<SOURCE TABLE="Criminology:Arts::v3.43">
<SUBJECT ID="191-326" CODEUSED="191-326/426">
<TITLE>VIOLENCE AND THE NATION-STATE</TITLE>
<POINTS>16.7 3rd and 4th years
<COORDINATOR>Dr David Tait.
<PREREQUISITES>3rd year: Any two second-level criminology subjects; 4th year: Admission to Criminology Honours.
<SEMESTER>Second semester
<CONTACT>One 1-hour lecture and a 2-hour seminar per week.
<OBJECTIVES>Students who complete this subject should be able to:
<ul>
<li>analyse critically the role of nation-states in promoting, regulating and carrying out violence against individuals, communities and states;
<li>understand justifications and critiques of official violence in social theory;
<li>critically examine and deconstruct theories of the 'state', 'genocide', ethnicity and masculinity in relation to state-sanctioned violence;
<li>demonstrate an understanding of methods and techniques useful for analysing information about violence and the state, including oral history, document analysis and analysis of official statistics;
<li>demonstrate an ability to carry out independent research on state violence using an appropriate range of sources and techniques
</ul>
<CONTENT>The subject examines the role of the nation-state in promoting, regulating and carrying out violence. Case studies may include the white settlement of Australia, the Holocaust, the slave trade and corporal punishment in schools.
<ASSESSMENT>Up to 5,000 words written work at 3rd year level and 6,000 words at 4th year level. An examination may be substituted for part of the written work.
</SUBJECT>
</SOURCE>


