SUMMER 2003 COURSE OFFERING

CRN

73001

Distribution

C/D

Course No.

SST 250

Title

Theory and Practice of Human Rights

Professor

Amy Ansell / Thomas Keenan

The course will be held in Durban, South Africa at the University of Natal and the University of Durban-Westville. The theme of this annual intensive interdisciplinary course in the theory and practice of human rights for 2003 is Human Rights and Civil Society: Conflict and Global Transformation. The course seeks to promote a critical understanding of human rights as part of a broad intellectual and social movement, not simply a code or set of laws but a discourse in transformation and often in contest, extending into the humanities, social sciences, arts, and sciences. The course begins with a common core of questions about human rights, at once historical and comparative, with special attention to the interaction of global forces and local dynamics, and centered on relations of power, productions of meaning, and formations of identity. Topics include: human rights documents and institutions, cultural dynamics, strategies of inclusion and exclusion, the role of the state, humanitarianism and intervention, and social and economic rights in an age of globalization. Students then select two of four elective concentrations, which aim to focus and deepen their engagement with human rights practice and theory, choosing from: economics and development, democracy and governance, culture and media, identity and difference. In addition to lectures and seminar discussions, students work closely with local institutions, including international, national media, and non-governmental organizations, in a closely -supervised research practicum. Students spend 18 hours each week in classroom discussions, lectures, and fieldwork, over the course of four weeks, with total hours equivalent to a semester-long course (4 credits). Students and faculty are drawn from a consortium of 14 Southern African universities and U.S. liberal arts colleges. Limited to 5 Bard students by prior application. Contact Prof. Thomas Keenan or Prof. Amy Ansell.