Degree Course: Security and human rights
A.Y. 2021/2022 
Conoscenza e capacità di comprensione
Per quanto concerne i risultati di apprendimento, il corso si prefigge di raggiungere i seguenti obiettivi, nell?ambito degli indicatori di Dublino:
- Conoscere e comprendere la relazione e il dualismo tra sicurezza e diritti umani nel mondo globalizzato (obiettivo di area filosofico giuridica-economica-geografica)
- Conoscere e comprendere le specificita del rapporto tra sicurezza e diritti nelle diverse realta storico-sociali europee ed extraeuropee (obiettivo di area storica-politologica-giuridica)
- Conoscere e padroneggiare gli strumenti di analisi delle sfide giuridiche, politiche, economiche e sociali alla "sicurezza umana" (obiettivo di area sociologica-economica-giuridica)
- Sapere interpretare e comprendere i fattori di cambiamento di breve, medio e lungo periodo, connessi alla crisi della statualita e all'emergere di nuovi bisogni e nuovi diritti (obiettivo di area storica-sociologica-giuridica)
- Conoscere e saper comprendere il linguaggio tecnico della sicurezza internazionale e le strutture grammaticali e sintattiche di livello avanzato che consentono di esprimere le competenze acquisite in lingua inglese (obiettivo di area sociologica-politologica-linguistica)
La verifica del raggiungimento dei risultati di apprendimento avviene sia con le prove di esame, in forma orale e/o scritta, sia attraverso relazioni, presentazioni, homework e/o verifiche intermedie.
Capacità di applicare conoscenza e comprensione
- Saper applicare le proprie conoscenze in ambiti professionali nazionali e internazionali e nell'analisi di situazioni complesse (obiettivo di area storica-politologica-giuridica)
- Essere in grado di applicare le proprie conoscenze nel contesto del mondo delle professioni nazionali e sovranazionali, cosi come nel campo della ricerca teorica e sul campo (obiettivo di area giuridico-linguistica)
- Riuscire a trasformare le conoscenze acquisite in un asset spendibile in ambiti professionali, istituzionali e non, nella consulenza interna e internazionale, nella divulgazione e nella ricerca (obiettivo di area giuridico-linguistica)
La capacita di applicare conoscenza e comprensione viene potenziara attraverso le lezioni frontali, lo studio dei testi consigliati e del materiale didattico fornito dai docenti, la discussione di casi giurisprudenziali, nonche tramite le altre attivita formative svolte dagli studenti sotto la guida dei docenti o di tutor come stage e tirocini e la partecipazione alla Summer Training School annuale.
Il raggiungimento dei risultati viene verificato tramite esami scritti e/o orali e tramite relazioni, presentazioni, homework e/o verifiche intermedie.Autonomia di giudizio
- Essere in grado di confrontarsi con decisioni che presuppongono la soluzione di problemi complessi, grazie alla capacita di integrare le proprie conoscenze anche di fronte a dati e informazioni parziali
- Essere in grado di utilizzare le proprie conoscenze per formulare giudizi autonomi sulla dimensione etico-sociale dei fenomeni studiati
- Saper applicare le conoscenze acquisite in relazione alle problematiche tipiche dei rapporti tra attori della sicurezza e enti posti a difesa dei diritti umani
- Sapersi confrontare con problematiche non familiari, in virtu dell'approccio multidisciplinare e dinamico fornito dal corso di studi
- Saper applicare le conoscenze acquisite nello sviluppo di competenze professionali fortemente innovative, necessarie per confrontarsi con l'evoluzione dei settori professionali e la domanda di "lavori nuovi"
- Saper applicare le conoscenze acquisite nell'analisi di dinamiche connesse agli impieghi nei settori della migrazione e della gestione della mobilita umana nell'area mediterranea
- Saper applicare le conoscenze acquisite nell'analisi di dinamiche connesse agli impieghi nei settori delle nuove tecnologie dell'informazione, del web e della gestione dei dati
- Saper applicare le conoscenze acquisite nell'analisi di dinamiche connesse agli impieghi nei settori della green economy e della resilienza ambientale nelle societa post-industriali
- Essere in grado di compiere scelte strategiche coerenti con i principi di responsabilita e non discriminazione, anche di genere
Gli studenti iniziano a sviluppare un?autonomia di giudizio nel corso delle lezioni e dei seminari a carattere interattivo, dove gli studenti sono chiamati, all?interno di momenti di riflessioni collettiva, a esprimere il proprio punto di vista sugli argomenti trattati, nell?ambito di un confronto con i docenti e tra studenti.
Sotto questo profilo, la discussione di problemi applicativi, anche legati a casi giurisprudenziali, e particolarmente utile, in quanto consente agli studenti di sviluppare (e al docente di valutarne) la capacita di combinare conoscenze diverse e di individuare chiavi di lettura originali o comunque autonome per l?analisi e soluzione dei problemi posti.
La capacita argomentativa e di espressione di un pensiero critico, autonomo e originale, e verificata e valutata altresi in sede di esame, oltre che nell?ambito di esercitazioni che prevedano la redazione di elaborati scritti.
Apposite modalita di svolgimento delle esercitazioni sono previste per gli studenti che seguono a distanza, opzione resa possibile dalla dotazione dei piu avanzati strumenti e programmi informatici nella disponibilita dell?Ateneo.Abilità comunicative
- Possedere la capacita di redigere rapporti e relazioni sui temi e sulle attivita del corso di studi
- Saper comunicare in pubblico
- Saper gestire la comunicazione istituzionale nel rispetto dei principi di trasparenza e riservatezza
- Dimostrare piena padronanza della lingua inglese, inclusi i lessici disciplinari
Il miglioramento delle abilita comunicative in forma scritta e promosso tramite la redazione di papers su problemi di tipo teorico, nonche di relazioni e rapporti nell?ambito di seminari ed esercitazioni su casi pratici.
