LL.M. Curriculum

The Master of Laws in Intercultural Human Rights degree program is designed to be completed in 24 credits over two semesters, and offers a wide variety of courses for students to choose from. Four required LL.M. courses comprise eleven of these 24 credits; eight other elective one-week courses were developed specifically for the LL.M. program. In addition, students have to fulfill a writing requirement generally completed by enrolling in a related two-credit J.D. seminar, and they may take up to twelve elective credits from a variety of international and domestic law courses offered in the J.D. curriculum as recognized by the Program.

LL.M. Courses

Required LL.M. Courses

International Law
LLM 700 – 3 Credits
This course offers a study of the role of authority in the decision-making processes of the world community, including both the basic constitutive process by which international law is made and applied and the public order established. Consideration is given to formal prescription and effective practice with respect to the participants in such processes (nation-states, international governmental organizations, multinational enterprises, and other private associations and individuals), arenas of interaction, bases of power (control over people, resources and institutions), practices, outcomes and effects. The principal emphasis is on the many roles of the nation-state.
The International Bill of Rights
LLM 411a – 3 Credits
This introductory course on the International Law of Human Rights provides an overview of the standards, structures, and procedures designed to effectuate the international protection of human rights. The course primarily addresses the sources and processes of making international human rights law, encompassing universal and regional legal systems of human rights protection. The International Bill of Rights is commonly defined as encompassing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948 and the twin Covenants on Civil and Political Rights as well as Economic, Social and Cultural Rights of 1966. Starting from this normative framework, the scope of the Covenant rights as well as the duties of the States parties will be discussed. The course will also analyze the distinction between United Nations treaty bodies entrusted with monitoring and enforcing human rights obligations under various conventions, and United Nations Charter bodies, including the Human Rights Council, with its procedure of universal periodic review, as well as the Security Council and the issue of humanitarian intervention. An overview will be given of international criminal law, humanitarian law and their crossroads with the international law of human rights as well as the roles played by nation-state governments, non-governmental organizations and individual actors.
Regional Systems of Human Rights Protection
LLM 421 – 3 Credits

This course will provide students with an introduction to the substantive norms of human rights in the inter-American, European, and African systems of human rights protection, the main theoretical issues concerning the nature and scope of rights that appear in conventional instruments, and the diverse procedures available at the regional level for defense and protection of human rights. The course is broken down into three main sections:

  1. The Inter-American System of Human Rights Protection
    This part of the course will provide students with an introduction to the substantive norms of human rights in the inter-American system, the main theoretical issues concerning the nature and scope of rights that appear in conventional instruments, the diverse procedures available at the regional level for defense and protection of human rights, and the ways in which policymakers in the countries of the Western Hemisphere attempt to reconcile the demand for enforcement of human rights with the current of foreign policy objectives.
  2. The European System of Human Rights Protection
    This part of the course will give an overview of the 1950 European Convention on Human Rights and its procedural as well as substantive guarantees. The Convention is applied by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France. In the last half-century the Court has developed its own, rich jurisprudence. Its doctrines cover the right to life, the prohibition of torture, slavery and forced labor, criminal procedure and the principle of legality, privacy and family law issues, freedoms of speech, of press, of assembly and association, equal protection, right to property, prohibition of death penalty, right to free elections, etc.
  3. The African System of Human Rights Protection
    The part of the course will examine the practice of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR) regarding the review of individual NGOs complaints, with a case study of the implementation of the right to a fair trial, since it has developed important case law on this guarantee. The course will also deal with the development of in-site investigations and the thematic procedures, especially those relating to the mandates and work of the Special Rapporteur on extra-judicial, summary and arbitrary executions and of the Special Rapporteur on the conditions of prisons in Africa. The course will conclude with an evaluation of the work done by the ACHPR under its protective mandate and consideration on its future role in the context of the establishment of an African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights.
Armed Conflict and Individual Liability
LLM 416a – 2 Credits

This course explores issues of humanitarian law, i.e. the law of armed conflict, faced by professionals of war, relief workers, humanitarian organizations and others working in complex emergencies. Students will explore and analyze emerging and controversial aspects of law and policy. With the proliferation of conflicts around the globe, humanitarian organizations are being forced into new and unfamiliar territory. Increasingly, humanitarian professionals are attempting to provide relief in settings of diminished security and are grappling with the growing involvement of non-state actors – from rebel groups to private corporations to humanitarian organizations themselves – in situations of armed conflict.

