- Course Code :
LAW 201
- Level :
Undergraduate
- Course Hours :
3.00
Hours
- Department :
Department of Political Science
Instructor information :
Area of Study :
In a rapid developing society, either within the national or the international sense, a student within the faculty of Economics and Political science, shall be aware of the basic principles governing International law and International relations, which is basically what this course aims to achieve. It deals with, inter alia, the definition of international law, the differentiation between public and private international law, the main sources of international law, the Vienna convention on the law of treaties, the definition and characteristics of a state, sovereignty and recognition of state, national borders, the succession of states, international responsibility, self-defense, intervention, preemptive wars, law of the sea, air law, space law and Antarctica. All of which, using different examples from international cases as developed by international courts, such as the International Criminal Court (ICC), International Court Of Justice (ICJ), International Criminal Tribunal for formal Yugoslavia (ICTY), European Court for Human Rights (ECHR), and developing case study skills with the students.
Course Goals:
• Develop an understanding of the key concepts in the field of international public law.
• Equip students with a legal framework through which they can view the state and its relations in political science.
For further information :
In a rapid developing society, either within the national or the international sense, a student within the faculty of Economics and Political science, shall be aware of the basic principles governing International law and International relations, which is basically what this course aims to achieve. It deals with, inter alia, the definition of international law, the differentiation between public and private international law, the main sources of international law, the Vienna convention on the law of treaties, the definition and characteristics of a state, sovereignty and recognition of state, national borders, the succession of states, international responsibility, self-defense, intervention, preemptive wars, law of the sea, Air law, space law, and Antarctica. All of which, using different examples from international cases as developed by international courts, such as the International Criminal Court (ICC), International Court Of Justice (ICJ), International Criminal Tribunal for formal Yugoslavia (ICTY), European Court for Human Rights (ECHR), and developing case study skills with the students.
For further information :