PSCI 4213 (Fall 2007)

Europe and the International System - HONORS

 

Research Paper Guidelines

 

You will be required to submit a 4,000-5,000 word research paper, worth twenty-five percent of your final grade.  You will progress in stages, due and weighted as identified in the following table:

 

Element

Grade%

Date Due

Paper Topic

2.5%

20070913

Paper Outline

2.5%

20071002

Paper Draft

5%

20071129

Final Paper

15%

20071213

 

The aim of the research paper assignments is to have you engage in extended individual research into, and to communicate in a scholarly paper, some aspect relating to Europe and the International System.  I expect this to be a substantial piece of originally-researched scholarship.  Depending upon your topic, you may well have to analyze primary documents, utilize quantitative data, etc.

 

Here are some of the nuts and bolts.  Failure to respect these requirements will result in point deductions.

 

The paper must contain the following elements, organized as you see fit.

 

The topic of your paper is up to you.  But your topic will need to be approved by me, hence the several stages of the project.

 

Paper Topic

Your paper topic reflects your initial characterization of the paper.  In 1-2 pages (not more!), you must identity and introduce the question that you will be addressing in the paper; briefly identify the relevant literatures (e.g., at a broad level of generality such as “theories of legislative organization”); identify the hypotheses that you will test; provide the broad contours of your research design; and discuss implications of your findings for our understandings of the question in play and the more general question of Europe and the International System.

 

Paper Outline

Your outline will lay out, in less than two pages, the anticipated structure of your paper.  You will have had some time since the return of your paper topic to think concretely about the structure of the paper.  Spell it out in the outline.

 

Paper Draft

Your draft will be a substantially complete initial version of your paper.  Minimally it should contain a full introduction, a full literature review, full specification and operationalization of your hypotheses, and initial discussion of data/results and implications.  The more you can get done at this stage, the better off you will be.  It may take me two weeks to return these drafts, so you should plan on continuing data collection/analysis and write-up in the interim.

 

Final Paper

The final paper will have all the qualities of a paper that is conference-ready.  It should have a title page, be paginated, be formatted with normal fonts & margins, and fully sourced and written.  Imagine that you this is a paper that you might submit for publication somewhere (not a bad idea!) – write it with the scenario that it will be read by experts in the field in mind.