GI7099 - Citizenship and Social Justice (2024/25)
Module specification | Module approved to run in 2024/25 | ||||||||||||
Module title | Citizenship and Social Justice | ||||||||||||
Module level | Masters (07) | ||||||||||||
Credit rating for module | 20 | ||||||||||||
School | School of Social Sciences and Professions | ||||||||||||
Total study hours | 200 | ||||||||||||
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Assessment components |
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Running in 2024/25(Please note that module timeslots are subject to change) |
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Module summary
According to republican ideals, citizenship originally denoted being an active part of a city and its civil society, of a polis and its political community, not simply the possessor of a passport.
This module explores the changing meaning and continuing potential of citizenship, including the modern separation of the politics of the sovereign, bureaucratic state from the market society of its economically active subjects, and the failure of attempts to use states’ representative democracy to democratise society and justify corporate and institutionalised power in terms of citizens’ participation. This failure has much to do with the massive scale of modern political and economic organisation, and the module will explore recent arguments about both the politics of locality and community and the relation of citizenship and rights to duties, virtues, and justice.
The modules aims:
- To provide a historical and critical introduction to ideas, theories and arguments about citizenship and social justice.
- To explore ethical ideas and to articulate such ideas in the construction of a logical argument.
- To relate philosophical propositions to political, social and economic issues and to institutional, legal and policy prescriptions.
Prior learning requirements
There are no pre-requisites.
Syllabus
The indicative syllabus includes the following:
- Universality, Nationality, and Locality (LO 1, 3)
- Ethics and Politics of Common Goods (LO 2, 3)
- Citizenship: From Participation to Passivity? (L 1, 2)
- Ethics and Politics of Rights (LO 2, 3)
Balance of independent study and scheduled teaching activity
Blended Learning will be a key component of the module. Lecture recordings and documents for use in class will be posted on-line, as will web links for relevant websites and library resources.
Materials, including questions for discussion and assessment tasks, will be available from the beginning of the module via the Weblearn site, which will include a list of resources students can use to answer the questions and study the subject in greater depth.
Students are required to make a presentation and to participate in critical discussion of lectures and presentations.
Throughout, students will be encouraged to reflect on their learning.
Learning outcomes
By the end of this module students will be able to:
- understand the sources and development of contemporary ideas and practices of citizenship;
- analyse, articulate, criticise and defend ethical ideas, and apply such ideas in the
- evaluation of political ideologies and institutions and of social and economic policies;
- present and defend a logical argument supported by relevant evidence.
- develop critical abilities to analyse primary and secondary resources focused on human security.
- enhance the capacity to work independently, demonstrating initiative, self-organisation and time-management, as well as co-operating with other students to achieve common goals.
Bibliography
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