Al potenziamento delle abilita comunicative in forma orale concorrono, altresi, varie attivita, che includono innanzitutto momenti di discussione e riflessione collettiva nell?ambito di lezioni e seminari, nonche la esposizione di ricerche e relazioni redatte nell?ambito di esercitazioni.
Il docente valuta la capacita degli studenti di comunicare in maniera corretta e nel rispetto dei vincoli formali e contenutistici propri delle comunicazioni istituzionali, aspetto cui e dedicata particolare attenzione nell?occasione di workshop aventi ad oggetto simulazioni di situazioni di confronto istituzionale (es.
moot courts).
In tutti i casi e richiesto il corretto uso della lingua inglese, in forma scritta e orale, e del linguaggio tecnico-disciplinare: per il potenziamento di tali competenze linguistiche rispetto al livello di conoscenza richiesto per l?ammissione (almeno pari a B2), oltre alla frequenza degli insegnamenti del corso, tutti erogati in lingua inglese, e previsto, tra le materie affini del primo anno, un apposito insegnamento di inglese per le relazioni internazionali e i diritti umani.
Nelle occasioni richiamate e in sede di prova finale, tali abilita comunicative sono verificate dai docenti, rappresentando uno dei parametri del giudizio sulla preparazione dello studente.Capacità di apprendimento
- Sviluppare autonome capacita di approfondimento metodologico e contenutistico
- Sviluppare autonome capacita di aggiornamento spendibili per una professionalizzazione incrementale post lauream
- Sviluppare la capacita di procedere alla selezione, all'elaborazione e all'analisi dei dati oggetto di studio
- Avere la capacita di apprendimento necessaria per procedere a percorsi avanzati di perfezionamento e professionalizzazione, sia in Italia che all'estero
Con riferimento ai c.d.
learning skills, e promosso l?utilizzo da parte degli studenti di banche dati e altri strumenti di informazione scientifica per raccogliere letteratura, dati e statistiche da utilizzare come base per analisi e ricerche, utili in particolare ad ampliare casistiche note, individuare sviluppi e istituire collegamenti tra i temi trattati a lezione.
Il docente fornisce assistenza anche con suggerimenti di lettura e indicazione di metodo (ad es., con riferimento ad analisi e rapporti rilevanti), promuovendo, al contempo, le capacita di ricerca individuali.
Gli studenti devono dimostrare di padroneggiare gli strumenti di ricerca e le fonti, nonche di sapere raccogliere, selezionare, elaborare ed analizzare i dati rilevanti.
Il docente valuta, altresi, la capacita di utilizzare i dati per problematizzare e ampliare le conoscenze acquisite, proponendone una interpretazione aggiornata e autonoma.
Anche queste capacita sono oggetto di valutazione nei giudizi relativi alle attivita individuali e di gruppo, rese possibili, anche a distanza, dalla strumentazione hardware e software in dotazione in tutte le aule messe a disposizione del corso.Requisiti di ammissione
Per l?accesso alla laurea magistrale in "Security and Human Rights" e necessario, anche nel caso in cui lo studente chieda il trasferimento da altro Corso di Laurea Magistrale, che i candidati soddisfino i seguenti requisiti curricolari:
- possesso di laurea di primo livello (di almeno 180 crediti), conseguita in Universita italiane o titolo conseguito all?estero riconosciuto COME idoneo;
- avere una conoscenza della lingua inglese almeno pari al livello B2 (Quadro Comune Europeo di riferimento per la conoscenza della lingua), attestata dal possesso di una adeguata certificazione linguistica o, in assenza di questa, dal superamento di un apposito test organizzato dal Dipartimento.
In particolare, costituisce requisito di ammissione il possesso di una laurea nelle classi: L-14 Scienze dei servizi giuridici; L-16 Scienze dell?amministrazione e dell?organizzazione; L-36 Scienze politiche e delle relazioni internazionali; L-37 Scienze sociali per la cooperazione, lo sviluppo e la pace; L-40, Sociologia; L-42, Storia; LMG-01, Giurisprudenza, nonche il possesso di una laurea delle corrispondenti classi attivate ai sensi del decreto ministeriale 3 novembre 1999, n.
509.
Possono inoltre accedere al corso di laurea magistrale, sulla base dell?esame effettuato da parte della Commissione didattica, anche coloro che siano in possesso di una laurea triennale di altra classe, ovvero di laurea magistrale o quadriennale, ovvero di titolo di laurea conseguito all?estero, purche abbiano conseguito almeno 60 CFU, sui 180 complessivi del corso di studi triennale, relativi ad almeno due raggruppamenti: il raggruppamento di area giuridica (IUS da 1 a 21) e uno dei raggruppamenti disciplinari di seguito indicati.
- Area politico-sociale: SPS/01, SPS/04, SPS/07, SPS/08, SPS/09, SPS/11, SPS/12
- Area economico-statistico: M‐GGR/02, SECS‐P/01, SECS‐P/02, SECS‐P/03,SECS-P/05; SECS‐P/06, SECS‐S/01, SECS‐S/03, SECS‐S/04, SECS‐S/05
- Area storica: M‐STO/02; M‐STO/03; M‐STO/04; SECS‐P/04; SECS‐P/12; SPS/02; SPS/03; SPS/06
- Area linguistica: L-LIN/12, L-LIN/04, L-LIN/07, L-LIN/14
E ammessa una tolleranza fino ad un massimo del 10% dei CFU richiesti.
E prevista, altresi, la possibilita di integrare le competenze richieste.
Le modalita di verifica dei requisiti di accesso, sia per gli studenti con titolo italiano, sia per gli studenti con titolo conseguito all?estero, nonche le eventuali modalita di integrazione delle competenze richieste sono definite nel Regolamento del CdS.