This course also explores novel issues of criminal liability under international law, resulting from war crimes, genocide, crimes against humanity, and the crimes of aggression. It examines substantive elements of such crimes; jurisdictional elements of domestic and international law over international criminal activities; the implications of international cooperation in criminal matters, such as extradition and mutual legal assistance; and the history, practice, and impact of international war crimes tribunals, including the International Criminal Court under the Statute of Rome.

 

Elective LL.M. Courses

Ethical Moorings: Philosophical and Religious Foundations of Human Rights
LLM 420 – 1 Credit
This course explores the religious and philosophical roots of the development of human rights, ranging from natural law in the Aristotelian, Thomist and Kantian tradition to more pragmatic philosophies designed to bring about a public order of human dignity.
Human Rights Lawyering
LLM 423 – 1 Credit
The purpose of this class is to introduce students to the assessment and analysis of a given human rights situation and the employment of human rights advocacy via hands-on instruction in the representation of victims of human rights abuses, the litigation of pertinent issues, and the public advocacy, using old and new media, in the articulation and propagation of key human rights concerns. Emphasis will be placed on client relationships, strategy building and an overview of useful tools in the practice of human rights lawyering.
Human Rights and the Environment
LLM 418 – 1 Credit
This online course looks at the linkages between human rights and the environment, how such linkages can assist efforts to protect both human rights and the environment, and what further collaboration between these two fields might be pursued. This includes discussion of specific human rights that implicate the environment and the cases interpreting such rights, the use of the United Nations and regional human rights systems, as well as national courts, for enforcing human rights to protect environmental interests, and how human rights may be applied directly to corporations to protect the environment. A field trip to Florida’s Everglades National Park may be included as part of this course.
Human Rights and Religion
LLM 401 – 1 Credit
This course will explore the parameters of the essential norms of religious human rights — liberty of conscience, religious pluralism and equality, free exercise of religion, nondiscrimination on religious grounds, and autonomy for religious groups. Individual religious rights include the right to change one’s religion, to proselytize, and to reject one’s religion; allied rights include freedom of speech, association, and travel. While these are civil and political in nature, the rights of religious minorities are social, cultural, and possibly economic. These norms will be explored from various religious and non-religious perspectives with a view to understanding groups in the formation and protection of cultural heritage.
Human Rights in States of Emergency
LLM 416B – 1 Credit

The COVID-19 crisis has created an unprecedented disturbance in the enjoyment and the realization of human rights. Rights of the individual have been curtailed on account of a national emergency, to pursue the legitimate aim of securing public health. International human rights law foresees limitations on rights under very strict criteria. However, many times there is a clash between rights. This course addresses human rights in extreme situations, real or claimed, that pose a threat to a country’s or its people’s survival. This involves situations such as war and other man-made attacks, natural disasters and pandemics. The issues are whether, and to what extent, the peacetime structure and content of human rights survive the actual and claimed fundamental crisis. The course will draw a comparison of standards and their application through examples including inter-state war, terrorism, earthquakes, with a particular emphasis on the present COVID-19 crisis.

Human Rights and Terrorism
LLM 416 – 1 Credit
This course seeks to explore and critically analyze the continuum of terror violence, its goals, its means, its perpetrators, and its intersection with all aspects of human rights. It will begin with a history of the phenomenon of terrorism, the rise of the human rights idea and the interrelationship between the two. Before, but especially after September 11, 2001, legal systems both domestic and international have responded to the unprecedented assault with a concerted global effort. This course will closely scrutinize the international legal issues arising in this context.
International Economic Law and Human Rights
LLM 405 – 1 Credit
The principal objective of this course is to analyze the process of transformation of international economic law and to assess what has been achieved in light of ever more important concerns relating to the effective protection of human rights. Special emphasis will be put on the WTO, the World Bank, the IMF, the OECD, and the EU. Economic freedoms such as the freedoms of establishment, movement of persons, goods, services, and capital will be discussed, just as the content and impact of economic, social, labor as well as civil and political rights.
The Protection of Refugees
LLM 414 – 1 Credit

This course will start with an introduction to the concept of international protection of refugees and an examination of the various international attempts since 1921 to meet the problem of the forced movements of people due to persecution or armed conflict. This will be followed by an introduction to the basics of international refugee law, including the gaps in this body of law. This will in turn lead to a comparative study of the refugee definitions as a basis for the determination of refugee status, the issue of the safe third country and the problem of responsibility for determining asylum claim, and other contentious issues relating to refugee status determination.

