Course

Media and Human Rights - LAWS8162

Faculty: Faculty of Law

School: Faculty of Law

Course Outline: See below

Campus: Sydney

Career: Postgraduate

Units of Credit: 6

EFTSL: 0.12500 (more info)

Indicative Contact Hours per Week: 2

Enrolment Requirements:

Prerequisite: Academic Program must be either 9200 or 5740 or 9210 or 9230 or 9211 or 5211 or 9240 or 5760 or 9214 or 5214.

Equivalent: JURD7462

Excluded: JURD7462

CSS Contribution Charge: 3 (more info)

Tuition Fee: See Tuition Fee Schedule

Further Information: See Class Timetable

View course information for previous years.

Description

Media and Human Rights is an innovative course bringing together the study of traditional human rights concerns regarding the media and current debates regarding the role played by the media within the field of human rights. It aims to consider the protections offered to the media by human rights law, the role played by the media within human rights and the mediatization of human rights - its turn to advocacy, representation and communication. The course will consider topics such as free speech, hate speech, privacy, the protection of journalists in conflict, human rights reportage, fact-finding and witnessing, the internet, social media and human rights. Case studies will include: Wikileaks, online advocacy such as Kony 2012, the role of social media in the Arab Spring and debates regarding 'clicktivism'. There will also be consideration of the resilience of human rights concepts in terms of internet regulation and internet freedom. This course will be of interest to students in the human rights and social justice, international law and media law streams. It will offer a balance of theoretical and practical insights and provide the opportunity for students to engage in research in a new and dynamic field.

LLM Specialisation

Recommended Prior Knowledge

This course assumes a general knowledge of human rights and international law. Human rights principles as they relate to the media will be covered in the course, but students would benefit from earlier familiarity with human rights in their undergraduate or postgraduate studies.

Course Objectives

Media and Human Rights aims to critically consider traditional human rights concerns regarding the media and current debates regarding the role played by the media within the field of human rights. To do so the course considers both the relevant human rights protections for and limits placed upon the media, along with examination of the mediatization of human rights. It will offer a balance of theoretical and practical insights and provide the opportunity for students to engage in research in a new and dynamic field. The course will equip students with a human rights framework with which to assess the challenges and possibilities posed by the rise of digital media and the internet. This course will provide coverage of both core principles such as free speech, privacy and the protection of journalists, along with an engagement with detailed case studies and the emerging scholarship in this developing area.

Learning Outcomes:

At the conclusion of this course, students should be able to:
  1. understand the relationship between the media and human right
  2. have a sound knowledge of the main legal concepts and principles within human rights and international law with regards to the media
  3. understand the role the media plays within the human rights system
  4. critically assess the problems and possibilities which the media and the internet pose for human rights as a field
  5. have the capacity to articulate his/her knowledge and understanding in oral and written presentations
  6. integrate scholarship within media and human rights within the exisiting framework of human rights law and practice

Assessment

Class Participation 20%
Class Presentation 20%
Research Essay (6,000 words) 60%

Course Texts

A full up-to date reading list will be provided in the detailed course outline closer to course commencement.
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Study Levels

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