E prevista l?istituzione di una Commissione didattica, che verifica i requisiti di accesso e, in sede di colloquio (svolto in lingua inglese anche a distanza), la preparazione personale dello studente.
La medesima Commissione stabilisce, altresi, le modalita di recupero di eventuali crediti mancanti in conformita al Regolamento del Cds.
Per facilitare l?accesso di studenti stranieri, sul sito del CdS sara pubblicato un Syllabus in inglese con l?indicazione dei requisiti di ammissione.
Potranno inoltre essere stipulate apposite convenzioni con Universita straniere per agevolare le procedure di riconoscimento dei titoli di laurea stranieri che consentono l?accesso al corso.
Prova finale
La prova finale (pari a 14 CFU) consiste nella preparazione di un elaborato scritto, in lingua inglese, su un argomento concordato con un docente responsabile di uno degli insegnamenti presenti nel curriculum del candidato, e nella successiva discussione di fronte a una commissione di professori nominata dal Direttore del Dipartimento.
La bibliografia di base viene indicata dal relatore al momento dell'assegnazione ufficiale della tesi e deve essere integrata dal candidato.
Il lavoro si svolge sotto la guida del relatore, che verifica lo stato di avanzamento della stesura del testo e comunica al candidato il parere positivo finale.
Lo studente puo scegliere come disciplina di tesi qualunque disciplina compresa nel suo piano di studio, e come relatore di tesi un docente di cui abbia seguito l?insegnamento.
La scelta di un relatore non appartenente al dipartimento e possibile solo se nel dipartimento non sono presenti docenti della disciplina della tesi ed e sottoposta all?approvazione del presidente del CdS.
Al termine della prova finale, la commissione formula la valutazione conclusiva, espressa in 110 ed eventuale lode, collegando l'intera carriera del laureando alla prova finale.
In sede di prova finale la commissione puo assegnare sino a un massimo di 7 punti per la tesi di laurea.
Se la prova finale viene sostenuta entro il termine legale del CdS, vengono assegnati 2 punti in piu; un ulteriore punto e assegnato a chi abbia conseguito almeno il 25% delle lodi.
Il punteggio che la commissione assegna deve esprimere non solo la qualita della tesi, ma anche la discussione che il candidato ha sostenuto.
Il Corso di Studio in breve
Il Corso di studi (CdS) in Security and Human Rights, appartenente alla classe di laurea in Studi Europei (LM-90), offre un percorso formativo in cui la dialettica classica sicurezza-liberta e declinata alla luce delle tendenze globali e delle sfide del XXI secolo: migrazioni, tecnologia, sostenibilita.
Esso mira a offrire competenze multidisciplinari e strumenti di analisi, anche di tipo empirico e quantitativo, necessari per la comprensione di fenomeni complessi e per operare in ambiti strategici ad elevato tasso di innovazione: migrazioni e border security, impiego delle nuove tecnologie, privacy e data protection, green economy e politiche di sostenibilita.
Il CdS si rivolge a tre tipologie di studenti: studenti internazionali (principalmente da Balcani, Eurasia e Paesi del Medio Oriente e del Nord Africa) interessati a formarsi in Italia per intraprendere carriere in Europa o nel Paese di origine; funzionari e professionisti stranieri che intendono rafforzare la propria expertise in materia; studenti italiani con titolo di laurea di primo livello nell?area delle scienze sociali.
Il CdS offre un percorso formativo che consenta ai laureati di muoversi in un mondo del lavoro fortemente dinamico e in perenne trasformazione.
Gli esiti occupazionali tipici possono riguardare ruoli di alta responsabilita in enti pubblici (amministrazioni locali, ministeri, agenzie, autorita indipendenti) e privati (imprese, ONG impegnate nell?accoglienza e nella tutela dei diritti umani), non solo a livello nazionale (anche nei Paesi di origine), ma anche europeo (es.
Agenzie UE) e internazionale (es.
UNHCR).
A questi si aggiungono le possibilita che il CdS apre in settori dell?impresa privata e dell?amministrazione che presentano interrelazioni con i fenomeni della mobilita umana, della sostenibilita ambientale, della gestione dei dati.
Per l?accesso e necessario che i candidati siano in possesso di una laurea di primo livello (di almeno 180 CFU) propedeutica al CdS conseguita in Universita italiane o titolo equivalente conseguito all?estero e riconosciuto idoneo, nel rispetto dei requisiti piu avanti specificati.
Si richiede inoltre una conoscenza della lingua inglese pari almeno al livello B2 del Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR).
Il CdS e erogato interamente in lingua inglese, rientrando percio nella categoria C della Tabella K del DM 6/2019, e prevede una modalita mista di erogazione (dal 10% al 66% dei corsi erogabili a distanza).
Il percorso formativo e articolato in due anni.
Il primo anno (45 CFU), volto ad acquisire le conoscenze di base relative al problema della sicurezza, comprende due semestri, dedicati, rispettivamente, alle tendenze globali in materia di sicurezza e al rapporto tra sicurezza e criminalizzazione negli ordinamenti europei contemporanei.
Il secondo anno prevede due indirizzi con un piu elevato tasso di specializzazione.
Il primo indirizzo ("Security and Human Mobility") e dedicato ai processi migratori ed e imperniato su due semestri riguardanti, da un lato, la sicurezza esterna dei confini e la gestione dei flussi migratori nell?area Euro-Mediterranea ("The External Dimension") e, dall?altro, la sicurezza interna e i processi di integrazione giuridica, economica e culturale degli immigrati ("The Internal Dimension").