Other themes will include: the mandate of work and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees; refugee protection and human rights; asylum; non-refoulement under the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugee under general human rights law; temporary or time-limited protection and “subsidiary protection”; refugee detention and freedom of movement; refugee protection in armed conflict and complex emergencies; security of refugee camps and settlements; the protection of refugee women and the problem of sexual violence against refugees; the protection of refugee children; the developing law of internally displaced persons; the solutions to the refugee problem; the challenge of repatriation; and the future of international protection.

The Right to Integral Human Development
LLM 411B – 1 Credit
This course analyzes the right to development as a human right, the notion of sustainable development, and the search for a new model of development that integrates, links and promotes dialogue amongst various social systems in order to achieve a development that is “founded on the dignity and freedom of every human person, to be brought about in peace, justice and solidarity.” Integral human development includes the idea of development as freedom, affording the material and spiritual resources that allow every human being to flourish.
The Right to Water and Sanitation
LLM 418A – 1 Credit

This course addresses water as the source of life, considering that the right to drinking water and sanitation is unquestionably a human right, without distinction of any kind: race, color, sex, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status. The human right to water is inextricably linked to the right to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, as well as to the right to life and human dignity, and constitutes a prerequisite for the realization of other human rights and integral human development.

Thesis – LL.M. in Intercultural Human Rights Thesis
LLM 424 – 3 Credits
In lieu of taking a three-credit elective course or a two-credit seminar, students may write a thesis specifically for the LL.M. Program on a topic of the students choosing within the field of human rights. The topic has to be related, in the broadest sense possible, to the field of human rights. If it relates to a societal problem addressed by the law, we suggest using the detailed problem- and policy-oriented analysis developed by policy-oriented jurisprudence. The thesis should consist of at least 15,000 words. Students must arrange supervision of their papers with a member of the law or LL.M. faculty who has indicated his or her willingness to act as supervisor.
Women’s Rights and Rights of the Child
LLM 422 – 1 Credit

This course explores issues arising from the universal and regional legal instruments designed to protect the rights of women and the rights of the child, including, but not limited to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women and the Convention on the Rights of the Child as well as their various protocols.

  1. Women’s Human Rights
    While human rights law has become a staple in legal discourse, women’s human rights law still lacks this universal recognition. Human rights violations of women tend to be recognized only if such violations resemble those of men. Women who are tortured for their political beliefs are granted the same protections as men in the same position. However, if the abuse takes other, gender-specific forms, such as rape and forced impregnation, involves non-political, i.e. social and economic rights, or is inflicted by private rather than governmental actors, human rights protections are being disregarded. In part, this is a function of the universal subjugation of women; in part it is the function of current human rights systems which values male-identified rights, i.e. political rights, above others and focuses on abuses by government actors. Because of the general disregard of women’s rights it is important to highlight the particular issues women face which involve violations of human rights. Such violations occur in the United States as well as internationally. In some cases, women are treated differently even though there is no justifiable, gender-based reason; in others, women are treated the same as men even though unequal treatment would be more appropriate; in a third group of cases women are treated unequally because of a received gender difference.
  2. Human Rights of the Child
    This part of the course will consider issues and problems affecting children in light of the 1989 Convention of the Rights of the Child and related protocols, its background, and its normative policy dimensions. It considers the identification of the child as the holder of certain rights, with the grant of procedural status to assert these rights in appropriate domestic judicial and administrative proceedings. It treats the substance of the Convention alongside implementation of its provisions and the guiding principles of interpretation and construction of the child’s “best interests”; the “evolving capacities of the child,” and equality in treatment (non-discrimination). It also addresses a variety of situations identified by the human rights community as making children especially defenseless, and discusses the child’s means of international protection.

 

Graduation Requirements

Graduation from the LL.M. Program in Intercultural Human Rights requires the completion of 24 academic credits of the LL.M. course of study, including all the required courses and necessary elective courses as detailed above.

