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SGIA43015: Consolidating Peace after Violence

It is possible that changes to modules or programmes might need to be made during the academic year, in response to the impact of Covid-19 and/or any further changes in public health advice.

Type Tied
Level 4
Credits 15
Availability Available in 2024/2025
Module Cap
Location Durham
Department Government and International Affairs

Prerequisites

  • None.

Corequisites

  • None.

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • None.

Aims

  • To study, at an advanced level, the complex and inter-related issues of post-war recovery and reconstruction in failed and fragile states.
  • To examine post-war reconstruction and recovery through a sustainable peace building analytic lens.
  • To explore linkages between state stabilisation, the establishment of good governance through democratic processes, building sustainable peace and security
  • To examine contributions from civil society in state building and peace building processes.

Content

  • Indicative module content typically includes: the design of power sharing models of governance and post-war constitution-building; anti-corruption; election processes and election monitoring; track 2 and track 3 contributions to peacebuilding; demobilisation, disarmament and re-integration; the role of business; reconciliation and transitional justice; international criminal courts; law, order and an independent judiciary; inclusion, civil society and local perspectives; development, humanitarianism and peace building; aid conditionality.

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • Students will have, by the end of the module,
  • An advanced knowledge of theories and concepts of building peace and state building in fragile states, particularly from the perspective of civil society.
  • An advanced understanding of the linkages between the various elements involved in building peace, civil society and state building
  • knowledge, at an advanced level and drawing from recent research, of the activities of agencies in the areas of building peace, civil society and state building
  • An understanding of the methodologies used to study building peace, civil society and state building, and of the impact of our choice of methodology and conceptual framework on our understanding of conflict and negotiations, and vice versa.

Subject-specific Skills:

  • Students will be able, by the end of the module,
  • To relate linkages between state stabilisation, the establishment of good governance through democratic processes, building sustainable peace and security with contributions from government, international organisations and civil society in state building and peace building processes
  • To engage in research projects at MA level in the subject of conflict analysis and principled negotiation
  • To apply subject related knowledge and advanced theoretical models to the evaluation of current local and global issues, to interpret and analyse empirical data at an advanced level and according to competing explanatory frameworks, and to recognise the impact of a chosen conceptual framework on ones research findings.

Key Skills:

  • Students will be able, by the end of the module,
  • To demonstrate an ability to construct argument critically for both oral and written presentation from different sources of material, including material delivered orally and in an article review, report or policy document.
  • To demonstrate an independent approach to learning, critical thinking and creative problem-solving.
  • To use sophisticated techniques of information retrieval and management using an array of print and digital resources.
  • To formulate complex arguments in articulate and structured English, within the discursive conventions and genres of academic writing and written to high academic standard
  • To demonstrate effective time management.

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • Students will be taught and learn through self-guided learning, lectures, class discussion, and seminars.
  • Students are taught through one-hour lectures, followed directly by one-hour seminars that combine different teaching approaches among them student presentations, discussions, role-plays. Each lecture will introduce the students to the key theoretical approaches and accommodate the differential knowledge and disciplinary skills of different cohorts.
  • The seminars encourage students to explore the module content in detail and guide students through required and further reading. The seminars will enable students to develop their abilities to conduct research, to communicate, to present theoretical alternatives and data, and to develop their own argumentation skills. Occasionally, seminar groups will be combined into larger two-hour sessions to accommodate specific activities. Class discussion encourages background reading, contributing to the students independent learning. It will further allow students the opportunity to exchange ideas, to explore issues and arguments that interest or concern them in greater depth, and to receive feedback from both the group and the lecturer on their own arguments and understanding. Class discussions and seminar tutor interventions will be the main form of formative feedback students receive on this module, and students will be made aware of this at the start of the module.
  • A 3,000 word essay will form the assessed element of the module. Summative assessment by essay formally tests the skills developed throughout the course. The essay, to be submitted at the end of teaching, tests the ability to plan a substantial piece of work, identifying and retrieving sources and selecting and displaying appropriate subject specific knowledge and understanding. It tests the ability to develop an extended discussion which utilises concepts and examines competing interpretation and analysis. It also develops key skills in sustaining effective written communication and information presentation to high scholarly standards. It enables students to demonstrate that they have sufficient subject knowledge to meet the assessment criteria, that they have achieved the subject skills and that they have acquired the modules key skills. In particular, summative essays test the acquisition of knowledge through independent learning and the ability to apply it in critical argument in relation to a specific question. They furthermore help students to develop time management skills by working to a deadline, as well as the ability to seek out and critically use relevant data sources. The summative assessment will test skills of synthesis, analysis and critical evaluation with reference to material drawn from the module.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Lectures9Weekly1 hour9 
Seminars9Weekly1 hour9Yes
Preparation and Reading132 
Total150 

Summative Assessment

Component: EssayComponent Weighting: 100%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Essay3,000 words100 

Formative Assessment

Formative assessment will take the form of continuing feedback in seminars.

More information

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