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2010 Course Handbook

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SOC361: Justice and the Social Order

The unit explores sociological theories and practices of social and criminal justice, discipline, and punishment in historical and contemporary settings. The unit invites students to consider the breadth of sociological theory, ideologies, and policy on criminal justice, social justice, social order, discipline, and punishment. These theories are introduced giving social and historical context for each approach, basic concepts and contemporary examples, as well as critique. Students are encouraged to develop a critical understanding of the relevance of these theories to current practices and ideologies by presenting and discussing case study examples in tutorials. Issues of social class, power structures, gender, Indigenousness, ethnicity, social inclusion and exclusion, and the evolution of our so called freedoms are explored throughout the unit. Critical reflection on social and criminal justice, discipline and punishment in theory and in practice in Australian and international milieu are encouraged, particularly linking justice, discipline and punishment to concepts of citizenship and the state, and connecting the ideals with the realities of freedom, liberty and justice in the current social order.

Credit Points: 4
Contact Hours: 3
When Offered:

D1 - Day; Offered in the first half-year

Staff Contact(s): Dr Peter Rogers
Prerequisites:

30cp

Corequisites:

NCCW(s):
Unit Designation(s):

Social Science

Assessed As: Graded
Offered By:

Department of Sociology

Timetable Information

For unit timetable information please visit the Timetables@Macquarie Website .