Course

Law and the Holocaust - JURD7563

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: 3

Enrolment Requirements:

Pre-requisite: 36 UOC of JURD courses for students enrolled prior to 2013. For students enrolled after 2013, pre-requisite: 72 UOC of JURD courses.

Excluded: LAWS3463, LAWS8163

CSS Contribution Charge: 3 (more info)

Tuition Fee: See Tuition Fee Schedule

Further Information: See Class Timetable

View course information for previous years.

Description

This new course examines the relationship between law and the origins and implementation of the events known as the Holocaust. Through this case study students will consider the lessons for law and legal theory arising from Hitler’s rise to power, the legalization of the Nazi worldview through persecutory legislation targeting multiple groups on racial-biological grounds, the character of parallel legal measures in Vichy France and elsewhere, the challenge to our conceptions of legal and moral responsibility that is presented by the idea of ‘administrative massacre’, and the question of how the Nazi legal era has been represented in mainstream jurisprudence. By studying the sequential moments of legal and institutional pathology that provided the context for the persecution – loss of meaningful constitutionalism or constitutional values, loss of legal rights, loss of citizenship, loss of the standards of the rule of law, loss of the status of the legal subject as a bearer of dignity, amongst others – students will have the opportunity to think deeply about the significance of these pathologies for our understanding of what law is, what law should be, and what conditions are required for law to mediate power rather than merely provide a vehicle for its expression.

Course Aims

This course aims to give students the opportunity to think deeply about the significance of the debasement of law and legal institutions for our understanding of what law is and what law should be. Through the historical case study of the Holocaust, the course demonstrates the continuing salience of these questions.

Learning Outcomes

At the conclusion of this course, students should be able to:
  1. Engage in critical analysis of legal institutions and their connection to specific social and cultural institutions.
  2. Engage in critical analysis of theories of the law as applied to concrete historical and contemporary contexts.
  3. Engage in critical analysis of the law on one hand and personal and public morality on the other.
  4. Demonstrate effective oral communication skills by discussing and debating course concepts in a scholarly, reflective and respectful manner.
  5. Demonstrate an ability to incorporate a range of legal and interdisciplinary research sources in written communication with appropriate referencing.
  6. Engage in critical analysis of the historical and social significance of law's relationship to atrocity.

Assessment

  • Class Participation 20%
  • Essay Abstract 10%
  • Research Essay 70%
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