The student needs to achieve a cumulative grade point average of 2.0 in order to graduate.

Course Schedule

LL.M. Course Schedule – Fall 2024

Click here for a printer-friendly version of the LL.M. Course Schedule Fall 2024

Fall 2024 LL.M. Required and Elective Courses**

Course #Course NameCr.ProfessorDays^Time^Room^
LLM 700 LAW 700International Law3Professor Roza Pati 08/28-11/20 W6:00-9:00 pA-112
LLM 411A LAW 411AThe International Bill of Rights3Professor Siegfried Wiessner ; H.E. Ibrahim Salama*; The Hon. Virginia Bras Gomes*8/19 – 9/7 M T Th Sat6:00-8:20 p; Sat 9:00 a -1:40 p [Sept. 2 class meets on Sept. 6]A-111
LLM 420 LAW 420Ethical Moorings: Philosophical & Religious Foundations1Professor John Makdisi09/16-09/21 M T Th Sat6:00-8:20 p; Sat 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 414 LAW 414The Protection of Refugees1The Hon. Denise Slavin9/30 – 10/5 M T Th Sat6:00-8:20 p; Sat 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 405 LAW 405International Economic Law and Human Rights1Professor Craig Hammer10/14 – 10/19 M T Th Sat6:00-8:20 p; Sat 9:00 a -1:40 pA-111
LLM 401 LAW 401Human Rights and Religion1Professor Gordon Butler10/28-11/2 M T Th Sat6:00-8:20 p; Sat 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 423 LAW 423Human Rights Lawyering {S}1Dr. Ana Maria Suarez Franco*; Professor Roza Pati11/11-11/16 M T Th Sat6:00-8:20 p; Sat 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111

*Distinguished Guest Lecturer

**LL.M. IHR students must also choose a qualifying Seminar (2 cr.).

LL.M. IHR students have the option to choose from a broad range of elective courses from the core elective courses related to the human rights law as well as from a variety of courses offered in the J.D. curriculum each semester.

LL.M. Course Schedule – Spring 2024

Click here for a printer-friendly version of the LL.M. Course Schedule – Spring 2024

Course #Course NameCr.ProfessorDays^Time^Room^
LLM 405B LAW 405BThe Art and Practice of Int’l Negotiations1Ambassador (ret.) Marisa Lino01/8-01/13 M T Th, Sa6:00-8:20 p Sa: 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 416A LAW 416AArmed Conflict & Individual Liability: I. International Criminal Law 1H.E. Judge Fausto Pocar* Professor Nicholas Rostow01/22-01/27 M T Th, Sa6:00-8:20 p Sa: 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 416A LAW 416AArmed Conflict & Individual Liability: II. Humanitarian Law1Professor Nicholas Rostow01/29-02/3 M T Th, Sa6:00-8:20 p Sa: 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 421 LAW 421Regional Systems of Human Rights Protection: I. The European System1Dr. Abadir M. Ibrahim Professor Federico Lenzerini*02/12-02/17 M T Th, Sa6:00-8:20 p Sa: 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 421 LAW 421Regional Systems of Human Rights Protection: II. The African System1Dr. Abadir M. Ibrahim02/20-02/24 T Th F, Sa6:00-8:20 p Sa: 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 421 LAW 421Regional Systems of Human Rights Protection: III. The Inter-American System1Dr. Abadir M. Ibrahim Professor Jaime Olaiz Gonzalez*02/26-03/2 M T Th, Sa6:00-8:20 p Sa: 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 407 LAW 407Self-Determination and Group Rights1Professor Siegfried Wiessner03/11-03/16 M T Th, Sa6:00-8:20 p Sa: 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111
LLM 416 LAW 416Human Rights & Terrorism1Professor Roza Pati03/25-04/1 M T W M6:00-8:55 pA-111
LLM 418A LAW 418AThe Right to Water & Sanitation1Dr. Tebaldo Vinciguerra* Professor Roza Pati04/15-4/20 M T Th, Sa6:00-8:20 p Sa: 9:00 a - 1:40 pA-111

*Distinguished Guest Lecturer
** LL.M. IHR students need to enroll in a qualifying J.D. elective course (3cr.)

View the Juris Doctor course calendar here: College of Law Course Schedule

View the College of Law academic calendar here: College of Law Academic Calendar