Course Description
Over 20 million people are thought to be enslaved today (some in the United States). Several billion people experience hunger regularly including 14% of Americans. 1 in 6 children on the continent of Africa are dying before the age of five due to preventable diseases. Dictators who deny their citizens basic freedoms rule 70 countries. 125 countries have been found to torture people. And yet, humanity is making progress. In the past one hundred years, life spans have increased, literacy is on the rise, and dozens of new democracies have been created. This class will focus on humanity’s solutions to human rights problems. It will therefore focus on the positive. Many entities contribute to problem solving and we will study their methods. We will learn about the United Nations, non-governmental agencies, and what multinationals contribute. Thus, students will learn about humanities failures – the human rights abuses around the world – and humanities considerable achievements.Texts
The readings are a compilation from books including: An Introduction to Human Rights, NGOs in International Politics, Human Rights at the UN, Business and Human Rights. Students are also assigned reading from a good international daily newspaper.Requirements
This course will have short written assignments about the readings. Each student will be required to make one short presentation to the class about an NGO of their choice, and there will be two 5-8 page papers. Class discussion is, of course, a required feature as well.About the Instructor(s):
Sarita Cargas
Sarita Cargas, D.Phil. Oxford University, MA Psychology Georgetown, BA St. John’s College (ed. Encyclopedia of Holocaust Literature). My main research area is human rights, and I am currently writing a textbook on human rights. I teach in the Peace Studies program as well as in Latin American Studies at UNM.
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