Arts, Sciences, and Engineering History
Course Section Listing Course Course Title Term Credits Status
COURSE_SECTION-3-127209 HIST 303W-1 International Human Rights Spring 2022 4.0 - 0.0 Open
Schedule:
Day Begin End Location Start Date End Date
M 200 PM 440 PM Bausch & Lomb Room 315
Enrollment: Enrolled     
10
Capacity     
18
Co-Located: GSWS 296-1, GSWS 496-1, HIST 303W-1 (P), HIST 403-1
Instructors: Jean Pedersen
Description: What does it mean to be human? What political, economic, religious, social, or sexual rights might be part of different people's working definitions? This course will look at both a) the historical development of conflicting theories of human rights and b) more contemporary debates about their ideal extent, their exercise, and their enforcement. Special topics will include debates over the meaning of the American and French Revolutions, the fight to design an International Declaration of Human Rights in the aftermath of World War II, the history of organizations such as Amnesty International, and the controversy around UN events such as the 1995 World Conference on Women in Beijing, the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development in Rio de Janeiro, and the 2000 and 2005 Millennium Summits in New York City.
Offered: Fall Spring Summer