Section Information
Section Description Provided by Instructor
This seminar explores a central concern in the history of international law, namely the management of racial and religious difference, both often coded in terms of "civilization." International law has generally oscillated between two approaches: attempting to manage such differences as tolerable variations on universal themes on the one hand and using such differences to exclude categories of people wholesale from the ambit of law and its protections on the other. We will explore both dynamics by reading some classic debates as well as recent scholarship at the intersection of law and transnational history. In so doing, we will see how dilemmas over the management of difference have played an important role in shaping international law; how groups deemed marginal, backwards, or even inhuman have sought to engage and define international law and the world system; and how such hierarchies and exclusions were transformed after decolonization ushered in a world order based on formally equal sovereign nation-states. This seminar will equip students with conceptual tools for analyzing and connecting seemingly disparate contemporary problems in international, transnational, and comparative law, as well as to train them in independent research methods.
Semester
Spring 2013
Section
001
Schedule
M 4:20p - 6:10p
Location
WH 1001
Points
2.0
Method of Evaluation
Paper
J.D. Writing Credit
Minor (upon consultation), Major (only upon consultation)
Course Limitations
Pre-requisite Courses
None
Co-requisite Courses
None
Recommended Courses
Background in Public international law, human rights, law of war, legal history, comparative law would be helpful but is not required:
Other Limitations
None
Learning Outcome Goals
No learning outcome goals have been provided.
