JUNIOR SEMINAR: BRINGING HUMAN RIGHTS HOME

Semester
Spring 2020
Instructor(s)
Units
4
Section
1
Number
191
CCN
17386
Times
W 2p-4p
Location
791 Barrows
Course Description

Why are human rights not part of debates about domestic public policy and legal reform in the United States? The United States played a leading role in the creation of the post-World War II international human rights regime and has often championed human rights as a foreign policy goals. Yet human rights have been marginal to debates about social and economic equality at home. We will examine the history of human rights in the United States since the New Deal, asking how and why the New Deal’s embrace of human rights was supplanted by a narrower focus only on constitutional and civil rights. We will also examine the consequences of this narrower framework, as well as why human rights may now be coming home. 

 

The Junior Seminars are intense writing seminars which focus on the research area of the faculty member teaching the course. 

 

Junior seminars fulfill upper division requirements for the major.

 

Subfield:   American Politics

Prerequisites

Political Science Majors of Junior and Senior status (must be 3rd or 4th year students with at least 60 units completed) with a minimum overall UC GPA of 3.3. Students must place themselves on the waitlist through CalCentral in Phase II. Priority may be given to students who have not yet taken a junior seminar.  Selection and notification will occur early January 2020.