HUWISU | Winter on Campus
Subject Course

Human Rights Violations in Germany: Gender, Colonial Crimes & Transnational Corporations

The monitoring and protection of human rights is a major challenge for the international community. The course introduces the philosophical foundations of human rights as a concept. It addresses the content of human rights as well as different methods developed at international level to protect them.

Course Period
Jan. 8, 2024 – Jan. 26, 2024 
Category
Law & Economics
Course Levels
Bachelor
Language
English
Class Size

max. 18 participants

Credits and Certificate

Participants will receive 6 ECTS credit points and a certificate if they attend classes regularly (at least 80% attendance) and participate actively. Additionally, six weeks after the end of the course a Transcript of Records is issued by Humboldt-Universität.

Application Deadline
Nov. 15, 2023, or when participant quota is reached
Course Fee
Description

Can human rights be universal? What exclusions and injustices are inherent in law that treats everyone “equal” in unequal societies? How is it that some human rights have been finally recognized, whereas others are continuously dismissed? Which actors are involved and why? What role do power and knowledge play? Who ‘wrote’ ‘the’ history of human rights? Who was excluded from this process?

Departing from an interdisciplinary perspective the Winter School will give an insight into Critical Human Rights Discourse and Litigation in Germany. On the basis of concrete human rights cases students will learn about the different bodies and instruments of human rights protection in Germany, their practical advantages, challenges and inherent exclusions.

By focusing on specific sectors (Gender, Colonial Crimesand Transnational Corporations) and their intersectional effects students are taught to see the canon of rights protected within the legal system as constructed and thus embedded in social and political processes of deliberations on different levels. With the understanding that strategic human rights litigation is only one of the many tools used to forward social change and justice, we talk about how these legal strategies and instruments can and should be intertwined with grassroots political awareness campaigns, the creation of associations to strengthen visibility, investments in public relations and advocacy for change and justice within social movements. Studies concerning the impact of Strategic Public Litigation will be used in the discussion, potentially with representatives from NGOs involved in some of the relevant Public Interest Litigations.

Representative fundamental texts of critical legal theory will be read, discussed and applied to the German context. These are interactive courses that have participants practicing the shifts of perspective proposed by the authors of the texts as acts of resistance to the premises of objectivity, neutrality, reasonableness and universality of contemporary hegemonic law. The courses will be team taught and aim to create a platform for dialogue on equal terms. Class sessions will usually open with lecture and/or discussant presentation, case-oriented inquiry, theoretical exploration and class discussion of the topic/theme for the session.

Students will be able to communicate directly with Berlin NGO’s activists and state agencies in the field of human rights and anti-discrimination.

Syllabus
Course structure
  • You will receive a total of 45 hours (one lesson equals 45 minutes; 11 hours per week)
  • The lessons are held four times a week
  • Lessons will comprise lectures, group work, discussion sessions, excursions

 

The courses are grouped into different time tracks.
Your course will take place in "Track B".

Monday: 1.30 pm – 3 pm & 3.20 pm – 4.50 pm
Tuesday: 9.00 am – 10.30 am & 11.00 am – 12.30 pm
Wednesday: 9.00 am – 10.30 am & 11.00 am – 12.30 pm
Friday: 1.30 pm – 3 pm & 3.20 pm – 4.05 pm

 

 

Cultural activities
HUWISU offers a fine selection of interesting extra-curricular activities and aims to give all participants an unforgettable stay in Berlin. Your program includes excursions, sport activities and social gatherings providing you the opportunity to get to know the city, the university and to meet students from all parts of the world. The costs for these offers are included in the course fees.

Activities and tours we offer regularly: Federal Chancellery, German Parliament, House of Representatives, Topography of Terror, Political Archive, Museum Island, Kreuzberg Tour, Daytrip to Potsdam, Exhibitions…

Language Skills
English B2
Motivation Letter
About one page in English
Student Profile

Advanced undergraduate students (in their final year) of all subjects with an academic background and a strong interest in Human Rights.

This course is taught in English, including readings in English. For the understanding of the texts and the discussions in class a language level B2 (Common European Framework of Reference for Languages) is required.

Participating students need to be at least 18 years old.

Ms. Karina Theurer

Karina Theurer, M.A. (Berlin) is a feminist lawyer and writer. She is director of the Institute for Legal Interventions at the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) and coordinates and teaches the Humboldt Law Clinic for Fundamental and Human Rights (HLCMR). Between 2010 and 2018 she was Research Fellow at the Chair of Public Law and Gender Studies at the Faculty of Law of Humboldt University and tought the Masters Program "Social Work as a Human Rights Profession" at the Alice-Salomon Hochschule. She studied Law at the Ruprecht-Karls-University in Heidelberg, the Université Robert Schuman in Strasbourg und the Humboldt University (Graduate Prize for Academic Achievement in European and International Law). Her fields of specialisation include Feminst and Decolonial Legal Theory, Human Rights Litigation in Germany, Gender Equality, Sexualized Violence and Business & Human Rights. She holds a Master of Arts in "Interdisciplinary Latin American Studies", co-founded the bilingual literary magazine „alba.lateinamerika lesen“, translates poetry from Spanish to German and co-curated the symposium „(Post-)Colonial Injustice and Legal Interventions“ at the Academy of Fine Arts in Berlin.

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