Human Rights (2013 entry)

MA, 1 year full time/2 years part time

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Subject overview

Human rights at Sussex goes beyond a narrow legalistic approach and explores how human rights are socially embedded in wider processes of poverty, violence, identity, globalisation and the emergence of global forms of governance. Our Human Rights degrees reflect this critical perspective.

Sussex has a worldwide reputation for excellence in the field of human rights. Faculty teaching on our degrees come from a range of disciplines, each of which is excellent in its own right.

Based in the School of Global Studies, the distinctively interdisciplinary MA in Human Rights brings together expertise from anthropology, law, international relations and politics.

Our degrees are linked to the interdisciplinary Justice and Violence Research Centre, which hosts visiting scholars and holds regular seminars and events.

Faculty have undertaken consultancy and commissioned work in a range of human rights fields and regional contexts. Many of our graduates find employment in rights work, within which we have very strong international networks.

Specialist facilities

The University offers extensive computing facilities with a full range of data-processing and communications software. Office space is usually allocated to students taking research degrees. You will have full access to the University’s main Library and its online collection, and to the British Library of Development Studies, at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS), which is located on the Sussex campus.

Programme outline

This interdisciplinary degree provides you with an understanding of recent debates in the field of human rights from a range of disciplinary perspectives, including anthropology, law, international relations and politics.

You examine how human rights are embedded in wider social processes of state regulation, conflict and mass displacement, transnational social movements, and international agencies. You develop your ability to critically assess human rights instruments (international and regional), discourses and institutions, and the
relationship between international human rights law, state law and local interpretations of human rights. By the end of the degree, you should be able to research human rights issues in a way that contextualises state and transnational legal procedures in wider social processes such as gender, class, ethnicity and globalisation.

Sussex has a worldwide reputation for research in the field of human rights, and a distinctive interdisciplinary approach that enables fresh thinking that contributes practical insights of real value to policy-makers.

Work placements

The School of Global Studies offers you support in finding a work placement, allowing you to gain experience in an area of work relating to your subject of study and to acquire practical skills in preparation for a professional career. Work placements run over a 12-week period in the summer term and vacation. If you take a work placement, you will have the opportunity to write a dissertation based on your experience.

We continue to develop and update our modules for 2013 entry to ensure you have the best student experience. In addition to the course structure below, you may find it helpful to refer to the 2012 modules tab.

Autumn term: Human Rights and the Politics of Culture • Liberalism, Modernity and Globalisation. 

Spring term: you adapt the degree to your interests by taking two modules from Activism for Development and Social Justice • Anthropology of Childhood • Critical Debates in Environment and Development • Cultural Understandings of Health and Healing • Embodiment and Institutionalisation of Violence, Conflict and Conciliation • Fair Trade, Ethical Business and New Moral Economies • Globalisation and Rural Change • Human Rights in International Relations • Idea of Race • Knowledge, Power and Resistance • Migration, Inequality and Social Change • Migration under the European Convention on Human Rights • Poverty, Marginality and Everyday Lives • Reconciliation and Reconstruction • Refugees and Development • Society and Economy in South Asia • The Architecture of Aid • The Politics of Citizenship and Immigration • Transnational Migration and Diaspora • Women and Human Rights. Options may vary. 

You also take a Research Methods and Professional Skills module, which provides training to prepare you for further research and a professional career. This module is delivered as a series of workshops including one that prepares you for your dissertation. 

We will help you find a 12-week work-study placement for the summer term and vacation. 

Summer term: you undertake supervised work on your dissertation. 

Assessment 

Human Rights and the Politics of Culture is assessed by a three-hour unseen exam. Liberalism, Modernity and Globalisation is assessed by a 5,000-word term paper. Assessment of spring options varies. You also write a 10,000-word dissertation. 

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Activism for Development and Social Justice

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module addresses the ways in which activists and activism have sought to engage in development and social justice. You will explore and evaluate different approaches to activism, grounding this in theories of social mobilization and citizenship, and will work through a series of practical examples to explore how activism has been used to address issues of development and social justice. In doing so you'll develop your knowledge of theories of social change and approaches to development and social justice, exploring how different kinds of activisms seek to bring about change.

The module explores the contributions that imaginative, insurgent, disruptive and chaotic forms of social action have to make to development, and covers a range of forms of collective action from the use of petitions and lobbying of representatives, to the use of the arts in "interrupting" everyday life to bring some of its elements into question, to mobilisation for protests and peaceful demonstrations, to non-violent direct action and info-activism.

