Contemporary French Politics and Institutions

Code Cours
2324-ESPOL-POLS-EN-T001
Langue d'enseignement
Français, Anglais
Ce cours apparaît dans les formation(s) suivante(s)
Responsable(s)
Alexia VENOUIL
Période

Présentation

Prérequis

None, apart from genuine enthusiasm to learn about French polity!


No linguistic requirements in French.

Objectifs

This course is divided into twelve 2-hour lectures.


The aim of this course is to introduce foreign students to French political life and political culture. By the end of the lectures, they will get familiar with the main figures of the executive (social background, ideology political platform, main reforms implemented), from De Gaulle to Macron, as well as their political entourage. We will examine more specifically the weight of the gaullist legacy. We will then study the functioning of the institutions derived from the 1958 Constitution and we will zoom into French specifities (e.g.cohabitation, dual executive). Exposure will be given to aspects relevant of political communication (presidential campaigns and debates). Relationships between the executive and parliament, ss well as the peculiarities of the French administration (i.e. hiring procedures, politicization, pantouflage) will also be studied. Lastly, we will focus on the political forces,end the evolution of the partisan system (decline of the communist party, ups and down of the PS, recomposition of the republican right and center, breakthrough of the far-right). Finally, we will raise the question of the representation of interests in today's France (i.e. economic interest groups, trade unions, social movements, feminism, environmentalism) in the last part of the course.


On many occasions, we will view videos, mainly taken from the archives of the INA, national institute of audiovisual, to illustrate for the key moments of French political life in the past 50 years.

Présentation



  1. Introductory class : Characterizing French political culture


PART 1 : HISTORICAL OVERVIEW (1958-present)



  1. France since 1958 ( De Gaulle, Pompidou)

  2. France since 1958 (Giscard d'Estaing, Mitterrand)

  3. France since 1958 (Chirac, Sarkozy)

  4. France since 1958 (Hollande, Macron)


PART 2 : THE FUNCTIONING OF INSTITUTIONS



  1. The strengthening of executive government

  2. Checks and balances on the executive

  3. French state and bureaucratic power in France


PART 3 : POLITICAL FORCES IN TODAY'S FRANCE



  1. The Making of the French Party System

  2. Contemporary French Parties

  3. The Representation of interests


Modalités

Modalités d'enseignement

This course will be assessed by a take-home exam based on a list ot topics and to be handed in at the end of the term. Students will be required to conduct their own bibliographical research on the topic they have chosen. Further details about format and expectations will be communicated in class.

Students will be encouraged to actively participate in order to deconstruct their possible preconceptions of French politics and the claim of a so-called "French exceptionalism". Comparison and share of knowledge regarding the polity they originate from will be more than welcome.

Évaluation
Contrôle continu : coeff. 1

Ressources

Bibliographie

Bréchon, P., <em>Les partis politiques</em>, Montchrestien, 1999.|| Cole, A., <em>French politics and society</em>, Routeledge, 2017.|| Crépon, S., Dézé, A., Mayer, N., <em>Les faux-semblants du Front national</em>, Presses de Sciences po, 2015.|| Dolez, B., Douillet A.-C., Fretel, J., Lefebvre, R. (dir.),<em> L'entreprise Macron à l'épreuve du pouvoir,</em> PG, UGA éditions, 2022.|| Elgie, R., Grossman, E., Mazur, A., <em>The Oxford Handbook of French Politics</em>, Oxford university press, 2016.|| Haegel, F., <em>Les droites en fusion. Transformation de l'UMP</em>, Presses de Sciences po, 2013.|| Lefebvre, R., "Dépassement ou effacement du parti socialiste (2012-2017)?", <em>Mouvements</em>, n° 89, 11-21, 2017 [online]|| Tiberj, V., "Running to stand still, le clivage gauche/droite en 2017", <em>Revue française de science politique</em>, vol. 67, 1089-1112, 2017 [online]||