2012/2013
KAN-2BIR Business Responsibilities for Human Rights
English Title
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Business Responsibilities for Human Rights
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Language
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English
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Exam ECTS
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7.5
ECTS
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Type
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Mandatory
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Level
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Full Degree Master
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Duration
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One Semester
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Course period
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Spring
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Time Table
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Please see course schedule at e-Campus
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Study board
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Study Board for BSc/MSc i International Business and Politics, MSc
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Course coordinator
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Lynn Roseberry
- Department of Management, Politics and Philosophy
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Main Category of the Course
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Business Law
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International Politics
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Last updated on 08-10-2012
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Learning objectives
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The purpose of the course is to provide students with the theoretical and analytical tools necessary to identify when business activities are likely to impinge on internationally recognized human rights and enable them to identify and formulate legal, political and business arguments for and against holding businesses responsible for respecting human rights. After concluding the course, students should demonstrate:
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Describe the content of the UN Global Compact and its relationship to underlying international human rights treaties.
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Describe the main legal arguments and political arguments for and against holding businesses responsible for respecting human rights.
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• Explain the main ways in which business activities may have an impact on the protection and enjoyment of human rights.
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• Analyze specific cases where it is it is claimed that the business activities may have or actually do have effects on specific human rights.
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Examination
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.:
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Type of test
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Home Assignment
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Marking scale
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7-step scale
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Second examiner
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No second examiner
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Exam period
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Summer Term, Individual home assignment, max. 12 standard pages
Re-take same as ordinary exam
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Aids
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Please, see the detailed regulations below
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Duration
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Please, see the detailed regulations below
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Course content
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The course will cover the content and legal effects of the international treaties that embody what many recognize as “the international bill of rights”, the UN Global Compact, and other instruments of international law and policy concerning the relationship between business and human rights. The course will also provide an introduction to the development of the main international political and legal arguments for the proposition that businesses have some responsibility to respect human rights wherever they operate, regardless of the national legal context.
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Teaching methods
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Lectures
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Last updated on 08-10-2012