DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
University of Ghana
POLI 347: INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT, CONFLICT RESOLUTION
AND HUMAN RIGHTS
COURSE OUTLINE AND READING LIST: FIRST SEMESTER OF
2014/15 ACADEMIC YEAR
INSTRUCTOR: Dr. Kumi Ansah-Koi
Lecture
Sessions: Legon Campus: Wednesdays: 07:30-09:25 hours @ NNB 3
Accra
City Campus: Fridays:10:00-12:00 hours
Course
Overview and Objectives
This Course is a sequel to the Introduction to International Politics
course done at Level 200. It particularly focuses on the international scene
and international conflicts, on the possible resolution of those conflicts, and
on human rights as an issue in international relations. The Course aims at
offering students a deeper understanding of international relations; and a
better appreciation of the complexities and dynamics relating particularly to
human rights and conflicts in international relations.
Students should be regular and
punctual in their class attendance. Classes would be interactive. Tutorial
classes are compulsory in the Political Science department; and are especially
relevant and helpful in this Course. Students would be required to keep abreast
with current developments on the international scene. The readings listed here
are basic and introductory. More would be highlighted in class. Much of the
required readings for the Course are available on the internet; accessibility
should therefore not be a problem. Enjoy
the Course.
a) Origins and Nature/Features of the international
setting
b) Identification of the Actors in International
Relations
c) Distinction between the International /Foreign and
the Internal/Domestic; and also between the Sub-National, National, and the
Trans-National. The increasingly
blurred nature of that distinction.
(a) Comparative Study of various mechanisms for Conflict
Resolution. We would focus, for example, on such mechanisms as
Diplomacy/Negotiations/Mediation, Resort to Force of Arms or Violence,
Arbitration, International Law, Judicial Bodies like the International
Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice, Arbitration, and the
like.
(b) Distinction between Conflict Prevention/Aversion,
Conflict Management, Conflict Resolution, and Post-Conflict
Peace-Building/Making. We would as well focus on such incidental issues as
Peace Support Operations, DDRR, Transitional Justice, and the like.
(a) World War Two and emergence of the notion of human
rights in international relations
(b) Human rights: What they are
(c) State Obligations regarding Human Rights
(d) Human Rights in contemporary international relations
(e) Emergence of the notion of Crimes against Humanity;
and the aftermath.
Basic Readings/Documents/Treaties:
Sandy Ghandhi, Blackstone’s Statutes International Human Rights
Documents, 6th edition,
Oxford University Press, 2008
Erskine Childers with Brian Urquhart, Renewing the United Nations System, Uppsala,
Sweden,
Quentin Gausset, Michael A. Whyte,
and Torden Birch-Thomsen (eds), Beyond Territory and Scarcity. Exploring
Conflicts Over Natural Resource Management, Stockholm, 2005
Charter of the United Nations
Statute of the International Court
of Justice
International Bill of Human Rights:
Universal Declaration of Human
Rights
International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights
Optional Protocol 1 to the ICCPR
Optional Protocol 11 to the ICCPR
Convention on the Elimination of
Racial Discrimination
Convention on the Elimination of
Discrimination Against Women
Convention Against Torture
Convention on the Rights of the
Child
Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action
International Humanitarian Law
Geneva Convention 1: Wounded and
Sick
Geneva Convention 11: Armed Forces
at Sea
Geneva Convention 111: Prisoners
of War
Geneva Convention IV: Civilians
Protocol 1 to the Geneva
Conventions: International Conflicts
Protocol 11 to the Geneva
Conventions: Internal Conflicts
African Charter on Human Rights and People’s Rights
Final Act of the Conference on Security and
Co-operation in Europe
Constitutive Act of the African Union
Lewis Coser, The Functions of Social Conflict, New York: Free Press, 1956
Deng and Zartman (eds.), Conflict Resolution in Africa,
Washington DC: The Brookings Institution.
Sage Handbook of Conflict Resolution, London: Sage Publications
C A Crocker, F O Hampson, & P
Aall (eds.), Grasping the Nettle:
Analysing Cases of Intractable Conflict, Washington DC: USIP Press.
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