Sociology and Criminology
The Sociology of Human Rights
Module code: L3075B
Level 5
15 credits in spring semester
Teaching method: Lecture, Seminar
Assessment modes: Coursework
On this module, you’ll explore the historical evolution of human rights, alongside today’s debates about their ongoing validity.
You’ll examine the rise of human rights through case studies on topics around:
- gender, citizenship and migration
- torture and the death penalty
- development and corporate abuses of human rights
- analysing if we now live in a post-human rights world
- the implications for human rights in a post-human era.
You’ll draw literature, news media and social media to consider crucial questions, such as:
- whether human rights are inherently Eurocentric and entangled with colonial histories
- if non-European human rights epistemologies can transcend these histories
- whether judicial human rights frameworks can be revitalised through grassroots organisations and NGOs.
You’ll uses international examples, such as Guantanamo Bay, the death penalty in the US and Saudi Arabia, and the treatment of migrants in Europe. Through this, you’ll analyse the challenges and possibilities for human rights in a post-human rights era.
Module learning outcomes
- Demonstrate knowledge and critical understanding of human rights and their evolution.
- Demonstrate knowledge and critical understanding of case studies of human rights violations
- Apply the theoretical concepts/frameworks covered in the module to empirical examples, in order to critically analyse these examples.
- Critically assess the competing arguments that consider the contemporary salience of human rights regimes.