LSJ 367 A: Comparative Law and Courts

Autumn 2024
Meeting:
to be arranged / * *
SLN:
18024
Section Type:
Lecture
Joint Sections:
POL S 367 A
Instructor:
Jonathan C Beck
PRE-RECORDED ASYNCHRONOUS LECTURES ** LSJ CORE OR LEGAL SUBFIELD PURPLE CURRICULUM. LSJ CORE, 300-LEVEL, OR UPPER- DIVISION ELECTIVE GOLD CURRICULUM.
Syllabus Description (from Canvas):

Hey you! Check out WEEKLY MODULES to see what you can be doing this week! You can also see what's coming up by checking the SYLLABUS.

 

Looking for section Zoom links? Check out your TA's "Page" (you can only access your section's page and link):

Jintong Han's Section Page (AF & AH)

Jessica Sciarone's Section Page (AA & AB)

Benjamin Soto's Section Page (AC & AG)

Yi Zhang's Section Page (AD & AE)

 

POLS/LSJ 367: Comparative Law and Courts

Instructor:                   Jonathan C. Beck
Office:                         Gowen 025
Office hours:               Wednesdays 1-3:00 p.m.
E-mail:                         jcbeck@uw.edu

Hybrid Online: Asynchronous Lectures, Synchronous Sections

Teaching Team:

Jintong Han (AF & AH): jtonghan@uw.edu 
Jessica Sciarone (AA & AB): jsciar@uw.edu 
Benjamin Soto (AC & AG): bensoto@uw.edu 
Yi Zhang (AD & AE): yiz42@uw.edu 

Course Overview

Are you interested in why law and courts matter for politics and policy? This course will introduce you to comparative judicial politics: how law, courts, and politics interact in countries throughout the world. The class is a core course in the Law, Societies and Justice program.

We begin by critically examining the (ideal) functions of courts: to provide for “order,” resolve disputes, and to enforce legal norms. We then turn to constitutional politics in democracies, asking whether and how constitutional courts have changed national policies and empowered individuals with new rights. Next, we study law and courts in supranational and international contexts, including the European Court of Human Rights, African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights, European Court of Justice, and the International Criminal Court. We conclude the course by looking at developments in judicial politics in countries that are undergoing transitions to democracy, transitioning to some as yet undefined system, as well as those in non-democracies.

Required Reading: All required readings will be posted for free on Canvas. There are no required textbooks.

Catalog Description:
Introduction to comparative judicial politics, focusing on the relationship between law and politics in cross-national perspective, as well as on the functioning of supranational and international legal entities in the international system. Offered: jointly with POL S 367.
GE Requirements Met:
Social Sciences (SSc)
Credits:
5.0
Status:
Active
Last updated:
February 16, 2025 - 9:10 am