Description
International Children's Rights
Prerequisites: LAW 665, LAW 667, and LAW 688.

This 3-credit elective course serves as an introduction to international children's rights. It provides an overview of international human rights principles and procedures affecting children, with special emphasis on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. With this baseline understanding, you will explore thematic topics affecting children, including issues such as corporal punishment, child marriage, child labor, international adoption and abduction, discrimination, child soldiers, environmental challenges and child participation. Issues of equity, leadership and advocacy are identified and discussed throughout the course. As you proceed through the material, you are asked to remember and reflect on the fact that the world's most vulnerable children, those who most need the protection of international human rights law, are poor children of color. Please hold that thought near to you as you examine the range of issues that children experience around the globe and the potential for international human rights to respond to those issues.

Outcomes: Identify human rights that all children should enjoy; Articulate the nature and scope of challenges children face around the world; Assess ways in which globalization has impacted children and families positively and negatively.
Details
Grading Basis
Law
Units
2 - 3
Component
Lecture - Required
Offering
Course
LAW 678
Academic Group
School of Law
Academic Organization
Law Department
Campus
Online Campus
Enrollment Requirements
Restricted to students in the Children's Law and Policy MJ and Online Child and Family Law LLM programs