Il secondo indirizzo ("Security, Technology and Sustainability") mira a fornire competenze relative sia alle nuove sfide che l?utilizzo della tecnologia pone per i diritti fondamentali, in specie per la protezione della privacy e dei dati personali (1? semestre su "Privacy and Data Protection"), sia alle potenzialita della tecnologia per lo sviluppo delle tematiche "green" legate alla sostenibilita (2? semestre su "Green Security").
Ciascun insegnamento del secondo anno prevede una componente seminariale e workshop volti a fornire competenze applicative specifiche.
In aggiunta agli 11 insegnamenti previsti nel biennio (equivalenti a 78 CFU, di cui 54 caratterizzanti), il percorso di studi prevede, altresi il conseguimento di 12 crediti nell?ambito di "attivita a scelta dello studente", corrispondenti a 2 insegnamenti da 6 CFU, individuabili anche tra quelli opzionali offerti dal corso.
Prevede inoltre attivita formative integrative per ulteriori 16 CFU, acquisibili con tirocini, idoneita di lingua (anche italiana, per gli studenti stranieri) o mediante la frequenza delle Summer Training Schools (ciascuna da 8 CFU) organizzate ogni anno dal CdS.
Il percorso si chiude con una prova finale in lingua inglese (14 CFU), consistente nella presentazione di una tesi elaborata in modo originale dallo studente sotto la guida di un relatore.
Il corso presenta, per sua natura, un elevato livello di internazionalizzazione.
La scelta dell?inglese come lingua veicolare e le modalita di erogazione sono volte ad attrarre studenti internazionali, quale principale target del corso.
Al fine di attrarre studenti internazionali sono state sviluppate apposite strategie di reclutamento e attivita di orientamento, consistenti principalmente in: open days internazionali a distanza, colloqui di orientamento in sede e in via telematica, attivazione di contratti con tutors di area geografica, incaricati di curare la promozione del corso in specifici gruppi di paesi, disponibilita di borse di studio dedicate, anche all?interno di programmi di mobilita collegate al doppio titolo di laurea.
Il CdS intende offrire agli studenti contenuti professionalizzanti, diretti a favorire l?avviamento dei laureati al mondo del lavoro.
A questo fine, come anticipato, sono previsti insegnamenti e seminari con contenuti laboratoriali incentrati su aspetti pratico-applicativi, attivita formative volte all?acquisizione di strumenti operativi (es.
Summer Training School) e attivita di stage e tirocini curriculari.
Le attivita di stage e tirocinio sono organizzate mediante la stipula di apposite Convenzioni con enti e organizzazioni, pubbliche e private, a carattere nazionale e sovranazionale.
Alcuni accordi, in fase di definizione, sono stati avviati con gli oltre 20 enti coinvolti nella fase di consultazione delle parti sociali.
Al tempo stesso, grazie a un?offerta formativa connotata da un respiro teorico generale, il CdS mira a lasciare aperta ai laureati la possibilita di inserirsi in programmi di formazione post-laurea, quali Master di II? livello e programmi dottorali, offerti anche in questo Ateneo.
Lo studente espliciterà le proprie scelte al momento della presentazione,
tramite il sistema informativo di ateneo, del piano di completamento o del piano di studio individuale,
secondo quanto stabilito dal regolamento didattico del corso di studio.
Option A: Security and Human Mobility
FIRST YEAR
First semester
Course
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Credits
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Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
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Contact Hours
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Exercise Hours
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Laboratory Hours
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Personal Study Hours
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Type of Activity
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Language
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119131 -
Global Security: Geopolitics and Conflict in the 21st Century
(objectives)
The course aims at providing students with a basic knowledge of contemporary geopolitics. Through a multi-sector and multi-layer approach, it offers useful conceptual tools to analyse the theory and the practice of geopolitical international actors’ action, focusing in particular on the dynamics of global crises in the framework of the new, post-pandemic digital world. Special attention will be devoted to the geopolitics of the migratory routes, by comparing the Euro-Mediterranean and the US-Mexican border.
|
|
-
MODULE I
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4
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SPS/04
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24
|
-
|
-
|
-
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Core compulsory activities
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ENG |
-
MODULE II
(objectives)
The aim of the course is to provide students with a basic knowledge of the fundamentals of contemporary geopolitics. Through a multi-sectoral and multi-scalar analysis, the course intends to offer useful tools to analyse the theory and practice of action of international geopolitical actors, with a special focus on the dynamics of global crises in the context of a new post-pandemic digital world. A special section is devoted to the geopolitics of environmental risks and migration routes with a comparison between the Euro-Mediterranean border and the US-Mexico border. The completion of this unit will enable you to demonstrate that you: Understand and engage with theoretical approaches and concepts relevant to security and geopolitics; able to analyse the key dynamics of global crises in the context of a new post-pandemic digital world; critically understand causes and consequences of the geopolitics of environmental risks; critically understand causes and consequences of the geopolitics of international migration. Students acquire a theoretical, conceptual understanding of conflicts and geopolitical actors and security concerns in the new post-pandemic digital world; students acquire contextual and empirical knowledge of the geopolitics of environmental risks; students acquire contextual and empirical knowledge of of the geopolitics of international migration; students acquire the critical capacity to analyse, assess and engage in competing security and geopolitical debates; students develop and apply their transferable skills, which include: self-motivation, teamwork, communication, debating, conceptual thinking, critical evaluation and presentation skills; students develop the capacity to construct and orally present their argument. Your skills will be developed through a range of practices such as: investigative reading of texts and preparation for the class; preparation of a handout; collective discussions; students attending the lectures will always have the chance to discuss, reflect and engage in in-depth debates and ask questions and receive immediate formative feedback.