Anthropology of Reconciliation and Reconstruction

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

In their ethnographies, anthropologies have studied 'intra-cultural' conflict resolution practices. As activists, they have contributed to the emergence of generic approaches to conflict resolution. They have, however, raised important questions regarding the acontextuality of generic practices and whether they can capture the complexity of local circumstances. The first part of the module will critically assess the relationship between local ('intra-cultural') and generic approaches to conflict resolution (as practiced by INGOs and other third-parties), asking whether the latter can be tempered with a sense of context-specificity. The module will also consider the sociology of mediation and peace negotiations and the power relations and dynamics involved.

The second part of the module will be concerned with the desire to 'reconstruct' society in the aftermath of violent conflict. 'truth acknowledging' exercises (such as Truth Commissions), issues of memory and ways in which a psychologised 'nation' can be 'healed' will be critically assessed. This will be contrasted with arguments in favour of 'retributive' exercises (such as international criminal tribunals and domestic trials).

We will study the following: introduction to module; conflict resolution in context; conflict resolution or conflict transformation? 'Culture' and mediation/negotiation; INGOs and conflict resolution; peace processes; memory and narrative; 'truth commissions'; international criminal tribunals; one-to-one term paper tutorials.

Anthropology of Childhood

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

Anthropologists have taken children's lives into account from the early stages of the discipline, as visible in the works of, for example, Mead and Malinowski. These accounts, however, were often based on adult's views on children. More recently, anthropological interest has shifted from these socially constructed and symbolic understandings of childhood to an engagement with children's own perspectives and practices (James and Prout 1990). These approaches assume the centrality of children as actors, rather than passive beings who are being acted on; children are seen as complete humans, rather than as deficient adults-to-be. This perspective has enabled a wealth of cross-cultural, ethnographic studies to emerge, describing ideas and practices surrounding children and childhood. These include key events of the lifecourse, such as birth and death, but also a focus on how children are shaped by, and actively shape, their social environments, such as families and peers, educational institutions and religious communities.

Key themes address children in the context of play and labour, childrens' bodies, spaces and mobilities, as well as their experiences of, and responses to violence. This module aims to give an overview of anthropological engagements with childhood, both historically and including its more recent methodological innovations. Broader theoretical discussions are complemented by in-depth ethnographic material from cultures and societies across the globe.

Overview:

Week 1 'Childhood' as a cross-cultural concept
Week 2 Anthropological Perspectives on Children
Week 3 Rites of Passage
Week 4 Education and Morality
Week 5 Childrens' Bodies and Spaces
Week 7 Labour and Play
Week 6 Childrens' Mobilities
Week 9 Children and Violence
Week 10 Individual Term Paper Tutorials.

Critical Debates in Environment and Development

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

Medical Anthropology: Cultural Understandings of Health and Healing

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

Medical knowledge, related practices and health-seeking are shaped by the social, political and cultural contexts in which they occur. This module draws upon theories, concepts, and approaches in medical anthropology to interrogate the concept of 'health' in its diverse formulations. The module considers how people integrate different types of medicine in their everyday lives. It examines 'health-seeking' in different medical traditions. 'The body' is used as an alternative framework for understanding medical pluralism, and the connections between experience, efficacy, and knowledge.

Embodiment and institutionalisation of violence, conflict & conciliation

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

In this module we explore links between violence and conflict in society and its inscription into the body, memory, and habit. We consider the establishment of such connections within social institutional orders, and within disorder, questioning the salience of such distinctions. Therefore, module readings will, in Nancy Scheper-Hughes' words, 'continually juxtapose the routine, the ordinary the symbolic and normative violence of everyday life ("terror as usual") against sudden eruptions of unexpected, extraordinary or "gratuitous" violence (as in genocide, state terror, dirty wars and civil wars).' We explore the dialectic between body and society, as mediated through violence but also pleasure: efforts by society and state to appropriate bodies such as through initiation ritual, military drilling, and everyday rituals of social ordering, the responses of embodied subjects ranging from 'thralldom' and accommodation to resistance, and issues they raise around gender, personhood, and agency. We examine the inscription of nation, race, ethnicity, class and gender into bodies and embodied practices. Finally, we reflect on a range of discussions and debates concerning the relations between body, language, violence, pain, and fear.

Fair Trade, Ethical Business & New Moral Economies

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

Where and under what conditions are our T-shirts produced? How does Fair Trade impact on the livelihoods of small farmers in the Global South? Is Corporate Social Responsibility just a marketing ploy? Has ethics become only a matter of personal consumption behaviour?

