LLM Core Courses and Thesis Course: Updated 8 April 2021
LLM Core Courses and Thesis Course: Updated 8 April 2021
LLM Core Courses and Thesis Course: Updated 8 April 2021
LAW International Law 3 u. This problem-based course will develop the student’s
240 from Multiple knowledge of public international law concepts,
Perspectives international jurisprudential reasoning, jurisdictional overlap
and sovereign immunities, and interlocking competences of
courts, tribunals, and other treaty-based dispute settlement
mechanisms, as applied in contemporary problems of
international politics and international adjudication. This
course is designed to enable students to differentiate
between lex lata rules and de lege ferenda postulations in
the UN Charter-based international system; detect the
appropriate and correct interfaces of international legal
norms in relation to other public law norms within the
constitutional system; conduct technical substantive
assessments of the international legality (and illegality) of
acts committed by State and non-State actors; determine
the international responsibility attributable to State and non-
State authors of wrongful acts under international law;
ascertain the consequences of international responsibility;
and identify procedural remedies available for redressing
such situations of illegality within the framework of the
international legal order. The course will apply these
analytical approaches to basic problems of sovereignty; the
use of force (jus ad bellum) and international humanitarian
law (jus in bello); self-determination and human rights;
territorial and maritime delimitation; international tort and
criminal responsibility; environmental responsibility and
remediation; and international transactions and
international dispute settlement.
LAW ASEAN Law 2 u. The course is designed to initiate students to the study of
241 ASEAN law in the Southeast Asian political, sociological,
and historical context. In addition to introducing students to
the emerging body of regional law and the regional
governance system of the ASEAN, the course will also
allow students to examine current developments such as
the ASEAN integration process.
LAW Master’s Thesis 6 u. This course is in line with the University’s statutory mandate
300 to provide advanced studies and specialization for scholars
and professionals. In producing a thesis, each student will
be required to analyze the content, theoretical bases,
development, and operation of laws and legal processes in
his/her chosen area of specialization; to identify any
relevant needs, challenges, or issues concerning such laws
and legal processes; and to conduct legal research and
draft proposals for reforms in laws and legal processes
relating to such needs, challenges, or issues.
This is a two-part course, each part with three (3) units.
Under normal circumstances, the two-part course will be
taken during the second semester and the midyear term to
ensure that students have sufficient time to choose a