Syllabus

Title
5358 Foundations in Socioeconomics
Instructors
Univ.Prof. Dr. Sabine Frerichs, Mag.Dr. Nina-Sophie Fritsch
Contact details
Benjamin Schemel (tutor) benjamin.schemel@wu.ac.at; Magdalena Maad (teaching assistant) magdalena.maad@wu.ac.at
Type
VUE
Weekly hours
2
Language of instruction
Englisch
Registration
02/27/23 to 03/02/23
Registration via LPIS
Notes to the course
Subject(s) Bachelor Programs
Dates
Day Date Time Room
Thursday 03/09/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 03/16/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 03/23/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 03/30/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 04/13/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 04/20/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 04/27/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 05/25/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 06/01/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 06/15/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 06/22/23 12:00 PM - 02:00 PM Online-Einheit
Tuesday 06/27/23 02:00 PM - 04:00 PM Präsenz-Prüfung
Contents

This course gives a systematic introduction into socioeconomics: a research perspective that emphasizes the economy’s embeddedness in society and, by extension, nature. After defining socioeconomics and linking it with similar approaches (political economy, economic sociology, social-ecological economics), the embeddedness paradigm is introduced as a framework for socioeconomic research and developed with regard to understandings of actors, relations, institutions, systems, and rationalities. To demonstrate the added value and distinctiveness of socioeconomic research perspectives, the course revisits central institutions of modern capitalist systems, including the market, the state, law, work and money, whose workings and meanings are explored going beyond formal definitions. Building on this, the discussion turns to complex institutional constellations: the socioeconomic regimes of affluent countries, with a focus on their internal trade-offs and externalities as well as their interactions and transformations in the context of economic integration.

This course complements other courses in the introductory and main program phases of the BBE program ('Contemporary Challenges in Business and Economics', 'Foundations in Micro- and Macroeconomics', 'History of Economics and the Economy'), by offering an integrative account of the economy and its manifold institutions, which is informed by different social scientific disciplines and approaches.

Learning outcomes

After successfully completing this course, students will be able to distinguish socioeconomic approaches from the models and applications of standard economics. They will be able to give a substantive account of the economy, which brings out the social relations, institutional frameworks, and webs of meaning, in which economic activities are enmeshed. They will be able to enumerate key institutions on which our economic system rests, describe their properties from a socioeconomic point of view, and discuss whether these institutions are themselves imbued with economic thinking. They will be able to analyze contemporary socioeconomic regimes, explain their institutional and material preconditions, outline their development in recent decades, and discuss their viability in the future. By compiling, comparing and integrating information from different sources and research perspectives, they will improve their reading and research skills. By discussing contents and structuring presentations in collaboration with peers, they will refine their ability for academic teamwork.

Attendance requirements

In the summer term 2023, this course will be held online, in a synchronous distance-learning format, with attendance rules being the same as in on-campus teaching. Please reserve the time-slots for active participation.

In this course, regular attendance is both assumed and recommended, and a condition to achieve a very good grade. However, the formal attendance requirement is reduced to 50%, and the course can also be successfully completed at this minimum level of attendance. Attendance as such will not be monitored, but in-class activities in the form of online quizzes add up to 20% of the total grade.

Teaching/learning method(s)

In the summer term 2023, this course will be held online, in a synchronous distance-learning format. Students should be prepared that online quizzes will be accessible during class time only. The final exam will be held on campus.

The course format is ‘lectures with interactive elements’, which means that in-class activities by the students, including quizzes, other exercises and discussions, play an important role next to presentations by the teacher. As contact hours formally only make for a sixth of the total workload, the course also includes a considerable share of out-of-class activities, including reading tasks for each lecture (2 to 10), group work expanding on the contents of one of the lectures (3 to 7) and preparations for the final exam. The electronic course platform will be used to distribute materials and collect the results of group work, including online presentations and peer feedback.

Assessment

Grading is based on the following components: 

  • Out-of-class preparation (reading and multimedia tasks): 20%
  • Online quizzes on basics, institutions, and constellations (distributed over the whole semester): 20%
  • Group work with peer assessment and multimedia presentation (complementing lectures 3-7): 30%
  • Final exam (written exam ON CAMPUS, 27 June, 2-4pm): 30%

The grading scheme is as follows:

≥ 90 % excellent (1)

≥ 80 % good (2)

≥ 70 % satisfactory (3)

≥ 60 % sufficient (4)

< 60 % fail (5) 

Important rules:

  • There is no general opportunity to compensate for a missed group presentation with peer assessment. It is expected that the members of a group flexibly arrange the workload, so that they can deal with minor contingencies on their own. Only in exceptional, well-justified cases, the teacher may offer a second opportunity to do, or compensate for, a group presentation with peer assessment.
  • Students who miss the final exam for reasons outside their control generally have to give notice to the lecturer by email before the exam starts. Reasons of absence have to be substantiated by suitable evidence as early as possible. Only in this case, students can take the exam on a later date to be specified by the teaching administration. This possibility is only given once. Moreover, students can retake a failed exam, if the student achieved at least 10% of the total points of the exam. Passed exams cannot be retaken.
Readings

Please log in with your WU account to use all functionalities of read!t. For off-campus access to our licensed electronic resources, remember to activate your VPN connection connection. In case you encounter any technical problems or have questions regarding read!t, please feel free to contact the library at readinglists@wu.ac.at.

Unit details
Unit Date Contents
1 9 March

Introduction I: Socioeconomics

2 16 March

Introduction II: Embeddedness

3 23 March

Institutions I: Market

4 30 March

Institutions II: State

5 13 April

Institutions III: Law

6 20 April

Institutions IV: Work

7 27 April

Institutions V: Money

8 11 May

Reserve date -- cancelled

9 25 May

Constellations I: Comparative Capitalism

10 1 June

Constellations II: Welfare State Transformation

11 15 June

Constellations III: Economic Integration

12 22 June

Recap

13 27 June

Exam ON CAMPUS (2pm-4pm)

Last edited: 2023-04-26



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