International Human Rights Advocacy | William S. Richardson School of Law
588
LWPA

International Human Rights Advocacy

Law School Description

This course will teach students how to engage in the United Nations Charter-based human rights mechanism or treaty-based mechanism in cooperation with the international or domestic human rights organizations. The course provides students with an opportunity to develop skills for legal consultancy, advocacy, international litigation, and/or other legal practice for promoting and protecting human rights. The course consists of seminars on selected aspects of international human rights norms, institutions, and legal skills for fact-finding, evidence gathering, interviewing, campaigning, and reporting, which will be combined with targeted activities for international human rights advocacy. Students will choose the topic of his or her activities for the semester in consultation with the professor, and each enrolled student will join a group with similar issue areas approved by the professor.

UH Mānoa Catalog Description

Applying international human rights law and legal skills to promote and protect human rights by way of United Nations Charter-based human rights mechanism, treaty-based mechanism, or other international human rights institutions. 

Typical Course Credit

1-3

Credit Limit

3

Repeat Limit

Not Repeatable

Instructor Approval

No

Competition

No

Assigned Sections

No

Bar Course

No

Clinical Requirement

No

Certificate(s)

Pacific-Asian Law

Semesters Offered

Class Instructor(s) Term Yearsort ascending
View class page Tae-Ung Baik
Fall
2021
View class page Tae-Ung Baik
Spring
2017

Tentative Course Rotation

Full Time
Annually
Fall & Spring
Part Time
Annually

Effective Since

Fall
2016

Offering

Regular

Schedule Type

Lecture (LEC)

Major Restrictions

Law
Account
Pages