Course Syllabus
This course page is still under development, but weeks 1 and 2 are available in Modules and you can read the current draft of the Syllabus!
TA Information
Michael Esveldt
Contact: mesveldt@uw.edu or Canvas
Office Hours: Monday 1:30-3:30p (zoom) or by appointment. If those times do not work for you, contact me and list times you can meet
Rachel Ketola
Contact: rketola@uw.edu or Canvas
Office Hours: Mondays 12-2pm at SMI 265 or by appointment if those times don't work.
Roman Pomeshchikov
Office Hours: Drop-ins on Tuesdays from 12:35-1:30pm in Smith Hall M265. On Thursdays, my office hours are available by appointment. Please schedule a day in advance using the following link.
Course Overview
Law is central to social life: it shapes the distribution of power and resources, opportunities, relationships, punishment, and even our personal identities. Law is also shaped by social dynamics in complex ways. But what exactly is the law, and what different forms does it take? What gives law its power? How does it shape our everyday lives and identities? How does it create and enact violence, even as it seeks to suppress it? How can it be used to both protect and challenge rights, power, and privilege?
This course will introduce you to the social scientific study of law, as well as some of the main foci of the Law, Societies & Justice major, including violence, rights, and justice. Real world topics will be explored to illustrate the larger themes.
- What is law, and how does it matter? What are its intended and unintended consequences? Why does law on the books differ from law in action? How do social forces shape law’s meaning, application, and enforcement, and why is the impact of these social forces changing and uncertain? Why is legal discretion inevitable, and why does this matter?
- What is law’s relationship to violence? How and why does law entail and enact violence, even as it seeks to suppress it? Why does this matter?
- What are rights, and how are they related to law and justice? How do people make rights- claims in struggles over law and justice? What happens when rights claims conflict? How do struggles over rights relate to justice? How can rights-claiming enhance justice, and how can the assertion of rights trigger counter-mobilizations and undermine justice?
Course Summary:
Date | Details | Due |
---|---|---|