Sessional Lecturer - HIS103Y1-Y Strategy and Statecraft

University of TorontoToronto, ON
Onsite

About The Position

This course explores the history of the international state system, encouraging students to consider how this system has been constantly adapting and evolving for hundreds of years as states compete for power. It examines how wars between European states, along with diplomacy, empire-building, and the quest for wealth, led—unintentionally in many ways—to a broader, international system not confined only to European “great powers.” Students will study themes such as strategy and war, empire and imperialism, and trade, diplomacy, and state-building to understand the rise and fall of major states and empires over the centuries. Key events include the Thirty Years War in Europe; the global implications of the Seven Years War and Napoleonic Wars; and the roles of non-European regions like China, India, Japan, and the United States in the 18th and 19th centuries. The course also considers the effects of imperial competition in Africa and Asia, both for the imperial powers and the peoples and states of those continents; the diplomacy and competition that led to the First World War; and the global impact of the Second World War, with the rise of “superpowers” and the collapse of the European and Japanese empires.

Requirements

  • Master of Arts in History or related field required.
  • Mastery of the subject area as related to the course description above required.

Nice To Haves

  • PhD in History preferred.
  • Demonstrated evidence of superior undergraduate teaching preferred.
  • Previous experience teaching a similar course is highly desirable.

Responsibilities

  • Developing syllabus
  • Course preparation
  • Teaching two-hour classes weekly, in-person lectures
  • Marking
  • Supervision of TA(s) in accordance with the CUPE 3902 Unit 1 Collective Agreement
  • Conducting scheduled office hours (1 hour/week)
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