Syllabus/achievement requirements

Obligatory Reading: (no more than 500 pages)

David Cortright, Peace: A History of Movements & Ideas (Cambridge 2008)

Oliver P. Richmond, The Transformation of Peace (Palgrave 2007)

 

Supplementary Reading:

Beate Sj?fjell, “If Not Now, When? European Company Law in a Sustainability Development Perspective”

Chandra Lekha Sriram, Confronting Past Human Rights Violations. Justice vs Peace in Times of Transition (Cass 2004), Introduction & Chapters 1-2

Christina Voigt, “Sustainable Security”

Christine Chinkin & Hilary Charlesworth, Building Women into Peace: The International Legal Framework, in Richard Falk, Balakrishnan Rajagopal & Jacqueline Stevens, International Law and the Third World (Routledge 2008)

Corrine Parver & Rebecca Wolf, “Civil Society’s Involvement in Post-Conflict Peacebuilding”, International Journal of Legal Information (Spring 2008)

Hobbes, Leviathan , Chapters 13 & 14

James Lee Roy, Does Democracy Cause Peace?

Kathryn Abrams, “Women and Anti-War Protect: Rearticulating Gender and Citizenship” in 87 Boston University Law Review (October 2007)

Locke, Second Treatise of Government, Chapters 2 & 3

Martin Luther King, Jr. , Letter from a Brimingham City Jail

Naomi Roth-Arriaza, The Pinochet Effect. Transnational Justice in the Age of Human Rights (Pennsylvannia 2005), Chapters 7-8

Patrick Hayden, John Rawls: Towards a Just World Order (2002), pp. 151-168

Roland Paris and Timothy D. Sisk, (eds), The Dilemmas of Statebuilding. Confronting the contradictions of postwar peace operations (Routledge 2009), Chapter 1.

Roland Paris, At War’s end. Building Peace after Civil Conflict (Cambridge 2004), Chapters 1-8, 10

Scott Gates & Kaare Str?m, Power Sharing, Agency and Civil Conflict

Published June 18, 2014 3:20 PM - Last modified June 18, 2014 3:20 PM