Power and Resistance: 1900 - Present
Course Level Undergraduate
Course Level Undergraduate
                                                        Area/Catalogue
                                                        
HUMS 3049
                                                    
                                                        Course Level
                                                        
Undergraduate
                                                    
                                                        Offered Externally
                                                        
No
                                                    
Course ID
154547
                                                        Unit Value
                                                        
4.5
                                                    
                                                        University-wide elective course
                                                        
No
                                                    
                                                        Course owner
                                                        
UniSA Justice & Society
                                                    
To develop students’ advanced knowledge on the relationship between power and resistance in the context of designing and managing an individual research project.
The course entails students to advance their knowledge on the relationship between power and resistance in a historical context. In so doing, students will advance their knowledge of relevant research project skills. Working with their project supervisor, students will develop and manage individual research projects on power and resistance in relation to cultural and historical topics such as the civil rights movement, worker’s rights, gender and sexuality, politics of protest, to name a few, occurring within the timeframe 1900-present.
Planning Your Qualitative Research Project 2007, Tom O'Donoghue, Routledge, London and New York
Completion of any first year course from the History and Global Politics major within MBAA Bachelor of Arts, DHLD Bachelor of Laws (Honours) Bachelor of Arts (History and Global Politics), Humanities and Social Sciences for Education major in LHSE Bachelor of Secondary Education (Honours) or by approval from the Program Director. Completion of any first year course from previous major/sub-major offerings of History and Cultural Studies or International Relations.
Nil
| Component | Duration | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| INTERNAL, MAGILL | |||
| Seminar | 2 hours x First 5 weeks of course | ||
| Directed Study | N/A x 10 weeks | ||
Note: These components may or may not be scheduled in every study period. Please refer to the timetable for further details.
Case study, Essay
                EFTSL*: 0.125
                Commonwealth Supported program (Band 4A)
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Fee-paying program for domestic and international students
International students and students undertaking this course as part of a postgraduate fee paying program must refer to the relevant program home page to determine the cost for undertaking this course.
Non-award enrolment
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* Equivalent Full Time Study Load. Please note: all EFTSL values are published and calculated at ten decimal places. Values are displayed to three decimal places for ease of interpretation.