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First-Year Writing Seminar - Non-Western History (103-8-22)

Topic

Laws, Empires, and Global History

Instructors

Helen Louise Tilley
847/467-3014
Harris Hall - Room 335

Meeting Info

Locy Hall 109: Mon, Wed 2:00PM - 3:20PM

Overview of class

How does our understanding of global history change when we foreground law and empire? To what extent have international legal regimes arisen out of imperial dynamics? Why were slavery and settler colonialism so important to so many constitutional histories? This course takes up these and other questions in order to make sense of the interplay between laws and empires around the world over the last four centuries (circa 1600 to 2000). We will examine: 1) the origins and effects of mixed jurisdictions (or legal pluralism) in different regions; 2) the ways empires have shaped key concepts of sovereignty and citizenship; 3) the role of transnational corporations in bolstering imperial rule; 4) the roots of empire in the history of human rights and global governance; 5) tensions between scientific and legal definitions of race, reality, and indigeneity; 6) Islamic law; and 7) entanglements between cultural and intellectual property.

Learning Objectives

To increase your knowledge of global and transnational history; to deepen your understanding of the historical interplay among law, empire, and global governance; and to refine your expository writing skills.

Evaluation Method

In class discussion, Seminar, Writing Assignments, Group Work, Presentations

Class Notes

Concentration: Global

Class Attributes

WCAS Writing Seminar