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5
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M-GGR/02
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30
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
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ENG |
119133 -
The Global Governance of International Security
(objectives)
The course analyses the evolution of the international rules in the field of use of force, along with the main features of the functioning of the UN system of collective security. The global governance of collective security will be studied also by taking into consideration the growing role of new, relevant international actors, such as regional organisations and non-state actors. From this broader perspective, special attention will be devoted to the gradual emergence of the international norms on human rights, so as to assess whether and how this framework has produced – and is still producing today – changes with regard to the rules governing the use of force and the management of the international security.
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|
-
MODULE I
(objectives)
The first part of the course aims to illustrate and analyze both international rules and actors of the global governance of collective security. The main goal is to provide students with an overview of the most important legal instruments, the practice of States and international organizations and the relevant case-law of international courts and tribunals on the use of force in international relations. At the end of this part of the course, students should be able to grasp multilevel governance challenges in the complex field of global security.
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6
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IUS/13
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36
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
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ENG |
-
MODULE II
(objectives)
The second module explores the impact on individuals of security measures adopted at international level. The aim is to highlight the legal problems and dilemmas arising when an international measure or decision is addressed not (only) to States but (also) to individuals. When this individual impact occurs, the traditional dichotomy between international and domestic law becomes obsolete, along with the corresponding guarantees and accountability tools. The resulting problems of interactions between different sources of law (international, EU and national) will be analyzed through the lenses of Global administrative law.
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3
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IUS/10
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18
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
119134 -
Security and Individual Liberties in Comparative Perspective
(objectives)
The course aims to provide - from a public law perspective - an overview of the different ways in which state systems deal with the main issues concerning the balance between security (in its various forms) and individual rights and freedoms.
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6
|
IUS/09
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36
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-
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-
|
-
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Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
Second semester
Course
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Credits
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Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
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Contact Hours
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Exercise Hours
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Laboratory Hours
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Personal Study Hours
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Type of Activity
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Language
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119135 -
Strategies of Criminalisation and Processes of Radicalisation: Sociological Approaches
(objectives)
The course aims at providing theoretical and methodological foundations in order to develop a socio-criminologist analysis of the criminalisation and radicalisation, understood as social processes. Special attention will be devoted to the legal definitions, practices of control, widespread (mediatic) representations that affect the overall collective and individual configuration of those processes.
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|
-
ModuleI
(objectives)
1) Knowledge and ability to understand - the course aims to provide students with the theoretical foundations related to the processes of radicalisation and terrorism in the political and religious sphere, as well as tools and strategies of criminalisation in a perspective of historical evolution of the public sphere. 2) Applied knowledge and understanding - students will acquire skills related to the tools for analysing emerging political and religious radicalism, with particular reference to media analysis. 3) Autonomy of judgement - the course will provide students with the tools to recognise ongoing radicalisation processes and assess their extent and social danger. 4) Communication skills - during the lessons students will be invited to present their project work to the rest of the class, in order to share and compare with other colleagues the tools they have learnt. 5) Learning skills - the course is based on a dual mode of lecturing and learning by doing, which encourages students to participate in a final online analysis of a contemporary radicalisation phenomenon.
|
3
|
SPS/11
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
-
Module II
(objectives)
The course aims to present to students the fundamental theoretical and methodological skills useful to develop the sociological and criminological analysis of criminalization and radicalization, intended as social processes. Specific attention will be given to the composition of normative definitions, social and institutional practices of control and social (media) representation which shapes the individual and collective configuration of such processes.
|
3
|
SPS/12
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119136 -
New Global Threats and Criminal Law: Phenomena, Challenges and Legal Responses
(objectives)
The course aims at providing students with a in depth knowledge of the criminal responses to the challenges posed criminality on a global scale. It covers the analysis of the main manifestations of international criminality (transnational organised crime, human traffic and migrants’ smuggling, terrorism, economic criminality, environmental crimes), as well as the national and international strategies for their prevention and repression, assessing their forms and tendencies, also in the light of the growing importance of the objective of the economic sustainability of the criminal response. In addition, the course aims to equip students with appropriate tools to interpret legal complexity and develop their ability to carry out legal research and solve concrete cases involving fundamental issues of International, Transnational and European criminal law.
|
9
|
IUS/17
|
54
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
Optional Group:
gruppo opzionale A - (show)
|
6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
119141 -
Digital Evidence and Human Rights
(objectives)
The course focuses on the aspects of digital evidence that may be incompatible with individual human rights guarantees (in both the domestic, and EU law, and not EU law), such as privacy and social relationships, focusing on civil procedural law. The course further aims at providing practical knowledge for the acquisition of digital evidence in compliance with human rights.
|
6
|
IUS/15
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119142 -
Human Rights and Security in EU Criminal Investigations
(objectives)
The course offers an overview of the development of the European Area of Freedom, Security and Justice, discussing its fundamental principles, main legal instruments, and actors. Particular attention will be devoted to the study of European sources safeguarding human rights in criminal proceedings.
|
6
|
IUS/16
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119166 -
ENGLISH FOR INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND HUMAN RIGHTS
(objectives)
The course aims to introduce students to the use of English for Specific Purposes (ESP) through intensive reading comprehension and writing exercises. In particular, the course aims to develop the knowledge of specific terminology used in the fields of international relations (news, politics, law, etc.) and human rights protection through the reading, discussion and analysis of various types of texts. The material used for intensive reading and writing exercises will be derived from authentic texts - for ex., treaties, conventions, essays, and scientific journals - in order to offer an overview of the fundamental issues related to the domains of international relations and human rights. Reading texts will be the first topic of an introductory module in which students' interpretation and linguistic analysis will be solicited to develop their reading skills and improve their vocabulary, and then they will be the subject of practical academic and professional writing activities in English as well as individual and/or teamwork research. At the end of the course, students will have improved their reading comprehension skills; they will be able to identify the register and the contents suitable for the most usual communicative situations in the specific working sector and will be able to apply and adapt the textual genres they have learned to several communicative situations.
