SOCIOLOGY 386 & 781 (ONLINE):
PEACE AND SOCIAL JUSTICE
Summer, 2009 |
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SyllabusReading AssignmentsTeam Games and ExercisesWeekly Assignments for pointsWEBBOARDPrevious Handouts/MaterialFinal Paper |
The concept of "justice" remains an ambiguous term. "Peace," while an apparently simple concept, is never as easy to define as it seems in practice. Peace and Social Justice (SOCI 386-online) critically explores these terms as they play out in varieties of contemporary social and international conflict. Emphasis will be placed on "social justice," as we examine the philosophical, historical, legal, and other factors that facilitate or restrict individuals, groups, and nations in pursuing a common good beyond individual self-interest. Emphasis will be placed on "social justice," as we address the philosophical and conceptual roots, ask "social justice for whom," and explore the relationship betweeen the "Enlightment tradition" and contemporary views of "justice and equality." Topics will include the law and crime, "environmental justice," gender justice, envirnomental justice, animal rights, racism and other topics around which social conflict emerges.This is an online course, and students must be self-directed, computer literate, and be able to interact efficiently and consistently in email, WebBoard, and Internet exercises. Students should contact the instructor (Jim Thomas) prior to the start of class at:
Jim Thomas - jthomas@math.niu.edu The course will meet face-to-face during the semester. Meetings are mandatory. MEETING DATES: (on-campus/Dekalb: 9 a.m. / Hoffman Estates: 2 pm) (NOTE: Students signed up on-campus or at Hoffman can attend either location - whichever is most convenient) ROOMS NIU: Psyc-Computer Science 203 HOFFMAN: TBA on arrival (usually posted in front lobby) Meeting 1: Saturday, June 13 Meeting 2: Saturday, July 11 Meeting 3: Saturday, August 8 TEXTS and READINGS: Avaiable at bookstore: --D. Sullivan and L. Tifft: Restorative Justice: Healing Foundations.... --Peter Singer: Practical Ethics Available on class homepage: --Plato's Republic (Selected readings) --Weekly online readings GRADING --Class participation: 100 points (10 pct of grade) --WebBoard: 250 points --Midterm exam: 100 points --Final exam: 100 points --Class exercises, games, and involvement: 300 points --Final Paper: 150 points ______________ TOTAL POINTS: 1,000 Grading is on a straight 90-80-70-60 pct scale --10 (10) points will be given to those who sign up on WebBoard and the class email list prior to 48 hours of first class meeting (by Thursday, June 11). 30 points will be deducted for those who sign up later than 72 hours AFTER the first class meeting.
Page maintained by: Jim Thomas - jthomas@math.niu.edu