Law and Human Sciences - 2020-2021
Description of the course
Scientific Areas: 10 - Antiquities, Philology, Literary Studies, History of Art; 11 - History, Philosophy, Pedagogy and Psychology; 12 – Legal Studies; 13 – Economics and statics; 04 – Earth Sciences.
Scientific-educational fields: IUS/01; IUS/02; IUS/09; IUS/10; IUS/11; IUS/13; IUS/14; IUS/15; IUS/16; IUS/17; IUS/18; IUS/20; IUS/21; GEO/03; L-ART/02; L-LIN/01; L-LIN/12; L-LIN/12; L-FIL-LET/10; L-OR/21; M-PED/03; M-STO/01; M-STO/02; M-STO/05; M-FIL/02; M-FIL/04; SECS-P/02; SECS-P/08.
Based on the assumption that a greater understanding of institutions and social systems can be achieved by combining legal, historical and philosophical knowledge, this PhD program intends to provide PhD students with research methods and cultural supports which allow blending complementary knowledges. Contact points between the law and the social sciences immediately emerge when law is considered as a vehicle for deeper knowledge, for values which are not merely imposed, but shared and created by a social group, as the law, history and philosophy share a language and sense-constitutive operations. The type of interdisciplinarity which this PhD program aims at is not actualized in establishing atypical disciplinary paths or in awarding hybrid specializations. This, indeed, may expose young researchers to the considerable inconvenience of losing, at the end of the program, a clear and well-recognizable title and scientific identity in the community of scholars and professionals. Rather, the interdisciplinarity – the distinctive key of the course – is intended as a dialogue among neighboring disciplines, which singularly preserve their individuality, but which through discussion and reciprocal interaction improve their knowledge and possibility of in-depth analysis, in the effort to develop the study of issues of common interest. The innovative and distinctive feature of this PhD program is, therefore, identified in these methodological premises, while the research objects may vary, following the opportunities suggested by the interests of the attendees or by the network of external collaborations. A second characteristic element of this PhD program consists in the internationalization of the educational offer and in the possibility of conducting research abroad. This is the reason why the PhD program faculty has been extended to foreign colleagues from several universities, who in various ways collaborate to the training of our PhD students, and also the reason underlying our collaboration with the UNESCO Chair, which has recently been established. We thus hope to increase the future opportunities for our PhD students, offering them concrete prospects in the national and international academic and professional world.
Organization:
Programs: Historical-philosophical Program and Legal Program
Frequency and teaching program
The (compulsory and optional) educational activities are defined by the Teaching Board
Admission requirements
Candidates must possess one of the following Master’s Degrees
LMG/01 Master ’s Degrees in Law; LM-1 Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology; LM-2 Archaeology; LM-3 Landscape Architecture; LM-5 Archive and Library Science; LM-10 Architectural and Environmental Heritage Preservation; LM-11 Cultural Heritage Preservation and Restoration; LM-14 Modern Philology; LM-15 Philology, Literature and Antiquities; LM-19 Information and Publishing Systems; LM-37 Modern European and American Languages and Literatures; LM-38 Modern Languages for International Communication and Cooperation; LM-39 Linguistics; LM-43 IT Methodologies Applied to the Humanities; LM-48 Territory and Urban Planning; LM-49 Design and Management of Tourism Systems; LM-50 Design and Management of Educational Services; LM-51 Psychology; LM-52 International Relations; LM-55 Cognitive Sciences; LM-57 Education Sciences; LM-63 Public Administration Science; LM-62 Political Sciences; LM-65 Performing Arts and Media Production; LM-78 Philosophical Sciences; LM-84 Historical Sciences; LM-85 Pedagogical Sciences; LM-87 Welfare Services and Policy; LM-88 Sociology and Social Research; LM-89 History of Art; LM-91 Techniques and Methods for the Information Society; LM-92 Communication Theories; LM/SC Criminology applied to Investigation and Security; LMR/02 Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage; 1/S (MA in Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology); 2/S (MA in Archaeology); 3/S (MA in Landscape Architecture); 5/S (MA in Archival Library Science); 10/S (MA in Architectural and Environmental Heritage Preservation); 11/S (MA in Scientific and Industrial Civilization Heritage Preservation); 12/S (MA in Historical-Artistic Heritage Preservation and Restoration); 13/S (MA in Publishing, Multimedia Communication and Journalism); 17/S (MA in Philosophy and History of Science); 18/S (MA in Theoretical, Moral, Political and Aesthetic Philosophy); 22/S (MA in Law); 