
- UCAS course code
- LR40
- UCAS institution code
- M20
BSc International Disaster Management and Humanitarian Response and Spanish
Year of entry: 2023
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Course unit details:
Young people in conflicts and displacement (20th-21st centuries)
Unit code | HCRI30641 |
---|---|
Credit rating | 20 |
Unit level | Level 3 |
Teaching period(s) | Semester 1 |
Offered by | Humanitarian Conflict Response Institute |
Available as a free choice unit? | Yes |
Overview
This course introduces students to a global history of children in modern situations of war and displacement. Drawing on specific case studies, it puts into perspective current issues that are at the forefront of public and policy debates (war on children in Syria and Yemen, child soldiers in Myanmar and South-Sudan, refugee youths in Western Europe, army recruitment of adolescents in the UK, etc.). As part of our discussions, we will address how history and humanities more generally can help humanitarian practitioners to be better prepared to work in complex environments.
Aims
- Deepen critical reasoning and intellectual curiosity.
- Strengthen written and oral communication skills.
- Engage critically with a wide range of academic literature.
- Reflect on the long-term influence of the past on public debates, policy frameworks, and humanitarian action.
- Understand the wider usefulness of humanities and social science for the humanitarian sector, especially in matters involving children and young people.
Knowledge and understanding
- Gain a global understanding and historical overview of the experiences of children in war and displacement.
- Learn about specific case studies.
- Identify the evolutions of legal, practical, and cultural understandings of childhood and child’s protection.
- Grasp the challenges of conducting historical and social research with children.
Intellectual skills
- Critically engage with a wide range of disciplines and materials.
- Familiarise yourself with many different geographical and chronological settings.
- Develop a critical understanding of the methodological challenges of history writing and their relevance beyond the discipline.
- Further develop awareness of current humanitarian issues around children in war and displacement and their longer histories.
Practical skills
- Demonstrate analytical and debating skills with peers and tutor.
- Demonstrate efficiency and creativity in writing.
- Show effective use of library resources and search engine to gather information.
Transferable skills and personal qualities
- interpretation and argumentation (written and oral)
- communication
- interpersonal skills
- project and time management
- cultural and ethical awareness
Employability skills
- Other
- - Analytical and intellectual skills (written and oral) - Communication and Presentation skills - Interpersonal skills - Research skills - Meeting deadlines - Working autonomously
Assessment methods
Policy brief | 40% |
Essay Proposal | N/A |
Essay | 60% |
Short summary identifying the key takeaways of each class | N/A |
Feedback methods
Feedback method | Formative or Summative | ||||||||||||||
Written feedback on assignments | Summative | ||||||||||||||
Written feedback on research proposal | Formative | ||||||||||||||
Informal guidance during seminars | Formative | ||||||||||||||
Peer review and oral feedback in class |
Davey Eleanor. HPG Policy Brief: Humanitarian history in a complex world (London: Overseas Development Institute, 2014). Davin Anna. ‘What is a child?’ in Anthony Fletcher and Stephen Hussey (eds), Childhood in Question: Children, Parents and the State (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1999), 15-36. Honwana Alcinda. ‘Children's Involvement in War: Historical and Social Contexts’, The Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth, 1:1, (2008), 139-149. Kushner Tony. ‘Truly, madly, deeply … nostalgically? Britain’s on–off love affair with refugees, past and present’, Patterns of Prejudice, 52:2-3 (2018), 172-194. McLaughlin Carly. ‘“They don’t look like children”: child asylum-seekers, the Dubs amendment and the politics of childhood’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 44:11 (2017), 1757-1773. Oh Arissa. ‘From War Waif to Ideal Immigrant: The Cold War Transformation of the Korean Orphan’, Journal of American Ethnic History, 31:4 (2012), 34-55. Pignot Manon. ‘Drawing the Great War: Children's Representations of War and Violence in France, Russia, and Germany' in Mischa Honek and James Marten (eds). War and Childhood (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018), 170-188. Rosen, David. Child Soldiers in the Western Imagination. From Patriots to Victims (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2015). |