SP52088: Homicide and the human condition
[Page last updated: 15 August 2024]
Academic Year: | 2024/25 |
Owning Department/School: | Department of Social & Policy Sciences |
Credits: | 10 [equivalent to 20 CATS credits] |
Notional Study Hours: | 200 |
Level: | Masters UG & PG (FHEQ level 7) |
Period: |
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Assessment Summary: | CWES 100% |
Assessment Detail: |
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Supplementary Assessment: |
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Requisites: | |
Learning Outcomes: |
On successful completion of this unit students will be able to:
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Synopsis: | Explore the nature, anatomy, causes, and consequences of homicide.
This unit combines a legal, cultural, psychological, sociological and criminiological understanding of homicide to consider what constitutes `homicide', who kills and is killed, in what circumstances, and for what reasons. It critically examines the appeal, validity and influence of media portrayals of murder and murderers, as well as the implications of homicide for both the perpetrator and the victim's family and friends. |
Content: | This unit will cover topics such as:
1. The legal, cultural and normative framing of `homicide' (including debates about whether abortion, euthanasia and honour killings constitute `murder') 2. Who kills? (including `serial' killers, the military, medical professionals, state violence, genocide, and the role of violence in gang and organised crime activity) 3. Media Representations of Murder and Murderers 4. Domestic Homicides (including both women and men who kill) 5. Children who kill 6. Insanity, Psychopathy and Murder 7. Investigating and Prosecuting Murder 8. Murder and its Aftermath (including bereavement, the impact on the family, life sentences, and the death penalty) |
Course availability: |
SP52088 is Optional on the following courses:Department of Social & Policy Sciences
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Notes:
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