Module LAW3205 for 2022/3
- Overview
- Aims and Learning Outcomes
- Module Content
- Indicative Reading List
- Assessment
Undergraduate Module Descriptor
LAW3205: Law, Testimony and Trauma
This module descriptor refers to the 2022/3 academic year.
Module Aims
You will take part in developing knowledge in the field by conducting your own research project on the legal response to a traumatic event that you will choose to analyse. During lectures and seminars, you will receive guidance and support in developing both socio-legal research skills and research skills specific to the academic field. Socio-legal research skills include: planning a research project; ensuring that the project addresses the research question consistently; analysing a case study from a social perspective and from a legal perspective; building a bibliography according to decolonising principles; and developing critical thinking. The academic field specific research tools include learning the foundations of the field, i.e., its theories, concepts and case studies.
On successfully completing the programme you will be able to: | |
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Module-Specific Skills | 1. Demonstrate the ability to critically examine how legal responses to traumatic events influence society. 2. Demonstrate an understanding of the elements required for a legal response to a traumatic event to be effective and empowering. |
Discipline-Specific Skills | 3. Demonstrate the ability to critically examine the significance of legal narratives, the ways by which they are created and their influence on society. 4. Demonstrate a critical understanding of how different approaches to lawyering shape legal narratives. 5. Exhibit socio-legal research skills. |
Personal and Key Skills | 6. Exhibit the ability to design an independent research project. 7. Demonstrate the ability to conduct group presentations, provide feedback and critique to your peers, and mature as a consequence of the critique and feedback you yourself receive. 8. Demonstrate an understanding of research conducted according to decolonising principles. |