|
6
|
L-LIN/12
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
|
SECOND YEAR
First semester
Course
|
Credits
|
Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
|
Contact Hours
|
Exercise Hours
|
Laboratory Hours
|
Personal Study Hours
|
Type of Activity
|
Language
|
119143 -
Approaches to the Governance of Migration in the Euro-Mediterranean Context
(objectives)
The cooperation on migration governance between the European Union (EU) and its neighbourhood can only be accurately evaluated in light of the tensions between states’ obligations to comply with internationally recognized standards on the protection of human rights, on the one hand, and their attempt to control migration and borders through legal means and policy provisions, on the other. The course calls for a broader reflection on the hyper visibility of the cooperation on migration governance.
|
6
|
SPS/04
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
119144 -
Human Mobility, Asylum and Border Management: Challenges to Fundamental Rights in Europe
(objectives)
The first part of the course is dedicated to the legal framework of “involuntary” human mobility heading to the territory of EU Member States, distinguishing among immigration, asylum and border control policies. The second part of the course illustrates the friction points between these policies and the effective protection of migrants’ and refugees’ fundamental rights in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice and at its external borders.
|
|
-
Module I
|
6
|
IUS/14
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
-
Module II
(objectives)
The course aims to illustrate and analyse the European Union's immigration and asylum policies. Particular attention will be paid to the functioning of the Common European Asylum System and to international protection standards.
|
3
|
IUS/13
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
119145 -
Refugees and Economic Migrants: Between Containment and Legal Pathways
(objectives)
The course aims at providing students with a basic knowledge of the various legal mobility options to access the European Union. it covers legal and protected mobility channels under international and European law, focusing on both economic, job-related ones and those linked with humanitarian reasons.
|
6
|
IUS/14
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
Second semester
Course
|
Credits
|
Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
|
Contact Hours
|
Exercise Hours
|
Laboratory Hours
|
Personal Study Hours
|
Type of Activity
|
Language
|
119146 -
The Reception of Asylum Seekers and the Integration of Immigrants: Governance and Strategies
(objectives)
The course aims to analyse: a) the policies and reception tools for asylum seekers, from the moment of arrival to the recognition (or denial) of the international protection they have requested; b) the main integration strategies of refugees and protection seekers in Italy and in the European Union.
|
6
|
IUS/10
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
Optional Group:
Gruppo opzionale B - (show)
|
6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
119149 -
Migration and Integration Policies in Post-War Europe
(objectives)
The object of this Course is the History of migratory flows towards Europe and the inter-European movement, after the Second World War. Students will confront with national Politics regarding migrations in the context of the communitarian enlargement (from EEC to EU). Part of the Course will be focused on immigration containment/contrast policies within the debate on multiculturalism and transnationalism.
|
6
|
M-STO/04
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119148 -
The problem of citizenship: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives
(objectives)
The object of the course is the concept of citizenship, assessed through a historical-philosophical approach. What does it mean to be a citizen? And how, in the course of European history, have the criteria of belonging to a political community been legally defined?
|
|
-
Module I
|
3
|
IUS/19
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
-
Module II
|
3
|
IUS/20
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119163 -
BORDERS OF SOCIAL RIGHTS AND LABOUR RIGHTS IN EUROPE
(objectives)
Borders of Social Rights and Labour Rights’ teaching deals with the analysis of social rights and, in particular, of workers’ rights in the national legal system and in the European Union law, not least in view of the immigration policies and of the problems regarding social inclusion. A particular attention applies to the tools for implementing subjective social situations, as well as to the profile of judicial protection.
|
|
-
MODULE I
(objectives)
Knowledge of social rights within the framework of fundamental rights. Jurisdictional protection of social rights.
Capacity Ability to search for pertinent normative, bibliographic and jurisprudential material and their use for the purpose of setting legal problems. Ability to address the main issues that arise, starting with a correct identification of the relevant legislation. Ability to keep in mind and adequately select the main interpretations of this legislation in doctrine and jurisprudence, also with reference to the increase in the complexity of sources as a result of European legislation. Competences Sensitivity to the role that the constitutional perspective plays not only as a fundamental disciplinary dimension, but also as a necessary tool for interpreting the law, especially with reference to social rights and judicial protection. Awareness of the importance of checking constitutionality and, more generally, of the role of the judiciary in a civil law system.
|
3
|
IUS/07
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
-
MODULE II
|
3
|
IUS/09
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
|
119162 -
FINAL EXAM
|
14
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Final examination and foreign language test
|
ENG |
Optional Group:
Altre attività formative - (show)
|
16
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Optional Group:
ELECTIVE COURSES - (show)
|
12
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Option B: Security, Technology and Sustainability
FIRST YEAR
First semester
Course
|
Credits
|
Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
|
Contact Hours
|
Exercise Hours
|
Laboratory Hours
|
Personal Study Hours
|
Type of Activity
|
Language
|
119131 -
Global Security: Geopolitics and Conflict in the 21st Century
(objectives)
The course aims at providing students with a basic knowledge of contemporary geopolitics. Through a multi-sector and multi-layer approach, it offers useful conceptual tools to analyse the theory and the practice of geopolitical international actors’ action, focusing in particular on the dynamics of global crises in the framework of the new, post-pandemic digital world. Special attention will be devoted to the geopolitics of the migratory routes, by comparing the Euro-Mediterranean and the US-Mexican border.
