Course Info: CSI-0108

CourseCSI-0108 Genocide and Justice
Long TitleGenocide and Justice
Term2017F
Note(s) Satisfies Distribution
Textbook information
Meeting InfoFranklin Patterson Hall 101 on T,TH from 2:00-3:20
FacultyFlavio Risech-Ozeguera
Capacity20
Available3
Waitlist0
Distribution(s) Power, Community and Social Justice
Cumulative Skill(s)Writing and Research
Additional InfoStudents are expected to spend at least six to eight hours a week of preparation and work outside of class time.
Description

War crimes, torture and genocides demonstrate all too frequently that "never again" remains an elusive ideal. What role does the international system of human rights and humanitarian law play in deterring abuses of power? We examine the debates over the definition, adjudication and punishment of such acts, and evaluate how effective domestic and international legal and extra-legal strategies can be in preventing such crimes in the future, redressing those that do occur, and shaping collective memory and reconciliation after the fact, often called transitional justice. The Nuremberg trial legacy, the ICC, and varied approaches to justice after state violence in South Africa, Rwanda, the Balkans, Chile and Argentina, among others, will provide primary material for critical reflection. The course constitutes an introduction to international human rights discourses and to legal modes of analysis.