter 4 aims to enhance and apply learn­ing out­comes. Depend­ing on their Master’s the­sis project and career per­spec­tives, stu­dents will:

    They will also choose between:

    • Writ­ing the Master’s the­sis in a “research lab envi­ron­ment”;
    • Writ­ing the Master’s the­sis in the con­text of a “pro­fes­sion­al internship”.

    Stu­dents will be inte­grat­ed into the rel­e­vant research lab (with access to sem­i­nars and research meet­ings, data­bas­es, library and com­put­ing resources). Dur­ing Semes­ter 4, they will

    • work on their Master’s the­sis in the cho­sen insti­tu­tion (Feb­ru­ary-June);
    • take one course (see lists below) or fol­low local research sem­i­nars (equiv­a­lent to 3 ECTS). This activ­i­ty aims (i) to favour their induc­tion in the host­ing insti­tu­tion and/or (ii) to help with their Master’s the­sis (method­ol­o­gy, spe­cif­ic advanced cours­es…). Note: If a stu­dent choose an addi­tion­al course which is giv­en dur­ing Semes­ter 3, he/she does not have any­more oblig­a­tions to take an addi­tion­al course dur­ing Semes­ter 4.

    In con­struc­tion.…

    The intern­ship may be spent at one of the non-aca­d­e­m­ic asso­ci­at­ed part­ner or at any rel­e­vant insti­tu­tion pro­vid­ed that the intern­ship is direct­ly relat­ed to the top­ic of the Master’s the­sis, so that the time spent can be used as field­work in prepa­ra­tion for the dis­ser­ta­tion. It should be not­ed that the require­ments are the same for a the­sis done in a con­text of a pro­fes­sion­al intern­ship and a research lab envi­ron­ment. Note also that the stu­dents will­ing to do a pro­fes­sion­al intern­ship have to find the posi­tion. The intern­ship can last 4 to 6 months. 

    Please note that the giv­en details are sub­ject to evo­lu­tions and changes.

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