LAWS 3089 Children’s Rights: Local and International
Credit Points 10
Coordinator Meda Couzens Opens in new window
Description Children’s Rights: Local and International introduces students to the rights of children at domestic and international level. Students are introduced to the rationale and the development of children’s rights as well as the international and the Australian legal framework for their protection. Amongst the selected topics discussed in more detail are juvenile justice; families and child protection; First Nations children and the law; the exploitation of children; access to justice and governance (domestic and international) and the rights of children. The subject exposes students to multidisciplinary approaches to socio-legal issues and develops their analytical skills to help them conduct research that involves international and comparative legal materials.
School Law
Discipline Law, Not Elsewhere Classified.
Student Contribution Band HECS Band 4 10cp
Check your HECS Band contribution amount via the Fees page.
Level Undergraduate Level 3 subject
Pre-requisite(s) LAWS 2004 Criminal Law AND
LAWS 2008 Government and Public Law
Restrictions
When the subject is delivered onshore (in Australia, at WSU campuses), no enrolment restrictions apply, but the students must have completed the pre-requisite subjects LAWS 2004 AND LAWS 2008.
When the subject is delivered offshore, the subject is not available for self-select enrolment. Intake in the subject will be restricted to expressions of interest. GPA and progression in the program will be considered, and the pre-requisites must be met. Students must be able to travel to the offshore destination for a specified period of 2 weeks (The dates for the term of offer will be made available to students through the School of Law's regular communication channels).
Learning Outcomes
After successful completion of this subject, students will be able to:
- Examine the historical, moral and legal foundation of children’s rights
- Examine the domestic and international legal and institutional frameworks for the protection of the rights of children
- Explain the multifaceted nature of children’s rights, their connections with other areas of law and the importance of multidisciplinarity for their protection
- Analyse law and policy as it applies to children, including First Nations children
- Integrate relevant international and comparative legal material on children’s rights
Subject Content
- Development and theoretical aspects in relation to children’s rights
- Introduction to the international framework for the protection of children’s rights (UN, regional systems, non-Western approaches)
- Introduction to children’s rights protection in Australia (sources of children’s rights, the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the Australian law; main children’s rights challenges in Australia)
- Children and criminal justice
- Children, family and the state
- The exploitation of children
- Children and information technology
- First Nations children and the law
- Children and access to justice (domestic and international)
- Governance (domestic and international) and the rights of children
Assessment
The following table summarises the standard assessment tasks for this subject. Please note this is a guide only. Assessment tasks are regularly updated, where there is a difference your Learning Guide takes precedence.
Type | Length | Percent | Threshold | Individual/Group Task |
---|---|---|---|---|
Log/Workbook | 1500 words or equivalent | 30 | N | Individual |
Presentation | 15 minutes | 25 | N | Group |
Essay | 2500 words | 45 | N | Individual |
Teaching Periods