Social Sciences
Course

Transitional Justice and Human Rights

This course combines recent critical literature, insights from our own research, and non-conventional case studies with an excursion to The Hague. We will identify new actors and instruments that help us re-imagine these fields – a task that seems more urgent than ever.

€985
Student fee
€495.00

Specifications

-
Course Level
Master or PhD
ECTS credits
2-4 ECTS
Course location(s)
Utrecht, The Netherlands
First time, a witness in the Indonesia cases is heard via Skype in the courtroom in The Hague; Mr. Yaseman testifying how he was tortured in 1947. Credit: Martijn Beekman 2017

Description

This course will help you understand how societies deal with past violence and injustice. Transitional Justice and Human Rights are ‘booming’ fields in research and practice. At the same time, they face huge global challenges. Conventional institutions that protect them are under threat. 

Transitional Justice has been called a ‘defining global movement of our time.’ As both academics and practitioners engage with the field, it addresses the long-term effects of human rights violations and provides instruments to deal with them through judicial and non-judicial approaches: criminal trials and tribunals, apologies, historical commissions, commemorations and institutional reforms. Over the past few decades, the field has quickly grown. It has generated both praise and critique. While the first generation of Transitional Justice focused on the transition of states (from an era of injustice, violence and oppression towards peace and democracy), the new generation includes different actors and instruments, emphasizing restorative, retributive, reparative or redistributive justice, aiming for systemic and institutional change. Dealing with past wrongdoings has also developed into a conversation about ongoing injustices, which often means to link local, national, and transnational concerns.  

The course will teach students to operationalize concepts and tools of Transitional Justice and Human Rights for both research and practice, familiarize them with challenges of the fields, and provide them with a critical understanding of justice questions at a local, national, and global level.  

Lecturers

Prof. dr. Nicole Immler

Dr. Niké Wentholt

Target audience

  • Master students and postgraduate/PhD-students studying the fields of transitional justice and/or human rights, or related fields like war studies, ecocide, genocide, institutional injustice, social justice.
  • Professionals working in the fields of transitional justice and/or human rights who would like to deepen their knowledge

Aim of the course

In this course, we will share with you the most interesting developments in the worlds of transitional justice and human rights, our own insights from research into institutional and historical injustice, and different case studies to illustrate how we can rethink justice and a just world. The course coincides with the thirty year anniversary of the genocide in Srebrenica, one of the cases that we will discuss in this course. For those interested, we will join the commemoration in The Hague on July 11. We will combine this with an excursion to the Kosovo Specialist Chambers (or another institution of international law), to ensure that the fields of transitional justice and human rights come alive to everyone who participates in the course.

This course aims to, firstly, introduce you to critical perspectives on human rights and transitional justice. Secondly, it suggests new lenses and approaches to think more holistically about both fields. Thus, the course helps post-graduate students of both Master- and PhD-level to get acquainted with new ideas that are directly connected to empirical findings from the instructors’ research. It also offers them equally useful and challenging tools to re-think the topic of their studies. For professionals with a practitioner background, who are also very welcome, the course provides scholarly concepts that have proven themselves both in academia and in practice. These can help practitioner students to re-think their work and more effectively engage with questions of justice and transformation.

Both instructors work with theory and empirics of transitional justice and human rights in their respective research projects, most notably Dialogics of Justice. Here, we study a wide variety of cases of historical and systemic injustice. The course will introduces these cases to illustrate and re-imagine the scholarly concepts that we present. Thus, the course aims to offer theoretical knowledge that is empirically-grounded, and case-study material that is theoretically solid.

Study load

The standard study load is 2 ECTS.

Participants may elect to write an additional essay (detailed instructions will be provided) for an additional 2 ECTS, making a total of 4 ECTS and for an additional course fee of EUR 200.

Costs

  • Course fee: €985.00
  • Student fee: €495.00
  • Included: Course + course materials + lunch
  • Housing fee: €200
  • Housing provider: Utrecht Summer School

A discount of EUR 490 to the standard fee (i.e. net fee of EUR 495), may be applied to by a limited number of participants who work in the field of transitional justice and/or human rights and who are from the Global South. This discount can be applied for in the motivation letter. It is granted at the discretion of the course director.

Participants may elect to write an additional essay (detailed instructions will be provided) for an additional 2 ECTS, making a total of 4 ECTS and for an additional course fee of EUR 200.

Additional information

The housing costs do not include a Utrecht Summer School sleeping bag and/or pillow. These are separate products on the invoice. If you wish to bring your own bedding, please deselect or remove the sleeping bag from your order. 

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