24/S (MA in Digital Sciences for the Humanities); 40/S (MA in Italian Language and Culture); 43/S (MA in Foreign Languages for International Communication); 44/S (MA in Linguistics); 54/S (MA in Territorial and City Planning); 55/S (MA in Design and Management of Touristic Systems); 57/S (MA in design and management of welfare policies and social services); 60/S (MA in International Relations); 63/S (MA in cognitive sciences); 67/S (MA in sciences of social and institutional communications); 70/S (MA in Political Science); 71/S (MA in public administration science); 72/S (MA in religion science); 82/S (MA in sciences and technologies for the environment and the territory); 83/S (MA in economic sciences for the environment and culture); 88/S (MA in sciences for development cooperation); 89/S (MA in sociology); 93/S (MA in ancient history); 94/S (MA in contemporary history); 95/S (MA in history of art); 96/S (MA in history of philosophy); 97/S (MA in medieval history); 98/S (MA in modern history); 99/S (MA in European Studies); 100/S (MA in techniques and methods for the information society); 101/S (MA in theory of communication); 102/S (MA in theories and techniques of standardization of juridical information); 104/S (MA in Literary and Technical-Scientific Translation); comparable titles of Master’s Degrees after the DM 509/1999 or four-year degrees after the preexisting order (among others, Master’s degree in law, in International Relations, Four-year degree in Law, Four-year degree in philosophy, Four-year degree in Italian Studies, which are comparable to LM-80 Geographical sciences; LM-1 cultural anthropology and ethnology; LM.14Modern philology; LM-2 Archeology; LM-5 Archival science and librarianship; LM-15 Philology, literature and antiquities; LM-45 Musicology and cultural heritage; LM-65 Theater sciences and multimedia production; LM-37 Modern European and American Languages and Literatures; LM-19 Information and editorial systems; LM-62 Political sciences; LM-63 Public administration science).
Training activity
- 16 September at hrs. 10:00 a.m. Organized by Prof. Alessandra Vicentini and Prof. Paola Biavaschi on Medical-scientific Communication and Legal Profiles
- To be scheduled - Organized by Prof. Flavia Cortelezzi on Economic Analysis of Law
- To be scheduled - Organized by Prof. Sebastiano Citroni Civil Society and the Government of Urban Transformations
- To be scheduled - organized by Prof. Gabriella Mangione, Prof. Grazia Mannozzi, Prof. Andrea Spiriti and Angela Di Gregorio Law and Memories
- To be scheduled - Organized by Prof. Micaela Latini The Kafka Process: an Interdisciplinary View
- To be scheduled - organized by Proff. Barbara Pozzo, Gianmarco Gaspari The Adulteress in Literature
- To be scheduled - organized by Prof. Francesca Ferrari Artificial Intelligence and the Law: the New Initiatives of the European Union
- To be scheduled - organized by Proff. Emanuele Boscolo, Gianmarco Gaspari, Literary Landscapes
- To be scheduled - organized by Prof.ssa Cenini, Prof. Andrea Spiriti Law and Art
- To be scheduled - organized by Prof. Andrea Spiriti Representation of the Highlights of Ancient Law
- To be scheduled - organized by Prof. Barbara Pozzo, Valentina Jacometti, Roberta Minazzi, Roberta Pezzetti, Cycle of seminars: The new Silk Road: Sustainability Profiles (PRIN Project).
- To be scheduled - organized by Prof. Valentina Jacometti: Green Policies and the Textile Sector: Fashion becomes Sustainable
- To be scheduled - organized by Proff. Barbara Pozzo, Valentina Jacometti The European “Green Deal”
- November 2020: organized by Barbara Pozzo, Alessandra Vicentini, Valentina Jacometti, Silvia Marino, Fabrizio Vismara with Estella Cigna Angelidis (EU Court of Justice) and Sief van Erp (European Law Institute), The Role of English after Brexit in the EU
- March 2021: organized by Lino Panzeri, Emanuele Boscolo, Alessandra Vicentini The Language of Administrative Acts
- April 2021: Barbara Pozzo, Paolo Biavaschi, Valentina Jacometti, Alessandra Vicentini, Language and Gender: a legal and linguistic Approach
- May 2021: Barbara Pozzo, Valentina Jacometti, Silvia Ferreri (UNITO), Legal Cathegories and Terminologies for Uniform Law.
Two International Conferences
- May 2021 (organized by Barbara Pozzo) – Made in Italy: a legal and cultural approach, joint project with Florida International University
- June 2021 (organized by Alessandra Vicentini) – COMET 2021 – The 19th lnternational conference on “Communication, medicine and ethics”, 28-30 June, 2021
Contacts
Dipartimento di Diritto, economia e culture - DiDEC
Università degli Studi dell'Insubria
Via Sant'Abbondio 12 - 22100 Como
Coordinatore: Prof.ssa Barbara Pozzo
E-mail: barbara.pozzo@uninsubria.it
Enroll
This PhD Program has been established for the XXXVI cycle
Expected Admissions: 9
With scholarship: 7
Without scholarship: 2
You can enroll in the PhD program after a public competition for qualifications and examinations.
Call for admission