Learning Outcomes
Following the successful completion of the course, foreign students will be able to have a complete picture of the Greek political and economic situation and will be able to:
better understand the context of the country they chose to study
present in a coherent manner a subject related to contemporary greek reality to fellow students on their return home.
Course Content (Syllabus)
This is a course, composed by a series of lectures by staff members, doctoral and post-doctoral students of the School of Political Sciences. Its objective is to provide Erasmus and exchange students with an insight into – and the underlying causes of – the political, economic and social situation of Greece today. The lectures aim to introduce students to the most important aspects of Greek politics and the Hellenic society, as well as to offer them relevant information on the history and evolution of Thessaloniki, the city they currently live. This is an open-enrollment course, open to all Erasmus and exchange students in the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki; successful candidates receive three (3) ECTS credits. The detailed plan of the course is to be found in the course's site (http://www.eps.auth.gr/en/polsci/5942) and it is updated every semester.
Thematic topics
A brief history of Greece
• The creation of the modern Greek State
• The gradual expansion of the country
• Between East and West – the Greek modernity
An introduction to the contemporary political history of Greece
• From the civil war to the dictatorship
• Post-1974 history
Politics in Greece after 1974
• Party and electoral system
• The cleavages in Greek politics
• The fragmentation of the political system as a consequence of the crisis
The political culture
• Modernism versus traditionalism
• A European or a Balkan state
• The role of Church
The Greek culture
• Modern Greek literature and theater
• The arts in Greece today
Greece and the European Union
• A historic perspective
• EMU and Greece
• The immigration/refugee crisis
Greece’s foreign relations
• Greece and its neighbors (Balkans, Turkey)
• The relations with Russia
• Greece and the United States
The economy of Greece
• From an agricultural state to the services economy
• The “borrowed” prosperity of the 80s-90s
• The current economic crisis
An introduction to the history of Thessaloniki
• A multicultural city – a metropolis of the Balkans
• The role of the minorities (in particular the Jewish community)
• The changes after the W.W. II
• Re-inventing Thessaloniki in the 21st century
Keywords
Greece, today, politics, economics, society