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International Law

Offered By: Université catholique de Louvain via edX

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International Law Courses Human Rights Courses

Course Description

Overview

International Law is the law of the international community. In our globalized world, it is an expanding field and international politics cannot be understood today without some knowledge of the legal constraints bearing on it.

With this International Law MicroMasters program, you’ll master the language and institutions of international law. The MicroMasters program will give you a clear understanding of the ways by which international law exists as a legal order and bears on domestic governance (human rights), war (law of armed conflict), migration (asylum and refugee law) and the economy (investment law). You’ll learn to decode international news from a legal perspective and to understand the legal rules at play in specific professional fields of international relations (diplomacy, humanitarian aid, NGOs...).

If you’re not a lawyer, you’ll become able to interact with professional lawyers in an articulate way. If you already graduated in law, political sciences or international relations, you might even become interested in taking your MicroMasters credential to the next level, either by

  • Enrolling in an online LL.M. program organized by the UCLouvain Law school.
  • Or, becoming an on-campus degree student in the UCLouvain Advanced master in International Law in Belgium.


Syllabus

Courses under this program:
Course 1: International Law

Learn about the Law of the International Community, including how International Law is created, applied and upheld in today's world.



Course 2: International Human Rights Law

Learn how an individual’s human rights are protected from both public and private power by international laws.



Course 3: International Humanitarian Law

Learn how international law regulates armed conflicts, protects individuals in wartime, and guarantees minimum compliance.



Course 4: International Investment Law

Learn the features and dynamics of an important field of international law that grants rights to foreign investors to foster States’ development.



Course 5: Asylum and Refugee Law

What is asylum? What is the principle of non-refoulement? Who should be recognized and protected as a refugee? These notions are complex. Learn to understand and apply them!




Courses

  • 6 reviews

    12 weeks, 6-8 hours a week, 6-8 hours a week

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    Human rights have been defined as a concern of the international community since the post-Second World War period, when the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms and the prohibition of discrimination were included among the objectives of the newly established United Nations. They have significantly expanded their reach since: they now influence various branches of domestic law, including family law, employment law, corporate law, or criminal law. They also have influenced the shaping of international relations, in areas such as development cooperation, foreign debt, the global fight against terrorism, or the quest for sustainable development.

    Governments remain the main actors in the development of human rights. Civil society (non-governmental organisations) and social movements, however, increasingly contribute to shaping their contours, and human rights are now evolving as a result of the constant dialogue between international human rights bodies and domestic courts, in a search that crosses geographical, cultural and legal boundaries. This course will explore how human rights evolve and how they can be enforced and progressively realized. It will examine the sources of human rights, including both civil and political rights and economic, social and cultural rights. It will address the specific regime of human rights law as part of general international law. It will relate the rights of individuals to the duties of States (to respect, protect and fulfil human rights). And it will assess the effectiveness of the mechanisms of protection of human rights, at both domestic and regional or international levels.

    The course relies extensively on comparative material from different jurisdictions, to study a wide range of topics including, for instance, religious freedom in multicultural societies, human rights in employment relationships, economic and social rights in development, the human rights responsibilities of corporations, or human rights in the context of the fight against terrorism.

  • 14 reviews

    12 weeks, 6-8 hours a week, 6-8 hours a week

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    International law can be considered as the law of the international community, the law that governs relations between States. But it also relates to what international organizations do and, increasingly, it concerns individuals, corporations, NGO's and other non-state actors.

    As the world becomes more interdependent and more complex, and as new institutions are put in place to make international law more effective, international law has become an exciting, expanding field. Never before has it been so relied upon, used and developed. Despite their differences in size, power, culture, religion and ideologies, states rely on international law to cooperate and to coexist; they speak the language of international law and international law serves them as an important common language.

    This law course will extensively rely on judgments and advisory opinions of the International Court of Justice (ICJ), which is the principal judicial organ of the United Nations (UN).

    Having acquired a basic knowledge of international law, you'll find it easier to comprehend this subject in future international law sub-fields, like international human rights, international humanitarian law or international investment law.

    This course will teach you what international law is, the role it plays in the world today, how it can be used. You will also gain knowledge to help you better discern legal arguments within the flow of international news and reports.

    This course is part of the International Law MicroMasters Program that is designed to give learners a critical understanding of how international relations between States and individuals are dealt with, regarding the law.

  • 1 review

    12 weeks, 4-12 hours a week, 4-12 hours a week

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    Armed conflicts have always existed around the world. Unfortunately, recent events have shown that this phenomenon is becoming increasingly complex, especially with respect to some legal issues, such as:

    - The definition of combatants and the protection of detainees when terrorists are involved in the hostilities.
    - The detention by rebels of State armed forces.
    - The involvement and status of UN peacekeepers in armed conflicts.

    This course will help you understand these complex legal issues by teaching you the law of armed conflict , a branch of public international law also known as ‘International Humanitarian Law’ (‘IHL’).We will address these issues in light of recent practice, including counter-terrorism, such as the fight against non-state actors like ISIS and Al-Qaeda in different regions of the world, as well as other recent and older conflicts, such as those in Armenia, Afghanistan, Libya, Mali, and the Israeli-Palestinian one.

