Docente
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RIGO ENRICA
(programma)
The following themes will be addressed during the course: the legal globalisation; the theories of war and peace in international law; critical international law and postcolonial theory; the feminist critique to globalization; different approaches to environmental justice.
During the course, the students will be encouraged to attend seminars organised with guest speakers and to actively take part in the lessons.
Course Learning Objectives At the end of this course, students should be proficient in the following subject areas and skills: familiarity with the transformations that have occurred as a result of the shift from a state-centred paradigm of law to the current paradigm of global legal pluralism familiarity with the theoretical approaches related to globalization and the transformation of legal systems, transnationalism and struggles for recognition acquisition of instruments to interpret contemporary debates on rights’ recognition, redistribution and global justice
(testi)
books
Kelsen, Peace through Law, Part I and II
Schmitt, The nomos of the Earth, Part I and part IV
Papers/ articles
Kennedy, The Three Globalizazion of Law
Teubner, Global Bukowina: Legal Pluralism in the World Society
De Vito, Critical enviromental Law
Chimni, Prolegomena to a class approach to international law
de Sousa Santos, Beyond Neoliberal Governance: the World Social Forum as subaltern cosmopolitan politics and legality
Macmillan, Critical law and development
Otto, D. , Subalternity and international law: The problems of global community and the incommensurability of difference
Hilary Charlesworth, Christine Chinkin and Shelley Wright, Feminist Approaches to International Law
Fraser, N. Contradictions of Capitalism and Care
All readings will be uploaded on the e-learning platform
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