This module familiarises you with discourses and practices around ethics and engagement in the global economy. It covers some of the ways in which ethics in markets, trade and global production networks are phrased and expressed in the contemporary world, and explores what sorts of mobilisations have emerged in the light of new ethical concerns. You will explore the ways in which ethical issues within the sphere of the economy have long been articulated in terms of moral economy, philanthropic giving, and relationships of patronage and dependency.  The module goes on to discusses the contemporary shift towards global trade and production networks, and the ways in which this shift has produced new ethical concerns around economic behaviour.

These concerns are increasingly (and differentially) expressed in terms of CSR, fair trade and ethical consumption. They also give rise to a series of engagements in terms of CSR interventions, ethical trade initiatives, civil society activism and critical consumption practices. You will assesses each of these initiatives from both a theoretical and an ethnographic perspective. You will also critically consider the implications of such engagements in terms of power, equality and gender, and the ways in which they emerge from and reproduce complex global interdependencies.

Globalisation and Rural Change

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

Human Rights and Migration

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

The treatment of migrants is one of the most challenging issues which human rights, as a political philosophy of practical import, faces today. In the last two decades, immigration has risen to the top of the political agenda of many governments and international organizations around the world. It recurrently leads to reflexes of closure which are at odds with the ethical message embodied in the concept of human rights, generating questionable, if not straightforwardly abhorrent, practices which too often become entrenched and regarded as 'natural'.

The European Court of Human Rights is widely celebrated, and indeed praises itself, for being 'the conscience of Europe'. When the European Court decides migrant cases, does it manage to remain true to the values at the core of its institution? What about the other human rights institutions such as the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, the UN Human Rights Committee or the Committee for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination? This module addresses these questions from a perspective which combines legal analysis, historical and sociological discussion, as well as ethical reflection. Every year, some topics (eg family reunification, deportation after criminal conviction, social security protection, immigration detention) are selected for in-depth analysis.

Human Rights and the Politics of Culture

30 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1

Human Rights in International Relations

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

On this module you will examine the process of internationalisation of human rights and the main factors that underpin that process, including the nature of the international order, the relationship between human rights and sovereignty of states, and the problematic of intervention and redistribution. You will contrast the use of human rights as instruments of foreign policy with the involvement of international non-governmental organisations. You will examine both the global and the regional legal, and contrast questions of cultural hegemony with those that claim legitimate cultural autonomy.

International Crimes

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module will focus on the four core crimes in international law, including genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression. In each case we will highlight their development, application in international and domestic courts and matters of controversy in relation thereto, before examining other so-called quasi-international crimes including torture, hijacking, and terrorism.

Liberalism, Modernity and Globalisation

30 credits
Autumn teaching, year 1

Poverty, Marginality and Everyday Lives

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module examines the processes of impoverishment and marginalisation of children, youth and adults in development contexts. A principle focus in on what anthropology can tell us about processes of impoverishment and marginality in development contexts – a complex and highly contextual field. By considering detailed ethnographic accounts of peoples’ everyday lives, you will also interrogate how local preferences, priorities and values can be incorporated into development policy. Throughout the module you will explore these topics with reference to the development policies and practices that have been aimed at `the poor’, as well as the wider political economies of economic transformation in the contemporary world. Focussing upon local contexts, a central premise is that people’s everyday experiences of poverty and marginality have to be situated historically, as well as in terms of the micro-dynamics of economic, social and political relations.

Refugees and development

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

Research Methods and Professional Skills (Int Dev)

15 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

The Architecture of Aid

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This course explores the structure and organisation of the aid industry. You will cover the colonial heritage of the aid industry; the Washington and Post-Washington consensuses and the nature of structural adjustment; the rise of the NGO sector; the nature of the project and post-project approaches to development; and relations between disaster relief and development.

Transnational migration and diaspora

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

Women and Human Rights

30 credits
Spring teaching, year 1

This module is divided into two halves. The first half consists of core topics providing a theoretical framework for the study of women's human rights. You will draw on feminist legal theory, human rights theory, anthropological and historical materials and international and national rights instruments and documentation. The second half focuses on the conception, implementation, adherence and breach of a specific right or related rights. 

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Entry requirements

UK entrance requirements

A first- or upper second-class undergraduate honours degree in politics, international relations, philosophy, law, history, sociology, anthropology, development studies or a related field.

Overseas entrance requirements

Please refer to column A on the Overseas qualifications.

If you have any questions about your qualifications after consulting our overseas qualifications table, contact the University.
E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

Visas and immigration

Find out more about Visas and immigration.