    The course will provide essential theoretical and practical knowledge for students, researchers and academics who wish to specialize in International Humanitarian Law as well as professionals, including members of NGOs, involved in armed conflict situations, or even members of armed forces.

    In this course, you can choose between an audit (free) track and a verified track ($199 fee).

    The audit track

    • Proposes a general approach to International Humanitarian Law (it’s a master level law course so learners with poor knowledge on this subject may have to work harder to understand the materials).
    • Assesses your mastery of the relevant concepts through multiple choice questions that avoid complex and controversial issues.
    • Implies a workload of about 4-7 hours/chapter

    The verified track

    • Offers a deeper and more complex learning experience: detailed considerations and developments on controversial issues, additional videos and readings.
    • Assesses your mastery of complex and controversial issues through more complex MCQ, case studies and peer review assignments.
    • Offers a staff graded final exam.
    • Implies a workload of about 8-12 hours/chapter.
    • Delivers a verified certificate (in case of passing final grade) and allows you to pursue the International Law MicroMasters credentials.
  • 1 review

    10 weeks, 6-8 hours a week, 6-8 hours a week

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    Are you aware of the controversial investor-State disputes and arbitral awards in which the public interest has been at stake, for instance, the protection of human rights and the environment? Do you recall recent cases such as Philip Morris v Uruguay and Vattenfall v Germany?

    In the aftermath of these high profile cases and in the context of the negotiation of new international investment treaties, like the CETA and the TPP, local populations, policy-makers and NGOs have come to realize the societal importance of international investment law and arbitration. Passionate and sometimes ill-informed discussions have resulted from this realization. They have focused on the features of international investment law, which has traditionally granted rights to foreign investors notably to foster States’ economic development. Central to these discussions are the issues of:

    • the balance between the protection of foreign investments/investors and the right of host States to regulate in order to protect public interest objectives;
    • the regulation of foreign investments, i.e., the duties and obligations of foreign investors;
    • the promotion of sustainable development in international investment law;
    • the legitimacy of arbitration tribunals to decide on disputes between host States and foreign investors;
    • the coherence of arbitration practice.

    Learning and understanding the features and dynamics of international investment law and arbitration is key not only for international lawyers and policy-makers, but it is also important knowledge for all well-informed citizens.

    In this law course, you will:

    • discover the history of international investment law and arbitration as well as understand the dynamics which shape its evolution;
    • learn the objectives of international investment law and the specific rights international investment agreements (bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements’ investment chapters) grant to foreign investors, for instance the fair and equitable treatment and the prohibition of illegal expropriation;
    • discover how those rights have been interpreted in investment treaty arbitration;
    • master the features and functions of investor-state arbitration;
    • understand why international investment law and investor-state arbitration are currently the subject of criticism and be able to assess the soundness of this criticism;
    • gain insight into the content of the treaties newly concluded, and be able to assess how they address the issues of the right of host States to regulate, of foreign investors’ obligations and of the legitimacy of arbitration tribunals.
  • 1 review

    14 weeks, 6-8 hours a week, 6-8 hours a week

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    What is asylum?
    What is the principle of non-refoulement?
    Who should be recognized and protected as a refugee?

    These questions are both ancient and contemporary.

    Whether you are a decision maker, a judge, a lawyer, a human rights activist, a student, a lawyer in the business law department of a private company that wants to hire or assist refugees, you will have to answer these questions. The answers are complex. They require precise theoretical and practical knowledge of national, regional and international law.

    The 1951 Geneva Convention on Refugees will enable you to master these questions. This Convention remains the cornerstone of international refugee protection. It is at the heart of this online course. You will analyze in detail the principle of non-refoulement, the definition of a refugee and the causes of persecution such as political opinion, race, nationality, religion or membership of a social group.

    This definition will allow you to identify the people who, legally, should be recognized as beneficiaries of refugee status and international protection. Using a conceptual tool, the three-scale theory , you will analyze in a rigorous and structured manner each distinct element of the refugee definition (persecution, risk, proof) as well as, in a comprehensive approach, the definition as a whole.

    By confronting theoretical analysis with practical situations, you will see that, if correctly interpreted, the Geneva Convention remains effective and still allows to this day the protection of many fugitives or refugees ( Flüchtling, réfugiés ).

    Beyond law, you will understand the value of an interdisciplinary approach, in particular when measuring the credibility of an asylum seeker’s narrative.
    You will examine the importance of regional, subsidiary or complementary protection in addressing armed conflict, events seriously disturbing public order or mass influxes of people in need of international protection. Regional protections find their source in European Law, African law or American Law.
    Finally, you will look at future challenges, such as the issue of climate refugees.

    Numerous sources will be provided throughout the course in order to help you understand the concepts such as relevant case-law, doctrine and guidelines of UNHCR and other international institutions on refugee issues and international human rights law (such as EASO).

    In this course, Asylum and Refugee Law, you will learn whether or not migrants can be returned to another country, whether or not they should be included in or excluded from the refugee definition, and whether or not to challenge the decision on someone’s refugee status. You will do all of this by developing a rigorous legal reasoning.


Taught by

Pierre d’Argent, Raphaël Van Steenberghe, Jerôme de Hemptinne, Olivier De Schutter, Jean-Yves Carlier, Yannick Radi and Sylvie Sarolea

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