Class number:
1940
|
|
Title: Prohibitions |
|
Department: Formal Organizations |
Career: Undergraduate |
|
Component: Seminar |
|
Session: Regular |
Instructor's Permission Required: Yes |
|
Grading Basis: Regular |
|
Units: 1.00 |
Enrollment limited to 15 |
|
Current enrollment: 16 |
|
Available seats: 0 |
Start date: Tuesday, September 5, 2023 |
|
End date: Thursday, December 21, 2023 |
|
Mode of Instruction: In Person |
Schedule: MWF: 10:00AM-10:50AM, HHN - 105 |
|
|
Instructor(s): Alcorn, John |
Prerequisite(s): None |
Distribution Requirement: Meets Social Sciences Requirement |
Course Description:
This seminar tackles two questions: Why do we outlaw some consensual
behaviors by adults? And should we? Our common work will focus on prohibitions against lifestyles, markets,international migration, and making and taking life. Topics in contested lifestyles are recreational drug use and free marriage.Topics in contested markets are sex, adoption, organs for transplantation, secrecy (blackmail), and wagering on political predictions. Topics in contested ways of making and taking life are genetic engineering, abortion, and assisted suicide. Students will conduct policy debates about various prohibitions. We will devote several weeks towards the end of the semester to individual (or small-group) research projects by students. The research projects may be about topics we have covered or about other prohibitions. |