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Course Directory > Diploma and Certificate Courses > Certificate in Development, Law and Social Justice (Institute of Social Studies)
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Course Type: Diploma and Certificate Courses
Training Provider: Institute of Social Studies (ISS)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Institute of Social Studies (ISS)

Development Law and Social Justice is a non-assessed certificate programme primarily intended for professionals who are working in NGOs active in the promotion of social justice and human rights, and for academic staff of universities who are actively and directly associated with the work of NGOs in the same fields. Some participants work in governmental institutions or international organisations.

The DLSJ programme combines academic reflection on human rights issues with experiential learning based on active input from the programme participants. Substantive experience and active involvement in the struggle for the realisation of human rights are essential requirements for admission to the programme.

Programme objectives

The DLSJ Programme seeks to:

  • deepen theoretical understanding and enhance practical knowledge of human rights problems and possible responses to such problems;
  • promote policies and strategies aiming at transformation and realisation of human rights and social justice;
  • facilitate reflection on one’s own role in the struggle to realise human rights;
  • foster international cooperation and creative networking between human rights workers.

Programme description

The DLSJ programme links participatory and interdisciplinary methods to policies and strategies in the field of human rights. It is unique in three distinct aspects: (1) an explicit focus on economic, social and cultural rights within the framework of interdependence and indivisibility of all categories of human rights; (2) a conceptualisation of human rights as legal but also political instrument in the struggle for the realisation of basic human dignity; and (3) a collective and participatory search for innovative and integrative human rights strategies.

The programme’s approach is to provide participants with a free and creative space in which, in a climate of mutual trust and respect, they can exchange and deepen their theoretical understanding and practical knowledge of human rights in the context of transformations in their own society and culture and in the world at large. All participants are expected to contribute substantively to all elements of the programme, and share their personal and professional experience.

See also the MA programme on Human Rights, Development and Social Justice.

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Course Details

Staff:
Karin Arts
Associate Professor in International Law and Development

Cees Flinterman

Bastiaan de Gaay Fortman
Emeritus Professor of Political Economy

Donna Gomien
Senior Lecturer in Human Rights

Gerrie ter Haar
Professor of Religion, Human Rights and Social Change

Helen Hintjens
Lecturer in Development and Social Justice

Rachel Kurian
Senior Lecturer in International Labour Economics

Mohamed Salih
Professor of Politics of Development, University of Leiden

Thanh-Dam Truong
Associate Professor of Women, Gender and Development

Entry Requirements:
Substantive experience and active involvement in the struggle for the realisation of human rights are essential requirements for admission to the programme.

Course Duration:
This is a 7-week Special Graduate Programme, running from 23 May –7 July 2006/ 15 May –29 June 2007.

Language(s) of Instruction:
  • English

Mode of Study:
  • residential

Thematic Focus:
  • Civil Society/NGO Management
  • Human Rights
  • :Other:

Country(ies):
  • Netherlands

Town(s) or City(ies):
The Hague

Course fees:
2500 EUR

Scholarships & Awards:
Students should apply to the Netherlands Fellowship Programme

Further Funding Information:
http://www.iss.nl/navFrame/frame2.html?content=/WEB1/fellowships/index.jsp

Course's Webpage:
http://www.iss.nl/navFrame/frame2.html?content=/tprogrs/dlsj.html

School/Institute/Dept./Centre
Institute of Social Studies (ISS)
Training Provider: Institute of Social Studies (ISS)
Contact Telephone: +31 (0)70 426 0460
Courses: 8
ISS is a unique – independent and international – graduate school in the social sciences. It is one of the oldest and largest centres for the comparative study and research of social, political and economic development and change. ISS offers quality learning to its students, all young and mid-career professionals, and critical social science knowledge to its scientific peers, and stimulates debate with the general public, through an organisation that strives for ‘total quality care’.

The courses - all taught in English - provide knowledge and insights in a number of fields including development economics, sociology, politics, public policy and management, governance, gender, employment, population, social security, children and youth, and human rights.

The Institute offers a four-year PhD programme, a 15.5-month MA in Development Studies with various specialisations, postgraduate diploma programmes and tailor-made short courses. All degrees are recognised internationally and by Dutch legislation on higher education.

Over the past 50 years, around 10,000 students from more than 160 countries have studied at ISS. Many now hold leading positions in government, international organisations, higher education, planning agencies and non-governmental organisations.

The staff is drawn from around thirty countries from all over the world. The multicultural community at ISS offers an excellent learning environment both inside and outside the classroom, in which students can gain from each others’ diverse experience.

The ISS participates with other academic institutes in the Netherlands, including the University of Amsterdam, Utrecht University and Wageningen University, in the CERES Research School (Centre for Resource Studies for Development). During their stay PhD students participate in the School’s activities, which include special courses and workshops. This gives them an opportunity to interact with PhD students from other universities in the Netherlands.

ISS is situated in the centre of The Hague, the city of peace and justice. The Hague is home to over 150 organisations like the Permanent Court of International Justice, the Peace Palace Library and Europol. From the Hague it takes a few hours to travel to European cities like Brussels, Paris or London. The ISS guarantees accommodation for all students. The ISS possesses of its own housing close to the institution’s premises and in other parts of The Hague. The ISS has its own library which focuses on the social sciences with a predominant focus on developing countries. The institute has a permanent broad band connection to the internet and students get their own email account.

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