Postgraduate Course: Political Theory of International Human Rights (PGSP11161)
Course Outline
| School | School of Social and Political Science | 
College | College of Humanities and Social Science | 
 
| Course type | Standard | 
Availability | Available to all students | 
 
| Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 11 (Postgraduate) | 
Credits | 20 | 
 
| Home subject area | Postgrad (School of Social and Political Studies) | 
Other subject area | None | 
   
| Course website | 
None | 
Taught in Gaelic? | No | 
 
| Course description | This is a course for political theory students and addresses contemporary issues and debates relating to human rights.  It includes debates about: philosophical questions concerning what human rights are; the normative difference between social/economic and civil/political rights, relating these to ideas of 'positive' vs 'negative' rights; whether and how severe poverty is a matter of human rights violation; whether human rights support or conflict with goals of democracy, domestically and internationally; whether/when human rights concerns can legitimate intervention, even military, in other states' affairs;  whether human rights principles are consistent with, or a challenge to, the principle of state sovereignty; whether human rights can or should be used to the ends of environmental protection; whether human rights are culturally relative or genuinely universal. | 
 
 
Information for Visiting Students 
| Pre-requisites | None | 
 
| Displayed in Visiting Students Prospectus? | Yes | 
 
 
Course Delivery Information
| Not being delivered |   
Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes 
Students will acquire skills, knowledge and understanding to form reasoned views on the debates indicated in the course description.  In particular, they will learn to: 
 
- Understand the competing philosophical arguments about the nature and conditions of existence of human rights 
- Assess the relationship between legal and moral framings of human rights 
- Reflect critically on different categories of human rights (social, economic, civil, political) 
- Assess the arguments for and against cultural relativist critiques of human rights as universal 
- Asses the extent to which human rights support or compete with democratic values 
- Assess the role of human rights in environmental protection 
- Assess the role of human rights in relation to humanitarian intervention 
- Assess the competing claims of human rights and the principle of state sovereignty. | 
 
 
Assessment Information 
| one essay of 4000 words |  
 
Special Arrangements 
| None |   
 
Additional Information 
| Academic description | 
Not entered | 
 
| Syllabus | 
Not entered | 
 
| Transferable skills | 
Not entered | 
 
| Reading list | 
Beetham, D (ed) (1995) Politics and Human Rights (Political Studies special 	issue) Blackwell 
Boyle, A and Anderson, M (1996) Human Rights Approaches to Environmental 	Protection, Clarendon Press, Oxford. 
Caney, S & Jones, P (eds) (2001) Human Rights and Global Diversity, F. Cass. 
Davidson, S (1993) Human Rights, Open University Press. 
Donnelly, J (1998) International Human Rights, 2nd edn., Westview, Boulder 	Colorado. 
Donnelly, J (1989) Universal Human Rights in Theory and Practice. Cornell UP. 
Dunne, T & Wheeler, N (eds) (1999) Human Rights in Global Politics Cambridge UP 
Evans, T (ed) (1998) Human Rights Fifty Years On: a reappraisal, Manchester UP. 
Hayden, P (2001) The Philosophy of Human Rights, Paragon House. 
Hayward, T (2005) Constitutional Environmental Rights, Oxford University Press. 
Jones, P (1994) Rights, Macmillan. 
Martin, R (1993) A System of Rights, Clarendon Press, Oxford [online OSO] 
Morsink, J (1999) The Universal Declaration of Human Rights: origins, drafting 	and intent, University of Pennsylvania Press. 
Nickel, J (1987) Making Sense of Human Rights, Univ of California Press. Scanned  
text available online from http://homepages.law.asu.edu/~jnickel/ 
Orend, B (2002) Human Rights: Concept and Context, Broadview Press. 
Pogge, T (2007) World Poverty and Human Rights, 2nd edn, Polity Press. 
Raphael, DD (ed) (1967) Political Theory and the Rights of Man, Indiana UP.  
Rawls, J (1999) The Law of Peoples, Harvard UP. 
Renteln, A (1990) International Human Rights: universalism versus relativism. 	Sage 
Shue, H (1980) Basic rights : subsistence, affluence, and U.S. foreign policy. 	Princeton University Press.  (Also a 2nd edition, 1996) 
Vincent, R (1986) Human Rights and International Relations. Cambridge UP | 
 
| Study Abroad | 
Not entered | 
 
| Study Pattern | 
Not entered | 
 
| Keywords | Not entered | 
 
 
Contacts 
| Course organiser | Dr Tim Hayward 
Tel: (0131 6)50 4238 
Email:  | 
Course secretary | Mrs Gillian Macdonald 
Tel: (0131 6)51 3244 
Email:  | 
   
 
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