English language requirements

IELTS 6.5, with not less than 6.5 in Writing and 6.0 in the other sections. Internet TOEFL with 88 overall, with at least 20 in Listening, 20 in Reading, 22 in Speaking and 24 in Writing.

For more information, refer to English language requirements.

For more information about the admissions process at Sussex

For pre-application enquiries:

Student Recruitment Services
T +44 (0)1273 876787
E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

For post-application enquiries:

Postgraduate Admissions,
University of Sussex,
Sussex House, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877773
F +44 (0)1273 678545
E pg.applicants@sussex.ac.uk 

Fees and funding

Fees

Home UK/EU students: £5,5001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £5,5002
Overseas students: £13,0003

1 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
2 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
3 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.

To find out about your fee status, living expenses and other costs, visit further financial information.

Funding

The funding sources listed below are for the subject area you are viewing and may not apply to all degrees listed within it. Please check the description of the individual funding source to make sure it is relevant to your chosen degree.

To find out more about funding and part-time work, visit further financial information.

Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust for Postgraduate Study (2013)

Region: UK
Level: PG (taught), PG (research)
Application deadline: 1 October 2013

The Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust are offering bursaries to Postgraduate students following any postgraduate degree courses in any subject.

Sussex Graduate Scholarship (2013)

Region: UK, Europe (Non UK), International (Non UK/EU)
Level: PG (taught)
Application deadline: 16 August 2013

Open to final year Sussex students who graduate with a 1st or 2:1 degree and who are offered a F/T place on an eligible Masters course in 2013.

Faculty interests

Within the School of Global Studies there is a close academic collaboration between departments and interdisciplinary research centres, particularly the Justice and Violence Research Centre. Outside the School, we have particularly strong links with the School of Law, Politics and Sociology, where a number of human rights faculty are located. 

Research interests are briefly described below. 

Professor Craig Barker International law and international relations, international immunities, international criminal law. 

Professor Rupert Brown Intergroup relations and prejudice. 

Professor Jane Cowan Human rights in the Balkans. 

Dr Elizabeth Craig International human rights and comparative law, European minority rights law. 

Professor Marie-Bénédicte Dembour Rights claims in international law. 

Professor Saul Dubow History of race and national identity in South Africa. 

Professor Stefan Elbe International security. Author of Security and Global Health (2010). 

Dr Nigel Eltringham Violence, genocide, international criminal justice, Great Lakes Region of Africa. 

Professor James Fairhead Africa south of the Sahara, UK; agriculture and ecology. 

Dr James Hampshire Politics of citizenship and immigration, racism and immigration policy-making, state and nation-building. 

Zdenek Kavan History, memory and justice. 

Dr Mark Leopold Conflict and reconstruction in Uganda. 

Dr Jan Selby Peace processes and rights. 

Dr Anna Stavrianakis Global civil society, the arms trade. 

Dr Maya Unnithan India, Rajasthan, fertility and reproductive health, medical anthropology. 

Careers and profiles

Human rights teaching at Sussex provides an excellent training for those intending to work in professional advocacy in human rights agencies, for those pursuing further postgraduate research or for those simply seeking to develop a critique of conventional approaches to human rights. Our graduates have gone on to work for Save the Children, the Detention Advice Service, Human Rights Watch, and various UN agencies (including UNIFEM and UNRWA).

Kelly's career perspective

Kelly Barber

‘Working in international development was always my plan. After honing my application and interview skills with the Careers and Employability Centre, I secured a placement as a Press Officer with a local international development charity and gained valuable skills, insight and contacts in the industry.

‘Once I had finished my Masters, I worked for a few months at the House of Commons where I learnt the importance of developing my transferable skills. This led to my next opportunity as a Communications Officer for a small charity in London. After 18 months, I was offered two further paid internships: one working for an international development charity and one for a women’s rights charity.

‘The help I received at the Careers and Employability Centre gave me a vision of my career path and helped me set realistic goals to achieve this, along with valuable support throughout the process. This combination of positive guidance and persistence has, for me, been a formula for success.’

Kelly Barber
MA in Human Rights graduate

For more information, visit Careers and alumni.

School and contacts

School of Global Studies

The School of Global Studies aims to provide one of the UK's premier venues for understanding how the world is changing. It offers a broad range of perspectives on global issues, and staff and students are actively engaged with a wide range of international and local partners, contributing a distinctive perspective on global affairs.

Dr Nigel Eltringham,
School of Global Studies,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9SJ, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877686
E n.p.eltringham@sussex.ac.uk
International development

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