PA 5890 is also offered in Spring 2025
PA 5890 is also offered in Spring 2024
PA 5890 is also offered in Fall 2023
PA 5890 is also offered in Spring 2023
PA 5890 is also offered in Fall 2022
PA 5890 is also offered in Spring 2022
PA 5890 is also offered in Fall 2021
Spring 2022 | PA 5890 Section 002: Topics in Foreign Policy and International Affairs -- Politics & Law of Conflict Mgmt & Intervention (66847)
- Instructor(s)
- Class Component:
- Lecture
- Credits:
- 3 Credits
- Repeat Credit Limit:
- 15 Credits
- Grading Basis:
- Student Option
- Instructor Consent:
- No Special Consent Required
- Instruction Mode:
- Completely Online
- Class Attributes:
Online Course
Topics Course
- Enrollment Requirements:
- Graduate Student
- Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
Tue,
Thu 08:15AM - 09:30AM
Off Campus
UMN REMOTE
- Enrollment Status:
Open (17 of 30 seats filled)
- Also Offered:
- Course Catalog Description:
- Selected topics.
- Class Notes:
- Course will be offered REMOTELY (synchronously online). Full title: "Politics & Law of Conflict Mgmt & Intervention." Some knowledge of international relations will be useful as a basis for this course. 50A Humphrey School has been reserved for students to use during the scheduled class time. http://classinfo.umn.edu/?mukho017+PA5890+Spring2022
- Class Description:
- This course will invite students to consider the ways in which politics and law inform, undermine, and bypass one another in the realm of conflict management and military intervention. We will draw from a rich set of cases across time and space to examine the notion of "threats to peace and security" as it has evolved. We will, then, turn to the basket of instruments that make up contemporary intervention and conflict-management, starting with prevention and the right to exercise self-defense. We will, then, move into the space of military interventions that have been framed (both strictly and loosely) as means of keeping or restoring the peace. From here, we will enter the arena of more aggressive interventions, those that aim at the breaking, making, or remaking of states. Finally, we will consider the newest frontiers of intervention, those that have been charted in the last decade. Shadowy threats and elusive enemies have led to a variety of new, often controversial campaigns. New kinds of technology that could only have been imagined a few decades ago have made possible unprecedented forms of stealth and interference. And, yet, some of the world's most powerful states find themselves struggling on and off the battlefield. This is the conundrum we will consider in this final section of the course. Even as we consider the politics and geopolitics at hand, we will situate our empirical analysis of each case and/or phenomenon within the larger context of key legal doctrines, debates, and dilemmas. Unlike other survey courses on conflict management, we will not approach the material as a chronological catalog of interventions. Instead, we will engage the material thematically, juxtaposing more contemporary cases with historical ones in order to understand the various evolutions in political, legal, and operational thought.
- Textbooks:
- https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/66847/1223
- Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
- 23 November 2020
ClassInfo Links - Spring 2022 Public Affairs Classes Taught by Dipali Mukhopadhyay