LAW-40058 - International Refugee Law
Coordinator: Forough Ramezankhah Room: CBC2.009 Tel: +44 1782 7 34515
Lecture Time: See Timetable...
Level: Level 7
Credits: 15
Study Hours: 150
School Office: 01782 733218

Programme/Approved Electives for 2023/24

None

Available as a Free Standing Elective

No

Co-requisites

None

Prerequisites

None

Barred Combinations

None

Description for 2023/24

This module on international refugee law, although still of great contemporary relevance, presents a very unique perspective.
It is delivered in the context of international law however it offers an intersection between law, politics, sociology and psychology and in doing so offers an insight into the plight of asylum seekers as they seek international protection.


Aims
This module allows students to undertake an advanced study of international refugee law in its historical, political and social context. The module considers the legal protections available to refugees and the complementary protection as well as the shortcomings of the protection mechanism.
The aims of this module are to:
-understand, identify and analyse the evolution of the international protection regime as afforded to refugees
-explore and explain the rational underlying the legal and political responses of the international community to the challenges of forced migration
-demonstrate an understanding and knowledge of the legal principles and standards of awarding refugee status including human rights grounds

Intended Learning Outcomes

Satisfactorily use the academic conventions and relevant academic source materials to demonstrate knowledge and critical judgement in support of their view points, for example through library research and online database such as Westlaw and LexisNexis: 1
Satisfactorily identify and critique the key issues covered in the module via primary and secondary sources of international, regional and domestic legal, historical, political and social materials relating to international refugee law: 1
Through synthesis and analysis of the course reading materials come to some critical judgement by applying aspects of the core knowledge and its application to relevant and new challenges in the field of refugee law: 1
Present a coherent written piece of assessment that allow them to articulate to others a critical evaluation of the knowledge that they have acquired and its application in different potentialities and context relevant to the field of refugee law: 1

Study hours

12 x 2 = 24 of teaching time
12 x 5 = 60 preparation time, as every lecture (seminar style) entails advance reading and preparation
6 hours for an annotated bibliography for the last lecture
60 hours of independent research and reading for assessment

School Rules

None

Description of Module Assessment

1: Assignment weighted 100%
Research essay (4000 Words)
The assessment is a research essay of 4000 words. The module will be assessed on the basis of one research essay of 4000 words (100% of the end of semester assessment). Students will have the choice to write one research essay from a list of 5 essay titles. Five essay titles (four titles based on the taught content and one on the recent developments in the field of refugees studies) will be posted on KLE before the end of the semester. Students will have the opportunity to submit essay plans, bibliography and headings to the tutor for feedback prior to submission of the essay. The tutor will offer guidance on the detailed outlines (2 pages maximum).