Admission requirements
The course is aimed at Honours students of the Faculty of Governance and Global Affairs. Selection of participants will be based on a letter of motivation and grades attained so far. Maximum number of students: 30.
Description
This course challenges and encourages outstanding honours students to study, analyse and evaluate the most pressing issues and problems of human security and global justice in both theory and practice. Taking the United Nations Development Report of 1994 (which mentioned the term ‘human security’ for the first time) and the Report of the Committee on Global Governance of 1995 (conceptualising the challenges of global governance) as starting points, students will examine and assess lessons from previous failed and (partially) successful attempts of predicting and addressing local and global security problems and will apply these lessons to persisting current and future challenges.
Themes to be covered range from threats to individual freedoms and human rights to war, peace, geopolitical transformations as well as traditional and non-traditional challenges (such as arms proliferation, peacekeeping and peacebuilding, poverty and development, climate change and ocean governance, cybersecurity and hybrid threats, global health and pandemic management) to global security and global governance.
Students will closely interact with major experts, diplomats, policy-makers and senior officials from international organisations and NGOs as well as with social entrepreneurs, in order to devise their own actionable, pragmatic but at the same time innovative solutions and scenarios for the future of human and global security governance. Whilst analysing core concepts, theories, risk analysis and scenario planning tools during lectures and blended learning sessions, students will also form and work in their own “think tank” groups of up to 4 students in order to create and advance their policy proposals.
Students with outstanding proposals will receive the opportunity of publishing their work at ISGA’s Security and Global Affairs blog and with cooperating international think tank partners. The organisation of a public student-led “Better World is Possible” Conference with dialogue partners and experts is part of the programme and rounds off the course.
Course objectives
By the end of this course, students will have acquired the following knowledge, insights and skills:
The ability to explain, analyse and synthesize core concepts and issues related to the themes of ‘human security’, ‘global governance’ and global security from a multi-level perspective (i.e. individual, local, national, regional, global)
The ability to analyse the main international organisations, institutions and capacities created at different levels to address major issues of human and global security, to identify and explain their weaknesses and needs for improvement
The ability to explain and apply basic methods of risk analysis and scenario planning in order to predict future human security and global affairs threats
The capacity to analyse and apply insights from social entrepreneurs, diplomats and policy-makers
The ability to synthesize core insights from the literature, scenario analyses and exchanges with guest speakers and external events in order to apply them to devising actionable policy innovations
The ability to cooperate effectively in teams
Skills
Research – analyse – problem solving – project work – cooperation – communicate verbal – communicate in writing – presenting -social conscientiousness-work independently - resilience
Timetable
On the right side of programme front page of the studyguide you will find links to the website and timetables, uSis and Brightspace.
Mode of instruction
This course is worth 5 EC, which means the total course load equals 140 hours.
Contact hours: 20
Self-study (including assignments and reflection): 120
Assessment method
50% Individual paper 2.000 words
50% Group paper 8.000 words
Reflection Report: ungraded
All grades should be sufficient in order to pass the course.
Reading list
Initial Background Reading (further specialised readings on core challenges will be provided in advance of the course):
Thomas G. Weiss and Rorden Wilkinson, Rethinking Global Governance, Polity Press, 2019
David Bornstein: How to Change the World: Social Entrepreneurs and the Power of New Ideas, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Human Development Report, Oxford University Press, 1994
Our Global Neighbourhood: Report by the Committee on Global Governance, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995
Global Challenges Foundation: What is Global Governance? https://globalchallenges.org/global-governance/
Registration
Please note: USIS and Brightspace registration will be done centrally.
Contact
Dr. Joachim Koops j.a.koops@fgga.leidenuniv.nl