University of Cape Town Justice and Transformation

University of Cape Town Justice and Transformation

Justice & Transformation

Convenor:  Dr Helen Scanlon

Dr Scanlon is based in the School of African and Gender Studies, Anthropology & Linguistics
Rm 2.1, Harry Oppenheimer Building

+27 21 650-4205
h.scanlon@uct.ac.za

This interdisciplinary specialisation is offered in collaboration with departments in the Humanities Faculty, the UCT Law Faculty, the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation (CSVR), the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation (IJR) and the International Centre for Transitional Justice (ICTJ).

Specialisation objectives:

This Honours/Master’s specialisation has been designed to locate current concerns and topical interests in justice and transformation in the more general perspectives of normative theory and comparative studies. It is inspired by the new directions in writing, research and teaching generated by the South African TRC-process but not confined to these. Instead, it links these new research interests and current debates in the area of transitional justice (including human rights law, conflict-resolution and peace-building, and social justice in transformation) with the more lasting intellectual perspectives provided by a thorough grounding in relevant academic disciplines.

Admission requirements:

At Honours level: a first degree majoring with an upper 2nd or close approximation. At Master’s level: a good Honours degree or its equivalent.

Applicants should ideally have a major in, or some exposure to, Politics as an undergraduate subject.  However, depending on which area of concentration the applicant is interested in, the following additional study backgrounds may be taken into account when assessing applications:

Transitional Justice Majors in Politics, History, Philosophy, Sociology, Literature
Human Rights Senior courses in Law, LLB
Conflict Resolution Majors in Politics, Psychology, Social Anthropology, Sociology
Social Justice in Transformation Majors in Politics, Sociology, Social Anthropology, Psychology, Development Studies

Prescribed curriculum:

The full specialisation comprises 4 semester courses in each of the Honours and Master’s years plus an independent research project at Honours level and a Master’s minor dissertation component allowing exit options after the first year with an Honours degree and entry options at Master’s level. The specialisation offers a choice between two core courses and a selection of electives in the areas of Transitional Justice, Human Rights, Conflict Resolution, and Social Justice in Transformation.

PLANNING YOUR CURRICULUM

HONOURS (126 credits)

2 courses selected from:

  • POL4032F (Comparative Transitional Justice)
  • POL5037S (Post-Conflict Justice inAfrica)
  • a List A course
List A or List B Course List B Course or Internship POL4007H
(Research Project)
*20% + 20% 20% 20% 20%

MASTER’S (192 credits)

2 courses selected from:

  • POL4032F
  • POL5037S
  • a List A course
List A or List B Course List B Course or Internship POL5010W
(Mini-Dissertation)
*12.5% + 12.5% 12.5% 12.5% 50%

* the percentages provided are a general approximation of the weighting of each course in the overall mark calculation.  Some courses have slightly different credit totals than others, and occasionally students may need to take an extra course to fulfil the overall credit expectation.  In which case, the calculation differs slightly in terms of percentage weightings.

Core Courses

    Credits
POL4032F Comparative Transitional Justice 24
POL5037S Post-Conflict Justice in Africa 24

Electives

Select your electives depending on the area of concentration that you are interested in.  We include recommendations for which courses would fit with which area.  The areas of concentration are:

  1. Transitional Justice (TJ)

Courses in the area of Transitional Justice aim to provide a theoretical grounding and comparative understanding of the interdisciplinary field of Transitional Justice at the intersection of human rights discourses, democratic transitions and post-conflict reconciliation.

  1. Human Rights Law (HR)

Courses in the area of Human Rights Law aim to ground the professional and specialist studies in law in a broader theoretical and comparative understanding of the historical and political contexts in which Human Rights Law functions.

  1. Conflict Resolution (CR)

Courses in Conflict Resolution aim to provide a comparative understanding and practice-orientated introduction to current approaches to peace operations and post-conflict reconciliation in the African context.

  1. Social Justice in Transformation (SJT)

Courses in Social Justice in Transformation are designed to combine a focus on issues of social justice related to poverty and development with the combating of legacies of racism and redressing racial, gender and social inequalities within more general normative and theoretical perspectives.

Some of the areas of concentration provide for Internships, which may be substituted for one of the list B elective options.

List A Electives

    Recommended for: Credits
AXL4104F Gender, Peace and Justice CR, SJT 24
ECO4114S The Economics of Conflict, War & Peace CR 14
PBL5631S International Protection of Human Rights HR 30
PBL5634F Human Rights Law HR 30
PBL5647S Social Justice, Law and Development SJT 30
POL4039F Peace Operations in World Politics CR 24
POL4048F Dialectical Political Thought TJ 24
POL5029S Political Ethics TJ 24
POL5034S Conflict in Africa CR 24
POL5042F Peace-building: Issues & Problems CR 24
POL5046S Democratisation TJ 24
SOC5019F Race, Class and Identities CR 12

 

List B Electives

Students may select other electives appropriate to the programme and aligned to their research interests, subject to approval by the Convener.

    Recommended for: Credits
AXL4101F Gender and Violence TJ 24
AXL4103S Development Conflict and Political Change CR 24
AXL4106F Introduction to Gender and Transformation SJT 24
AXL4402S Anthropology of Societies in Transition TJ, SJT 24
AXL5402F Anthropology of Development SJT 24
CML4501F Dispute Resolution CR 9
CML5631S Mediation CR 30
CML5671F Negotiation CR 30
HST4055S Racism, Colonialism & Genocide CR 24
PBL5618S International Law on Disputes and the Use of Force HR 30
PBL5623F Governing Under the Constitution: Law and Practice HR 30
PBL5647S Social Justice, Law and Development   30
PBL5648S Social Justice in Practice SJT 30
PBL5815S Punishment and Human Rights HR 30
PBL5820F Theories of Crime and Social Order HR 30
PBL5822S Victims and Victimology HR 30
PHI4021S Topics in Rational Decision Making TJ 24
PHI4022F Moral Philosophy TJ 24
POL4044FS Global Political Thought TJ 24
POL5041F/S History of SA Political Thought   24
SLL4001S Representation of War in Fiction CR 24
SOC4010F Development Theory SJT 12
SOC5012S Sociology of Deviance SJT 12

 

Internships

May be substituted as the equivalent of 1 elective course.

POL4005H Internship Component I (Honours level) 24
POL5005H Internship Component II (Master’s level) 24

 

Research Methods courses

For Master’s doing field work/primary research/specialized data analysis.

AXL4401F Ethnographic Research Methods & Methodology 24
HST4034F Oral History: Method, Practice and Theory 24
POL5035F Data Analysis in Political Sciences 12
SOC5030F In-depth Interviewing and Analysis 12
SOC5052F Survey Data Analysis 12

Addresses & Maps

Physical & Postal Addresses

Mailing address:

Dept of Political Studies
(Rm 5.32 Robert Leslie Building)
University of Cape Town
Private Bag X3
Rondebosch 7701
South Africa

Physical address:

5th level (main office: Room 5.32)
Robert Leslie Building
University Avenue
Upper Campus
University of Cape Town
Rondebosch
7700

Maps and directions:

Map of Upper Campus (Robert Leslie building is in C3 on the grid)

Directions to UCT (we are on upper campus)