Researching Human Rights
POL4257.01
Course Description
Summary
This advanced seminar explores theories, concepts, methods, and cases in qualitative social science research on human rights. It will provide a venue for students to undertake independent, critical, work on human rights, using existing literature and databases. The course will begin with a discussion of contending conceptions and understandings of human rights, followed by a review of empirical social science theories (including rationalism, structuralism, and culturalism) and their relevance for explaining and understanding contemporary human rights challenges. Next, we will explore strategies and sources for collecting human rights information (including events-based data, survey data and administrative and socio-economic statistics), while examining state-of-the art examples of human rights investigation and research. Finally, students in the seminar will use in-depth qualitative methods, especially single-country case studies and small-N analysis, to address contemporary human rights questions and to produce research reports with theoretical insights and comparative implications.Prerequisites
Preference will be given to students who email (rsuberu@bennington.edu) on a first come first serve basis. Previous coursework in SCT and/or CAPA.
Please contact the faculty member : rsuberu@bennington.edu