International Business Fellows Program
Offered once a year, the International Business Fellows
Program consists of a multi-disciplinary graduate level seminar, IB 395, that seeks to
further students’ understanding of the major cultures, political systems and
economic structures that exist throughout the world and of the societal forces,
demographic developments and environmental changes
bringing change to those structures and systems. It also attempts to
assess how their interaction may shape
the world in which our individual, corporate and national aspirations must be
pursued. Finally, the seminar approaches such issues in an inter-disciplinary
context. The seminar is taught by lecturer and international lawyer, D.
Michael Dodd.
The seminar will include lectures, readings and
discussions on:
- international economics, finance and business
- international political and military affairs
- cultural, historical, and religious factors making
up and dividing peoples, countries and civilizations around the world
- demographic developments, environmental changes,
potential pandemics, resource-allocation concerns, and other risks and
challenges putting pressure on world systems and structures at this point of
the 21st century
For the Spring 2007 semester, the seminar will pursue
such questions as:
- Are we entering into a new era where there will be
a "clash of civilizations," the erection of regional economic and trade
barriers, and/or the pursuit of a new political and military balance of
power among former rivals/allies? If so, will this jeopardize or end
the recent expansion of global activity between and among countries? Will
recent episodes of terrorism, war, and threatened fractures in old alliances
be a catalyst for a renewed commitment to international cooperation among
nations politically, economically, and militarily?
- What are the political and economic implications
of demographic trends in Africa, China, Europe, Japan, the Middle East, and
the United States; global warming; trans-national risks on traditional
notions of national sovereignty and independence; a shifting center of
influence from the Atlantic to the Pacific?
- What are the business, individual and societal
implications of globalization? Will it end the middle class dreams of the
American worker? Can Europe's social safety net survive? Will economic
development end China's one-party rule? Will globalization upend India's
caste system?
- What will be the role of international
organizations? Will the United Nations find new life or will it follow the
path of the League of Nations? What will be the future of the EU? How ill
the WTO adapt? Will the World Bank and the IMF continue as they are or will
they find new life or be replaced? Will China and other Asian countries
develop new regional or international institutions which they control? If
so, will they complement or conflict with or replace the western-developed
international institutional system?
- What will the world look like in 2050?
Michael Howard, in his book The Lessons of History, wrote that
the real lessons of history are not so much about “pride and folly,” as
about
“people, often of masterful intelligence, trained usually in law or
economics or perhaps political science, who have led their governments into
disastrous miscalculations because they have no awareness whatever of the
historical background, the cultural universe of the foreign societies with
which they have to deal. It is an awareness for which no amount of strategic
or economic analysis, no techniques of crisis management or conflict
resolution...can provide a substitute.”
Such lessons may be applied to the business world and
other walks of life.
The seminar will endeavor to bring such historical and cultural factors into
our discussions.
For detailed information about the seminar, see
the Spring 2007 Seminar Syllabus.
Graduate students confront
global issues in the Spring 2007 International Business Fellows Seminar: