JJUA55241U Legal Innovation and Event Management - NOTE: THE COURSE IS CANCELLED IN THE AUTUMN SEMESTER 2018
The subject allows for immersion within a self-chosen legal area, with the opportunity for building and expanding one’s own professional network. There is thus the possibility of selfchosen specialization, where the student can work with the law as a tool for problem solving and value creation.
The learning goals are achieved by writing an independent paper
(synopsis) about a concrete, self-chosen issue of value-creating
character within a self-chosen part of the law. The paper must be
presented and defended orally at a public academic event. The
public academic event is organized, marketed, and held in
collaboration with the other course participants. The event
must involve relevant external actors from the public and private
sectors, e.g., as audience, speakers, etc. The student associations
Foreningen Argument and Lex Loci are cooperating with the course as
sparring partners.
Students will develop innovation and entrepreneurship competencies as well as develop communication skills regarding the dissemination of complex legal material. The course supports the preparation of the master’s thesis and, especially, its oral defense. In addition to the above named competencies, students gain training in other career-advancing skills, such as collaboration, project management, and event management.
Students will choose jointly, and under moderation of the course
conveners, one or more general themes for which they wish to
organize a public, academic event. Such themes might
address, e.g., one of the UN’s 15 Global Challenges, such as health
problems, climate change, differences between rich and poor, etc.
Such events may be, e.g., panel debates, workshops, seminars, or
poster presentations. The students themselves must be their own
Legal Innovators and event managers, as they themselves organize
and market the event as well as contact relevant external actors
who have an interest in the topic or topics. Through this, students
do not only develop innovation and entrepreneurship competencies.
They also further develop their professional networks.
Organizing and convening the event forms one part of the overall
exam. This part of the exam consists of a paper (synopsis) and an
oral defense in the form of participation in the event as
presenter. A synopsis may be done individually or in small groups.
The students get prepared for conveying their paper by a
rhetorician, who participates in a test-run of the presentations
and provides feedback on the papers.
During the course, students receive ongoing feedback on their
work on their papers from the course conveners and from the other
participants to ensure a high quality of the final product.
At the end of the course, students may want to submit their paper
to a relevant journal for publication, e.g. the UCPH Fiscal
Relations Law Journal
www.jura.ku.dk/firejournal).
All legal areas and disciplines are relevant to this course, and
there are no special prerequisites for taking the course, except
for a desire to further dwelve into a legal subject, collaborating
on organizing and convening an academic event, and to become your
own Legal Innovator and
event manager.
Knowledge:
- Explain basic legal concepts within a self-chosen legal area
- Reflect on a self-chosen area of value-creating character in an interdisciplinary and/or international context
- Reflect on/discuss legal issues/aspects within a self-chosen issue with particular focus on the value-creating part of the law
Skills:
- Analyze a legal problem within a self-chosen area of value-creating character
- Argue in a legally valid manner regarding the chosen problem
- Include, if necessary, interdisciplinary and international perspectives in the work on the issue, if this can help create value for the problem
- Identify relevant legal, interdisciplinary and international sources
- Argue for the methodological choices in the self-chosen research
- Discuss own results
- Conduct legal research (synopsis)
- Give and receive feedback
- Prepare and keep an oral presentation of the chosen problem
- Defend and discuss results and issues during the oral presentation
Competencies:
- Solve complex legal-, social-, or business-related tasks and create value for others
- Plan, manage, and handle complex workflows
- Collaborate with others across professional and disciplinary boundaries
Including innovation and entrepreneurship skills:
- Launch value-creating solutions
- Identify own and inadequate competencies and address imperfections, and regulate appropriate self-directed learning activities
- Be able to act on opportunities and good ideas.
Recommended litterature:
The recommended literature consists of ca 375 pages, the largest
part of which consists of literature chosen individually by the
students in relation to their individual paper projects (ca 200
pages). Further ca 50 pages of literature are supplied on academic
writing, plus ca 35 pages on innovation and entrepreneurship. Ca 60
pages of literature will deal with project management, and how to
prepare and give an academic oral presentation. Relevant example
published conference papers are provided (ca 30 pages). The below
examples of recommended literature are subject to change.
Examples on conference-papers
- Hansen, Søren Friis: Denmark: Beneficial Ownership; Interpretation of Directive 1990/435/EEC and Directive 2003/49/EC, i Lang, Michael m.fl.: CJEU – Recent Developments in Direct Taxation 2016, 2017, Linde, s. 33-43
- Hilling, Axel m.fl.: Tax policy issues in connection with the European Spallation Source project and other European Research Infrastructure Consortiums, Skattepolitisk Oversigt, 2017
Academic writing
- Murray, Rowena (2013): Writing for Academic Journals. 3. udg. Maidenhead, Berkshire: Open University Press, s. 114–161
Innovation and effectuation
- Society for Effectual Action (2011): What is effectuation? Batten Institute, Darden School of Business, University of Virginia. Charlottesville, VA. Available online at http://www.effectuation.org/sites/default/files/documents/effectuation-3-pager.pdf
Project management and academic presentations
- McMillan, Kathleen; Weyers, Jonathan (2013): Giving a Research Seminar or Paper. How to deliver an effective spoken presentation. I: Ibid.: How to Research & Write a Successful PhD: Pearson, s. 153–165
professional and disciplinary boundaries, and to collaborate with others on an innovative
project.
- Category
- Hours
- Preparation
- 178,25
- Seminar
- 28
- Total
- 206,25
Enrolling as a Single Master Level/ Credit Student:
For Single Master Level Courses – click here!
For Single-subject credit students - click here!
For further
information
- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Oral examination, 20 min.Oral exam based on a synopsis, 20 minutes
- Exam registration requirements
In order to attend the oral examination, it is a prerequisite to hand in the synopsis before the specified deadline. The deadline is agreed upon with the course lecturer.
- Marking scale
- 7-point grading scale
- Censorship form
- External censorship
- Exam period
Week 51, 2018 - Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
- Re-exam
Week 7, 2019 - Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- JJUA55241U
- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Level
- Full Degree MasterFull Degree Master choice
- Duration
- 1 semester
- Placement
- Autumn
- Schedule
- Please see the timetable for teaching time
- Continuing and further education
- Price
DKK 7.500
- Study board
- Law
Contracting department
- Law
Contracting faculty
- Faculty of Law
Course Coordinators
- Karina Kim Egholm Elgaard (karina.egholm.elgaard@jur.ku.dk)