Overview

This intensive course explores the legal and other regulatory dimensions of transitions from dictatorships to democracies – from comparative and international perspectives. The course is taught as a short overseas program at a UNSW Law partner in South America, the continent which originated Transitional Justice as a part of the … For more content click the Read More button below. Topics (non-exhaustive list of possible topics, pending availability of staff and guest speakers at the partner university): Introduction to the Field of Transitional JusticeRedemocratization and Political Reform in the Context of TransitionInvestigate, Prosecute and Punish: Approaches to the Criminalization of Atrocities in the Aftermath of TransitionTruth and Reconciliation as an Alternative to Criminal ProsecutionsAmnesties in Transitional Justice: Between Forgiveness and OblivionThe Transplantation of Transitional Justice Models across JurisdictionsThe Lasting Impact of the Eastern European and African Experiences on Latin American Approaches to TransitionStrategic Litigation and Transitional JusticeSocial Movements in the Transitional Process: the Roles of NGOs and Faith-Based OrganizationsThe Impact of Transition on Public Policy: Environmental LawThe Economics of Transitional JusticeThe Right to Truth as Part of Transitional JusticeCultural Heritage Law, Memorialization and TransitionThe Internationalization of Transitional Justice: the Impact of Regional Human Rights Courts’ JurisprudenceThe Limits of Transitional Justice: Critical Stock-Taking. This course fits into the Human Rights, International Law, Criminal Justices and Dispute Resolution specialisations of the LLM. Preference will be given to students who have not undertaken an overseas course within the UNSW postgraduate program.

Conditions for Enrolment

Prerequisite: Academic Program must be either 9200, 9201, 9240, 9211, 9285 or 9235.

Course Outline

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Pre-2019 Handbook Editions

Access past handbook editions (2018 and prior)