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PHIL2065 Politics and Rights

Later Year Course

Offered By School of Philosophy
Academic Career Undergraduate
Course Subject Philosophy
Offered in PHIL2065 will not be offered in 2011
Unit Value 6 units
Course Description

This course will be concerned with a range of philosophical issues relating to rights. It will include: (a) discussion in the history of philosophy about the origins and early character of ideas concerning rights, including ideas about rights and their relation to natural law; (b) discussion of a range of arguments about the existence and status of rights, including attempts to 'justify' them; (c) discussion about what the character of rights and correlative obligations should be, and who should be the bearers of these obligations; (d) discussion of current controversies about rights - such as aboriginal land rights, or rights and 'Asian values'. Our prime concern will be with philosophical consideration of normative issues - i.e. about what rights should be - and issues about rights and customary or positive law (national or international) will be discussed in that context.

Learning Outcomes The course aims to give students a broad introduction to issues concerning rights, so as: (i) to develop students' knowledge of and abilities to critically evaluate arguments about rights; (ii) to understand why ideas about rights are more problematic than is sometimes thought; (iii) to provide intellectual background that will be of use to students taking other courses which discuss rights, and when they encounter issues about rights in contemporary debates about social policy
Indicative Assessment

Short exercise (10%), 2 x 1,500 word essays (80%) and tutorial performance (10%).

Workload 20 hours of lectures and 12 hours of tutorials
Areas of Interest Philosophy and Political Sciences
Requisite Statement

One Philosophy, Law or Political Science course or permission of the Coordinator.

Preliminary Reading

* Cranston, M, What are the Human Rights?, Bodley Head, 1973
* Haakonssen, Knud and Lacey, Michael, A Culture of Rights, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991.

Majors/Specialisations Philosophy and Political Science
Academic Contact Dr Jeremy Shearmur

The information published on the Study at ANU 2011 website applies to the 2011 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2010 website.

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