|
|
-
MODULE I
|
4
|
SPS/04
|
24
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
-
MODULE II
(objectives)
The aim of the course is to provide students with a basic knowledge of the fundamentals of contemporary geopolitics. Through a multi-sectoral and multi-scalar analysis, the course intends to offer useful tools to analyse the theory and practice of action of international geopolitical actors, with a special focus on the dynamics of global crises in the context of a new post-pandemic digital world. A special section is devoted to the geopolitics of environmental risks and migration routes with a comparison between the Euro-Mediterranean border and the US-Mexico border. The completion of this unit will enable you to demonstrate that you: Understand and engage with theoretical approaches and concepts relevant to security and geopolitics; able to analyse the key dynamics of global crises in the context of a new post-pandemic digital world; critically understand causes and consequences of the geopolitics of environmental risks; critically understand causes and consequences of the geopolitics of international migration. Students acquire a theoretical, conceptual understanding of conflicts and geopolitical actors and security concerns in the new post-pandemic digital world; students acquire contextual and empirical knowledge of the geopolitics of environmental risks; students acquire contextual and empirical knowledge of of the geopolitics of international migration; students acquire the critical capacity to analyse, assess and engage in competing security and geopolitical debates; students develop and apply their transferable skills, which include: self-motivation, teamwork, communication, debating, conceptual thinking, critical evaluation and presentation skills; students develop the capacity to construct and orally present their argument. Your skills will be developed through a range of practices such as: investigative reading of texts and preparation for the class; preparation of a handout; collective discussions; students attending the lectures will always have the chance to discuss, reflect and engage in in-depth debates and ask questions and receive immediate formative feedback.
|
5
|
M-GGR/02
|
30
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
119133 -
The Global Governance of International Security
(objectives)
The course analyses the evolution of the international rules in the field of use of force, along with the main features of the functioning of the UN system of collective security. The global governance of collective security will be studied also by taking into consideration the growing role of new, relevant international actors, such as regional organisations and non-state actors. From this broader perspective, special attention will be devoted to the gradual emergence of the international norms on human rights, so as to assess whether and how this framework has produced – and is still producing today – changes with regard to the rules governing the use of force and the management of the international security.
|
|
-
MODULE I
(objectives)
The first part of the course aims to illustrate and analyze both international rules and actors of the global governance of collective security. The main goal is to provide students with an overview of the most important legal instruments, the practice of States and international organizations and the relevant case-law of international courts and tribunals on the use of force in international relations. At the end of this part of the course, students should be able to grasp multilevel governance challenges in the complex field of global security.
|
6
|
IUS/13
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
-
MODULE II
(objectives)
The second module explores the impact on individuals of security measures adopted at international level. The aim is to highlight the legal problems and dilemmas arising when an international measure or decision is addressed not (only) to States but (also) to individuals. When this individual impact occurs, the traditional dichotomy between international and domestic law becomes obsolete, along with the corresponding guarantees and accountability tools. The resulting problems of interactions between different sources of law (international, EU and national) will be analyzed through the lenses of Global administrative law.
|
3
|
IUS/10
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
119134 -
Security and Individual Liberties in Comparative Perspective
(objectives)
The course aims to provide - from a public law perspective - an overview of the different ways in which state systems deal with the main issues concerning the balance between security (in its various forms) and individual rights and freedoms.
|
6
|
IUS/09
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
Second semester
Course
|
Credits
|
Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
|
Contact Hours
|
Exercise Hours
|
Laboratory Hours
|
Personal Study Hours
|
Type of Activity
|
Language
|
119135 -
Strategies of Criminalisation and Processes of Radicalisation: Sociological Approaches
(objectives)
The course aims at providing theoretical and methodological foundations in order to develop a socio-criminologist analysis of the criminalisation and radicalisation, understood as social processes. Special attention will be devoted to the legal definitions, practices of control, widespread (mediatic) representations that affect the overall collective and individual configuration of those processes.
|
|
-
ModuleI
(objectives)
1) Knowledge and ability to understand - the course aims to provide students with the theoretical foundations related to the processes of radicalisation and terrorism in the political and religious sphere, as well as tools and strategies of criminalisation in a perspective of historical evolution of the public sphere. 2) Applied knowledge and understanding - students will acquire skills related to the tools for analysing emerging political and religious radicalism, with particular reference to media analysis. 3) Autonomy of judgement - the course will provide students with the tools to recognise ongoing radicalisation processes and assess their extent and social danger. 4) Communication skills - during the lessons students will be invited to present their project work to the rest of the class, in order to share and compare with other colleagues the tools they have learnt. 5) Learning skills - the course is based on a dual mode of lecturing and learning by doing, which encourages students to participate in a final online analysis of a contemporary radicalisation phenomenon.
|
3
|
SPS/11
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
-
Module II
(objectives)
The course aims to present to students the fundamental theoretical and methodological skills useful to develop the sociological and criminological analysis of criminalization and radicalization, intended as social processes. Specific attention will be given to the composition of normative definitions, social and institutional practices of control and social (media) representation which shapes the individual and collective configuration of such processes.
|
3
|
SPS/12
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119136 -
New Global Threats and Criminal Law: Phenomena, Challenges and Legal Responses
(objectives)
The course aims at providing students with a in depth knowledge of the criminal responses to the challenges posed criminality on a global scale. It covers the analysis of the main manifestations of international criminality (transnational organised crime, human traffic and migrants’ smuggling, terrorism, economic criminality, environmental crimes), as well as the national and international strategies for their prevention and repression, assessing their forms and tendencies, also in the light of the growing importance of the objective of the economic sustainability of the criminal response. In addition, the course aims to equip students with appropriate tools to interpret legal complexity and develop their ability to carry out legal research and solve concrete cases involving fundamental issues of International, Transnational and European criminal law.
|
9
|
IUS/17
|
54
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
Optional Group:
gruppo opzionale A - (show)
|
6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
119141 -
Digital Evidence and Human Rights
(objectives)
The course focuses on the aspects of digital evidence that may be incompatible with individual human rights guarantees (in both the domestic, and EU law, and not EU law), such as privacy and social relationships, focusing on civil procedural law. The course further aims at providing practical knowledge for the acquisition of digital evidence in compliance with human rights.
