The breakout of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 has brought the entire world to its knees. The world is in its biggest recession since the Great Depression. Already fragile countries and communities heavily in debt or suffering from armed conflicts are on the verge of unraveling into chaos. Millions of people in various regions of the world have lost their livelihoods. It is clear that the harshest impacts have been on the poorest and most vulnerable; yet the biggest casualty has been international solidarity at a time when it is most needed. This pandemic has exposed the massive fault lines along the already complex and tenuous interface between globalization and human rights. The role of international organizations such as the United Nations, World Health Organization, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, World Trade Organization etc. prior to, during, and in the aftermath of the pandemic in times of economic recovery is of crucial importance. Yet, several of these institutional drivers of globalization, including others such as businesses, have even before the pandemic been accused of having adverse impacts on human rights or keeping human rights issues out of their domain. The pandemic has also exposed inequitable impacts of other drivers of globalization such as migration, cultural pluralism, and technology.

This course will introduce students to these major themes and debates concerning the different linkages between globalization and human rights and explore the new streams of critique that have enabled a confluence as well as a questioning of the globalization-human rights interface. The overarching context for the course will be the COVID-19 and post COVID-19 world order.