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LW3IGS - International Law and Global Security

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LW3IGS-International Law and Global Security

Module Provider: School of Law
Number of credits: 20 [10 ECTS credits]
Level:6
Terms in which taught: Autumn / Spring term module
Pre-requisites:
Non-modular pre-requisites: Recommended that students have taken LW2FIL
Co-requisites:
Modules excluded:
Current from: 2022/3

Module Convenor: Prof Rosa Freedman
Email: r.a.freedman@reading.ac.uk

Module Co-convenor: Dr Alex Gilder
Email: a.f.gilder@reading.ac.uk

Type of module:

Summary module description:

This module examines the role and relevance of international law to fundamental questions of global security. Various crucial sub-areas of international law relate to global security concerns. This module will explore a number of these areas in depth, although the exact areas covered may change slightly each year.Ìý The core focus of the module, across relevant areas, is the assessment of international law’s ability to respond to global security concerns. The module also gives students the opportunity to engage with the process of a key global security mechanism through a practical assessment on resolving a global security crisis.


Aims:

This module aims to expose students to a range of perspectives within and beyond international law that engage with questions of global security. It will not only provide a descriptive account of various areas of international law, but also ensure that students are able to analyse and to critique the ability of international law and the broader international system to respond to global security crises. We will consider the role of different actors such as states, regional organisations, NGOs, and corporations, and also discuss issues of national security to wider human security at the local, regional and global levels. Students will develop an understanding of international law’s application to areas of global security in practice. We will examine geographic case studies of contemporary security issues and undertake a practical assessment to immerse students in the practicalities of resolving a global security crisis.


Assessable learning outcomes:

On completion of the module, students will be expected to be able to:




  • Demonstrate a substantive knowledge of a number of sub-areas of international law that engage questions of global security.

  • Debate and critique the relative merits and demerits of these sub-areas of international law, particularly in terms of their ability to respond to global security challenges in specific case studies.

  • Demonstrate an ability to engage withthe processes of the international legal system, in an interactive group exercise on resolving a global security crisis and be able to reflect on this process and link it to substantive knowledge of the role of different actors in the global system.


Additional outcomes:

Those skills listed in the School of Law's ‘Core Skills Statement’.


Outline content:

The module will usually cover topics such as the following, although exact topics may vary slightly from year to year:




  • Human security

  • International actors and institutions

  • Use of force

  • International Humanitarian Law

  • Nuclear weapons

  • Terrorism

  • International Criminal Law

  • International Environmental Law

  • Disaster Risk Management

  • International Refugee Law


Brief description of teaching and learning methods:

This module is taught by 20 hours of livestreamed lectures and associated activities, four 2-hour in-person seminars, and one 2-hour debate exercise. The number of hours listed is the equivalent to the material or a live class of the same length, and thus include associated exercises. In the weeks where we have no live seminars, there is an optional online drop-in session (see timetable).


Contact hours:
Ìý Autumn Spring<