About this course
Worldwide 1 billion people are chronically malnourished, including some 37 million people in developed countries. The human right to adequate food was formally recognized in 1966, in Article 11 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). The point of focus of this course is to discuss human rights from a multidisciplinary perspective and in relation to nutrition issues. In this course, illustrative examples from selected countries and case studies will play a crucial role in acquiring knowledge and understanding and developing abilities for using human rights concepts.
The course aims to:
- contribute to an understanding of the relationship between food, nutrition and human rights among professionals working in the field as well as beta and gamma students with for instance a Social Sciences, Human Nutrition, or Food Technology background;
- provide participants aspiring to, and professionals, working in food and nutrition security and interested in a human rights-based approach with the knowledge, abilities and motivation, to strengthen, design and implement programmes and interventions using a human rights-based approach;
- contribute to an interdisciplinary dialogue on the right to food and eventually create a new generation of specialists working with the right to food.
Learning outcomes
Analyze situations of hunger and malnutrition from a human rights perspective
Connect food-related social issues to the international human rights legal framework
Explain how legal scholars and social scientists approach the right to food
Design research on human rights issues, particularly on the right to food
Provide feedback on draft assignments to their peers
Assessment method
- Assignment other (40%) Research proposal.
- Assignment report (60%) Take-home exam.
Prior knowledge
Assumed knowledge gained in one of the following courses:
• Introduction to Law for the Life and Social Sciences (period 1)
• Essential Law (offered every period on-line)
• Food Crises: The Big Picture (SDC24306, period 1)
• Humanitarian Aid and Reconstruction (SDC34806, period 1)
Resources
- Course guide. Various articles, reports and cases posted in Brightspace.
Additional information
- Contact a coordinator
- Levelbachelor
- Mode of instructionon campus