|
|
|
||
Last update: Ing. Svatava Marešová (04.01.2023)
This is a multi-disciplinary course that provides students with a rigorous and focused engagement with different disciplinary perspectives on the subject of human rights including philosophy, sociology and law. It provides students with contending interpretations of human rights as an idea and practice from the different standpoints that the disciplines present. The course applies the insights of disciplinary frameworks of understanding to key human rights issues such as universality, the right to life, free speech and globalization. This course is designed to provide students with a broad introduction to the conceptual and legal problems raised by the development of a global human rights regime and to help students think their way through some of the complexities of European human rights law. It will provide an introductory analysis to the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights and the substance of European human rights law, by looking at different generations of rights, their content and relation to each other, through an analysis of different “functions” of human rights (protection, participation, distribution, inclusion). |
|
||
Last update: Ing. Svatava Marešová (04.01.2023)
Exam: essay or oral examination Means of communication: MS Teams |
|
||
Last update: Ing. Svatava Marešová (04.01.2023)
Syllabus:
|
|
||
Last update: Mgr. Tomáš Friedel, Ph.D. (18.01.2018)
The guarantor teaches 100 % classes. |
|
||
Last update: Mgr. Miroslav Sojka (09.01.2018)
P Agha, Human Rights between Law and Politics, Hart / Oxford 2016 S Greer, The European Convention on Human Rights: Achievements, Problems and Prospects, Cambridge University Press, 2006. G Letsas, A Theory of Interpretation of the European Convention on Human Rights, Oxford University Press 2009. |