 |  |  |
| DROI2319-2 | Social Law and Crime
|

 |
| Duration : | 45h Th, 15h AUTR |
 |
| Number of credits : |
| Master in Law, Professional Focus in Business Law, 1st year |  | 8 |
 |
| Master in Law, Professional Focus in Public and Administrative Law, 1st year |  | 8 |
 |
| Master in Law, Professional Focus in Private Law, 1st year |  | 8 |
 |
| Master in Law, Professional Focus in Interuniversity Mobility, 1st year |  | 8 |
 |
| Master in Law, Professional focus in Criminal Law, 1st year |  | 8 |
 |
| Master in Law, Professional Focus in Labour Law, 1st year |  | 8 |
 |
| Master in Law, Professional Focus in Labour Law, 2nd year |  | 8 |
 |
|
 |
| Lecturer : | Fabienne Kéfer |
 |
Language(s) of instruction :
 |
| French language |
 |
Organisation and examination :
 |
| Teaching in the second semester |
 |
Course contents :
 |
| The course is held every odd year (2015-2016, 2017-2018...).
The course stands at the crossroad of two matters, social law and criminal law.
Criminal labour law is the cross-over between two disciplines, labour law and criminal law.
It consists of studying the particularities of this branch of law, which is distinguished in several ways from more traditional criminal law, with a view to adapting to the needs of situations which lead to non-compliance with labour law. Questions relating to, among other things, criminal liability, administrative sanctions, and investigative powers of investigators. |
 |
Learning outcomes of the course :
 |
| At the end of the course, students must have mastered the key issues of social criminal law by emphasizing its specificity with regard to the so- called civil sanctions on the one hand, and to common criminal law on the other hand. |
 |
Prerequisites and co-requisites/ Recommended optional programme components :
 |
| Students are requested to have a sufficient knowledge of social law, as well as of criminal law. |
 |
Planned learning activities and teaching methods :
 |
| Ex cathedra course completed by readings of case-laws presented by students. If the number of students makes it possible, a mock trial is held.
The course is given during the second semester, on Tuesday mornings, from 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Depending on the progress of the course, three or four sessions will be added on Monday morning from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 a.m.
However, if the number of students is too low, the course will be replaced by a paper presented in seminar. |
 |
Mode of delivery (face-to-face ; distance-learning) :
 |
| presential |
 |
Recommended or required readings :
 |
| F. Kéfer, Précis de droit pénal social, 2ème éd., Anthémis, 2014. |
 |
Assessment methods and criteria :
 |
| Written exam. Teacher keeps the rignt to replace the written examination by an oral exam during the second session.
The main evaluation criteria include the student's ability to develop judicial reasoning, by setting out the arguments that support it, articulating those arguments in a logical, rigourous and coherent way, using reliable sources, as well as the ability to choose between different options, justifying this choice with judicial arguments. |
 |
Work placement(s) :
 |
| |
 |
Organizational remarks :
 |
| The course is held every odd year (2015-2016, 2017-2018...). |
 |
Contacts :
 |
| Teacher: Fabienne Kéfer - office R.59 - phone.: 04.366.30.54 ou 04.254.11.00 - mail : fkefer@ulg.ac.be
Secretary : Catherine Fett - Office I. 75- tel.: 04.366.31.57 - mail: catherine.fett@ulg.ac.be
Assistant : Aurélie Mortier: local R.58 - tél.: 04.366.30.55 maiol : Aurelie.Mortier@ulg.ac.be |
 |

|
|  |