Global Governance and the Rule of Law in Poland and Abroad
1300-GG-RlPA-KPP
Global governance is understood as “a dynamic process in which legal, political and economical arrangements unleash interests, change the balance of force, and lead to further reinvention of the governance scheme itself.” We need to come up with innovative approaches to global policy in the face of a legal and institutional architecture manifestly ill-equipped to address our most urgent global challenges. Poverty, conflict, injustice and inequality are also legal and institutional regimes that we can study on the basis of the Polish legal and political system taking the global order as a reference point. Present challenges to the liberal legal order in Poland and in the Western countries motivates us to think to present renewed architecture of the national and international legal order. Global governance research explores the ways in which they are reproduced and what might be done in response to propose a useful de lege ferenda approach that could be reflected upon by the legislators . The aim of the course is to provide a platform for new thinking about Polish legal order and international legal and institutional arrangements in the world of an urgent need for responsibility for the future. It also aims to present what role can Poland and Europe play in this process. Is global governance possible? Is wider responsibility possible?
Total student workload
Number or hours with the lecturer:
- participation in the lectures - 20 hours
-Individual time required for self study:
Preparation for the classes – 80 hours
Preparation for the essay – 40 hours
consultations with the lecturer – 10 hours
Total: 150 hours (6 ECTS)
Learning outcomes - knowledge
Within the scope of knowledge:
1.The goal is to make students knowledgeable about the leading issues of global governance:
Student knows major philosophical issues involved in the field of global governance and is able to sort and compare different themes according to existence of reciprocal links between them.
2.To make students knowledgeable with representative texts that touch on main problems concerning global governance:
Student becomes familiar with philosophical concepts supporting analysis of the main global governance issues, he/she can assign them to specific authors and point out to philosophers dealing with particular subjects.
3. Shaping consciousness of the students about the importance and significance - for science and society - of reflection on issues of global governance:
Students are able to identify the relationship between the issues of epistemology and scientific and social problems. Students are able to assess the degree of interrelation between the theoretical and the practical aspects of discussed problems.
Learning outcomes - skills
Within the scope of skills:
1.Gaining skills in the ability to analyze scientific text and undertake discussion around above-mentioned topics:
The student explores and analysis scientific texts in the light of particular problems, he/she can present them and be critical about them.
2.Gaining skills in the efficient use of specialized terminology and presenting workable hypotheses within above-mentioned topics:
The student can present the arguments from selected texts and independently problematise selected issues in the philosophy of human rights.
Learning outcomes - social competencies
Within the scope of social skills:
1.Gaining skills in examining scientific problems and be critical about them.
2.Gaining skills in reproducing the arguments of the selected texts and self problematizing selected issues of contemporary discourse of global governance.
3.Gaining skills in indicating relationships between the issues of epistemology and scientific and social problems. Understanding their mutual influence and shaping ability to assess the degree of theoretical and practical problems.
Type of course
core frame supplement (attribute withdrawn)
Prerequisites
Good knowledge of English
Course coordinators
Assessment criteria
Written essay and active participation in the class
Criteria:
0-59% failed
60%-69% - sufficient
70%-85% - good
86%- 100% - very good
Practical placement
Additional information
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors,
localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: