DEPARTMENT
OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
UNIVERSITY
OF GHANA
POLI
347: INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT, CONFLICT RESOLUTION AND HUMAN RIGHTS
1st Semester, 2018/2019
Lecturer: Dr. Seidu M. Alidu
Office: Room 12 Political Science Dept.
e-mail:
seidualidu@gmail.com
Venue: JQB 09
Time: Mondays
5:30 – 7:20pm
Course Title
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INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT, CONFLICT RESOLUTION
AND HUMAN RIGHTS
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Course Code
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POLI 347
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Course Overview
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This course introduces students to the
nature, types, structure and dynamics of international conflicts as well as
the mechanisms used in addressing them. It will explore the conflict
behaviour of states at the international arena, the impact of such behaviour
and the likely conflict resolution mechanisms needed to address them. Also,
the course aims at keeping students abreast with post-conflict peace building
strategies; the role of international institutions such as the International
Criminal Court, the International Court of Justice and ad-hoc tribunals in
addressing human rights violations during periods of transitions and the
general role of culture in these endeavours. The latter part of the course
involves demonstrating some of the concepts and theories discussed in class
via case studies.
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Outcomes
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At the end of the course students should be
able to understand, discuss and differentiate between the basic terminologies
of international conflict; identify and explain the sources, dynamics and
types of conflict within the national and international levels, and prescribe
relevant strategies for attending to them.
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Week No.
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Lecture Course
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Reading List
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1
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THE NATURE AND DYNAMICS OF INTERNATIONAL
CONFLICT
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2&3
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FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION
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4&5
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TECHNIQUES & APPROACHES TO CONFLICT RESOLUTION
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6&7
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CONFLICT MAPPING AND TRACKING
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8&9
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PEACEKEEPING & INTERVENTION IN WAR-ZONES
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10&11
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HUMAN RIGHTS AND HUMANITARANIAN LAWS IN ARMED CONFLICT
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12&13
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INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS INSTITUTIONS
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14
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REVISION
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Key Readings
- Barash, D.P. and Webel,
C.P. (eds.) (2009) Peace and
Conflict Studies, 2nd edition, Thousand Oaks, California,
Sage publication
- Williams, P. W. (ed.)
(2008) Security Studies: An
Introduction, Oxon: Routledge
- Avruch, K. (1999) Culture and Conflict Resolution,
Washington, USIP Press
- Woodhouse, T. and Duffey,
T. (2000) Peacekeeping and
International Conflict Resolution, New York: UNITAR-POCI
- Lederach, J. P. (1997) Building Peace: Sustainable
Reconciliation in Divided Societies, Washington DC: USIP Press
- Lederach, J. P. (1995) Preparing for Peace: Conflict
Transformation across Cultures, New York: Syracuse University Press
- Bassiouni, M.C. (2002)
(ed.) Post-Conflict Justice, New
York: Transnational Press Inc.
- Miall, Ramsbotham and
Woodhouse (1999) Contemporary
Conflict Resolution, Cambridge : Polity Press
Grading: There will be one
end of semester examination and one
mid-term or interim assessment (IA) which will be 30% of your final grade, while
the final exam will make up 70% of the final grade of 100%. Details will be
given at lectures. As a matter of
course, the exam will cover class and assigned readings and class discussions.
Note:
Academic Dishonesty will not be tolerated in this class. (See Student
Handbook for penalties).
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