Programme And Module Handbook
 
Course Details in 2024/25 Session


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Module Title LI Contemporary Issues in International Law and Globalisation
SchoolBirmingham Law School
Department Law
Module Code 08 28772
Module Lead Maureen Mapp
Level Intermediate Level
Credits 20
Semester Semester 1
Pre-requisites LC Global Law + Globalisation - (08 27948) LC Foundations of International Law - (08 33571)
Co-requisites
Restrictions None
Exclusions
Description This module builds upon the knowledge gained from the ‘Foundations of International Law and Globalisation’ and ‘Global Law and Globalisation’ modules in year 1. This format is designed to provide students with an opportunity to acquire a more in-depth understanding of the nature, function and development of global law by engaging with a series of contemporary issues.

This module is designed to encourage students to reflect on recent developments and study key conundrums in the field of public international law and globalisation such as gender and development, the persistence of widespread poverty migration of environmentally displaced persons, humanitarian crises, global trade, banking and finance, health and medicine, and the governance of emergent technologies and free and Open Source Software Licensing.

Issues of this kind challenge the international and transnational legal and political systems to devise solutions and adjust and implement these solutions across vastly different national, regional and local contexts. Exploring in depth the contours and challenges of international law and globalisation, students on this module will engage with theories of law, the intersect between public and private law, theories of regulation, gender and development, health, international finance relations, global justice and political economy in order to understand, question and critique the capacity of the ‘international community’ to address urgent and emerging challenges of global governance at the level of both states and non-state actors and the role of international law therein.
Learning Outcomes By the end of the module students should be able to:
  • Explain and assess the relationship and intersect between different specialised branches of international law
  • Demonstrate an advanced ability to identify and explicate the various successes, shortcomings and challenges facing contemporary international law, including migration, global health, global trade, banking and global finance.
  • Show development of a deeper understanding of the impact that factors like which politics, migration, gender, human rights, technology, and non-state private systems has on the application and development of legal approaches to these challenges.
  • Understand the legal mechanisms and regulatory tools by which the international community addresses challenges in international law and globalisation including the regulation of Free and Open Source Software Licensing, and the regulation of distributed ledger technologies.
  • Critically engage with a range of political, philosophical and legal debates and scholarships on international and transnational regulation, globalisation and the international legal system.
  • Demonstrate independent, critical research and communication skills in analysing contemporary challenges in global governance and regulation.
Assessment 28772-01 : Essay : Coursework (100%)
Assessment Methods & Exceptions Assessment:
One 3500 words essay (100%)

Reassessment:
Resit failed component(s)
Other
Reading List