Dozent/in |
Prof. Dr. Georgios Pavlakos; University of Glasgow, UK |
Veranstaltungsart |
Gastlehrveranstaltung |
Code |
HS201554 |
Semester |
Herbstsemester 2020 |
Durchführender Fachbereich |
Grundlagenfächer |
Studienstufe |
Master |
Termin/e |
Mo, 16.11.2020, 16:15 - 20:30 Uhr, ZOOM Di, 17.11.2020, 16:15 - 20:30 Uhr, ZOOM Mi, 18.11.2020, 16:15 - 20:30 Uhr, ZOOM |
Umfang |
Blockveranstaltung |
Inhalt |
One of the key effects of globalisation is that it affects the legal entitlements of persons in a manner that escapes regulation by both national and international legal orders. The module prepares the way for developing legal answers to those challenges by seeking to understand global events as questions of justice. To this end, it will examine and evaluate standard theories of justice in the domestic and international level, while illustrating the connection between law's authority and justice. |
Lernziele |
Rigorous analysis of case studies; ability to formulate cogent theoretical argument; application of theory to concrete case studies. Developing interdisciplinary reasoning. |
Sprache |
Englisch |
Begrenzung |
Yes, 50 |
Anmeldung |
Registration/Deregistration mandatory on the UniPortal from Sep 15, 8 am until Nov 11, 12 pm, 2020 / counts as exam registration. Master students will bi given priority. |
Prüfung |
Digital take home exam on Monday, Nov 30, 2020 from 08.15 - 09.15 h |
Abschlussform / Credits |
Written exam, passed or failed / 2 Credits
|
Hörer-/innen |
Ja |
Kontakt |
georgios.pavlakos@glasgow.ac.uk |
Material |
The Course is divided up in 5 units. For each unit you will find below a list of required and optional readings. A list of questions for discussion in class will be distributed closer to the dates of the course. |
Anzahl Anmeldungen |
11 von maximal 50 |
Literatur |
What’s indispensable? Unit One: The possibility of a global legal order
• R. Dworkin, ‘A New Philosophy for International Law’ in Philosophy and Public Affairs 41 (2013), 2.;
• Kadi vs Council and Commission: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/lexuriserv/lexuriserv.do?uri=celex:62005j0402:en:not
• G. Pavlakos and J. Pauwelyn, ‘Principled Monism and the Normative Conception of Coercion Under International Law’ in M. Evans and P. Koutrakos (eds.), Beyond the Established Legal Orders, Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2011, p. 317-341. Unit Two: Domestic Distributive Justice (Rawls)
• Kymlicka, W. (2002) (2nd ed.) Contemporary Political Philosophy. An Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. (chap. 3 FIRST HALF).
Unit Three: Domestic Distributive Justice (Nozick)
• Kymlicka, W. (2002) (2nd ed.) Contemporary Political Philosophy. An Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press (chap. 4).
Unit Four: International Justice (Rawls’s Law of Peoples)
• Rawls, J. (1999) The Law of Peoples, Cambridge (Mass.): Harvard University Press (sections 3-4; 10-11; 15-16).
Unit Five: International Justice (Political View and Consmopolitanism)
• Nagel, T. (2005) 'The Problem of Global Justice', Philosophy & Public Affairs, Vol. 33, No. 2, 113-47.
• Julius, A. J. (2006) 'Nagel's Atlas', http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/bpl/papa;jsessionid=54g8gfdf0hnh.alice, Vol. 34, No. 2, pp. 176-92.
Further Literature Unit One
• M. Kumm, ‘The Moral Point of Constitutional Pluralism’ in J. Dickson and P. Eleftheriadis Philosophical Foundations of EU Law, Oxford: Oxofrd University Press, 2012, 216-246 Unit Two
• Rawls, J. (1999) A Theory of Justice, rev. ed., Oxford: Oxford University Press (section 1-4 + 11-17). Unit Three
• Nozick, R. (1974) Anarchy, State, and Utopia, New York: Basic Books (chap. 7).
Unit Four
• Blake, M. (2005) ‘International Justice’, Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy, available online at https://webmail.ua.ac.be/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?url=http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/international-justice/, Introduction and Sections 2 – 4.
Unit Five
• Abizadeh, A. (2007) 'Cooperation, Pervasive Impact, and Coercion: On the Scope (not Site) of Distributive Justice', Philosophy & Public Affairs, Vol. 35, No. 4, 318-58.
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