Master
2023/2024
History of Justice
Category 'Best Course for Broadening Horizons and Diversity of Knowledge and Skills'
Category 'Best Course for New Knowledge and Skills'
Type:
Elective course (Global and Regional History)
Area of studies:
History
Delivered by:
Department of History
When:
2 year, 1, 2 module
Mode of studies:
offline
Open to:
students of one campus
Instructors:
Tatiana Y. Borisova
Master’s programme:
Global and Regional History
Language:
English
ECTS credits:
6
Contact hours:
34
Course Syllabus
Abstract
This course provides a comprehensive overview of global history of law and justice in the era of Modernity. Based on the interdisciplinary approaches from law, moral philosophy, legal and plotical history, the course examines key global transformations in a longue durée perspective, focusing on global ideas of law and justice since the French Revolution of 1789. It discusses impact of technologies and changes associated with the colonialism and post-collonialism on the way how ideas of justice were decoded in international law and in particular human rights discourse of the last two centuries.
Learning Objectives
- the Enlightenment and the modernist agenda of justice
- justice as a moral and as a legal concept
- justice as a judicial practice: the ideology of ‘rule of law’
- Hegel, Marx and Arendt: their phillosopy of human rights
- wars, colonialism and (im)possibility of International law as a means of global justice
Expected Learning Outcomes
- be able to reflex (evaluate and rework) the learned scientific and activity methods
- have gained the skills of interdisciplinary research of social, political and legal history
Course Contents
- Institutions of Justice in Political History
- Humanity and humanism as a global concern
- Globalism versus diversity: ideas and practices of justice in the 20th century
- What do we learn from historical struggle for justice?
Assessment Elements
- Home assignment
- Essay
- ExamExam is organized in a form of a take home final essay: this is essay-long discussion of randomly selected two questions from the list of exam questions. Exam asks students to debate across empirical material and different approaches covered in the course. Specifically, in answering each of these questions, students are required to use at least three individual pieces of writing from this course syllabus, not to repeat material in discussion of each of the two questions, and in answering both questions to draw on only one piece of readings that you presented on in class. Late assignments will be marked down by 10% of the mark per day and if you plagiarize, you fail.
- Class attendance and engagement
Interim Assessment
- 2023/2024 2nd module0.15 * Class attendance and engagement + 0.3 * Essay + 0.4 * Exam + 0.15 * Home assignment
Bibliography
Recommended Core Bibliography
- Morality and Responsibility of Rulers: European and Chinese Origins of a Rule of Law as Justice for World Order. (2018). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199670055.001.0001
Recommended Additional Bibliography
- Risse, T. (2014). No Demos? Identities and Public Spheres in the Euro Crisis. Journal of Common Market Studies, 52(6), 1207–1215. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcms.12189