|
6
|
IUS/15
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119142 -
Human Rights and Security in EU Criminal Investigations
(objectives)
The course offers an overview of the development of the European Area of Freedom, Security and Justice, discussing its fundamental principles, main legal instruments, and actors. Particular attention will be devoted to the study of European sources safeguarding human rights in criminal proceedings.
|
6
|
IUS/16
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119166 -
ENGLISH FOR INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND HUMAN RIGHTS
(objectives)
The course aims to introduce students to the use of English for Specific Purposes (ESP) through intensive reading comprehension and writing exercises. In particular, the course aims to develop the knowledge of specific terminology used in the fields of international relations (news, politics, law, etc.) and human rights protection through the reading, discussion and analysis of various types of texts. The material used for intensive reading and writing exercises will be derived from authentic texts - for ex., treaties, conventions, essays, and scientific journals - in order to offer an overview of the fundamental issues related to the domains of international relations and human rights. Reading texts will be the first topic of an introductory module in which students' interpretation and linguistic analysis will be solicited to develop their reading skills and improve their vocabulary, and then they will be the subject of practical academic and professional writing activities in English as well as individual and/or teamwork research. At the end of the course, students will have improved their reading comprehension skills; they will be able to identify the register and the contents suitable for the most usual communicative situations in the specific working sector and will be able to apply and adapt the textual genres they have learned to several communicative situations.
|
6
|
L-LIN/12
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
|
SECOND YEAR
First semester
Course
|
Credits
|
Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
|
Contact Hours
|
Exercise Hours
|
Laboratory Hours
|
Personal Study Hours
|
Type of Activity
|
Language
|
119150 -
The Politics of Privacy and Surveillance
(objectives)
The course’s aim is to introduce and explore the concept of privacy and to reflect on surveillance's impact on it, on other fundamental rights and on political systems. The course focuses on conceptualisations of privacy including classical liberal theories, genealogical and critical appraisals and intersubjective accounts of privacy. This theoretical discourse is illustrated by drawing on the interaction between privacy and surveillance in the context of contemporary security practices.
|
6
|
SPS/01
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
119151 -
Legal Issues of Data Protection and Cyberseurity
(objectives)
The course aims to provide an overview of the main legal issues and challenges posed by the digital revolution in the field of personal data protection. Such overview will move from the analysis of the origins of the right to privacy and will explore how the understanding and the protection of this right have evolved over the time as a consequence of the rise of new technologies
|
6
|
IUS/21
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
119152 -
Artificial Intelligence and the Threats of Automated Decision-Making
(objectives)
The course will provide a sound knowledge on the basic features of the European Green Deal, specifically meant as a regulatory process aimed at achieving the climate neutrality of the European continent. The course will discuss the Green Deal’s goals, its main regulatory instruments, and the new strategies for environmental sustainability. The European Green Deal will be examined also in the context of the global governance and in relation to the Green Deal’s of other major polities, as United States and China.
|
9
|
IUS/09
|
54
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
Second semester
Course
|
Credits
|
Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
|
Contact Hours
|
Exercise Hours
|
Laboratory Hours
|
Personal Study Hours
|
Type of Activity
|
Language
|
119153 -
New Frontiers of Sustainability: The Regulatory Architecture of the European Green Deal
(objectives)
The course will provide a sound knowledge on the basic features of the European Green Deal, specifically meant as a regulatory process aimed at achieving the climate neutrality of the European continent. The course will discuss the Green Deal’s goals, its main regulatory instruments, and the new strategies for environmental sustainability. The European Green Deal will be examined also in the context of the global governance and in relation to the Green Deal’s of other major polities, as United States and China.
|
6
|
IUS/10
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ENG |
Optional Group:
Gruppo opzionale C - (show)
|
6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
119155 -
ENVIRONMENTAL SECURITY: FOOD, ENERGY AND RAW MATERIALS
(objectives)
The aim of the course is to provide students with adequate knowledge on the subject of environmental safety, in relation to food and energy safety and the availability of raw materials. The course focuses on the interactions between ecosystems and humanity, the effects of global environmental change on the availability of food and environmental degradation, the effects of the growing social demand for resources, ecosystem services and environmental goods both from a point of view technical-engineering and managerial, as well as the role of governments and national and supranational institutions in guaranteeing food, energy and environmental safety.
|
|
-
MODULE I
|
2
|
IUS/03
|
12
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
-
MODULE II
|
2
|
ING-IND/11
|
12
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
-
MODULE III
|
2
|
SECS-P/13
|
12
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119156 -
CIRCULAR ECONOMY AND REGENERATIVE GROWTH
(objectives)
The aim of the course is to provide students with adequate knowledge on the subject of the Circular Economy and its principles. The course has as its object the study of the concept of Circular Economy, of new production and product design models for sustainable and circular production and consumption, of certification standards, as well as of waste management tools according to the " reduction, reuse, recovery and recycling".
|
|
-
MODULE I
|
3
|
SECS-P/01
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
-
MODULE II
|
3
|
SECS-P/13
|
18
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
119157 -
ECONOMICS AND HISTORY OF DEVELOPMENT
(objectives)
The aim of the course is to provide students with a knowledge of the phenomenon of development, between economics and history, in the last hundred years and, in particular, after 1945. The course covers ideas, documents, institutions and development policies. Particular attention will be paid to interactions with the issue of human rights and security in the context of relations between the North and the South of the world.
|
6
|
SECS-P/12
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Related or supplementary learning activities
|
ENG |
|
119162 -
FINAL EXAM
|
14
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Final examination and foreign language test
|
ENG |
Optional Group:
Altre attività formative - (show)
|
16
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Optional Group:
ELECTIVE COURSES - (show)
|
12
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|