Europe and Global Megatrends
About the course
Course content
This course deals with “megatrends” or ‘driving forces that are observable now and will most likely have significant influence on the future' in terms of the challenges and opportunities they pose for states, businesses and societies in the European context.
The course material focuses on four megatrends 1) New Forms of Social Change, 2) The Climate Crisis 3) New Forms of Technological Disruption, 4) Shifts in Global (Economic) Power. Each ‘global force for change’ brings about challenges and opportunities for societies, business and states in different sectors and industries.
Those challenges and opportunities that derive from each megatrend are discussed separately in each lecture around selected topics throughout the whole course.
The lectures and exercise classes explore the observable implications of the megatrends for the rapid shifts observed in the European economy and society. As such, they discuss each megatrend in terms of how it shapes and is shaped by firms, states and cities. To make sense of these analytical linkages, the course introduces a set of focused concepts, theoretical frameworks and cases dealing with critical issues such as labour markets, natural resources, financial markets, commodity markets, social policy, wealth accumulation, green investment, digitalization and cyber security, and global trade disputes. The lectures discuss and touch upon each megatrend at both the global and the European level for private and public sectors, as well as for societies.
The theoretical and conceptual backbone of this course is introduced in two first two lectures, dealing with competing conceptualizations of the state in the economy. These approaches – spanning theories of the regulatory state, the entrepreneurial state, the market-oriented state, and the self-regulation promoting state – provide different theoretically informed understandings about the relationship between state and market actors in dealing with emerging risks and long-term trends. Further, the readings and the lectures will enable students to synthesize the knowledge and skills acquired in the program as a whole, including in courses such as ‘Denmark in Comparative Perspective’, ‘Internationalization beyond Europe and Qualitative Methods’, or ‘Political Economy of European States.’
The course is an integrative platform for the European Business program, mobilizing the knowledge and skills develop through the program in order to understand and analyze the complexity and the challenges that the megatrends pose to European businesses, societies and states.
Nordic Nine: You will learn how to formulate and answer policy questions related to global megatrends shaping the European political economy in ways that pose trade-offs between competitiveness, security and a compassionate society. You will develop arguments, critically reflect on conventional wisdom and assess the plausibility of your suggestions about how to deal with the megatrends (NN2, NN3, NN6, NN8). You will learn how to approach key societal challenges and ethical dilemmas with conceptual depth and analytical rigor and clarity by identifying and articulating the tradeoffs entailed by alternative policy approaches to the megatrends (NN3, NN4, NN5).
See course description in course catalogue
What you will learn
- Demonstrate knowledge and understanding about the nature of megatrends, as forms of grand social challenges
- Describe key megatrends affecting Europe as opportunities and constraints for businesses, states and societies
- Use the analytical skills learned in previous courses - specifically approaches they have met in the political economy - as well as the new theories taught in this course, in order to analyze how EU institutions could address and solve the challenges posed by the megatrends
- Define and analyze a relevant policy problem pertaining to one or two of the four megatrends drawing upon a range of qualitative and quantitative sources
- Communicate and discuss the research results clearly, using appropriate terms and concepts.
Course prerequisites
This is an advanced course and students are expected to have acquired good knowledge about the European Union. The course also draws upon a range of theories and approaches introduced in previous courses of the European Business program, including Varieties of Capitalism, Growth Models, theories of European integration, and welfare regimes. Students who lack this knowledge are required to familiarize themselves with the above theories and concepts prior to the start of the course. For a basic understanding of the functioning of the European Union, we suggest reading the book: Simon Bulmer, Owen Parker, Ian Bache, Stephen George and Charlotte Burns (2020): Politics in the European Union. 5th edition. Oxford University Press.Facts
- Written assignment
Individual exam, summer
- 7 point grading scale