| 1 | <p>Understand a model of psychiatric care and treatment that draws on indigenous knowledge and gives due consideration for wairua (spirit), tinana (body), and whānau (family).</p> | <p>LLM - Master of Laws - Programme Capabilities <p>Graduates will have an understanding of the unique place of Māori as tangata whenua in New Zealand, the relevance and influence of mātauranga Māori in legal discourses, the sources and continuing authority of tikanga Māori, and the historic, contemporary and ongoing legal significance of Te Tiriti o Waitangi.</p> </p> |
| 2 | <p>Recognise the trauma, stigma, and hardship that Māori experience in a mental-health system that does not recognise mātauranga Māori and where wairuatanga is diminished by a westernised clinical paradigm.</p> | <p>LLM - Master of Laws - Programme Capabilities <p>Graduates will have a deep, critical appreciation of the differential impacts of law, and law’s potential to achieve justice and equality in Aotearoa New Zealand’s place in Te Moananui-a-Kiwa and the world.</p> </p> |
| 3 | <p>Draw connections between the statutory regimes governing the compulsory care and treatment of individuals with mental illness, intellectual disability, and substance use disorder, guardianship and care of children and older people, fitness to stand trial, the insanity defence, family violence, the regulation of sex offenders.</p> | <p>LLM - Master of Laws - Programme Capabilities <p>Graduates will possess an advanced understanding of the law. They will be able to apply their understanding of the theory, history, nature and substance of law across different contexts. Graduates will be able to combine such knowledge with transdisciplinary perspectives to respond to societal challenges.</p> </p> |
| 4 | <p>Demonstrate the ability to apply legal knowledge to theories of capacity, psychiatric and intellectual disability, and the treatment of justice-involved individuals with mental illness.</p> | <p>LLM - Master of Laws - Programme Capabilities <p>Graduates will possess an advanced understanding of the law. They will be able to apply their understanding of the theory, history, nature and substance of law across different contexts. Graduates will be able to combine such knowledge with transdisciplinary perspectives to respond to societal challenges.</p> </p> |
| 5 | <p>Identify and critically evaluate legal rules and principles relating to capacity, public safety, and the right to treatment for individuals with psychiatric, intellectual, neuro-developmental, or age-related disability.</p> | <p>LLM - Master of Laws - Programme Capabilities <p>Graduates will be able to identify, analyse and critically evaluate legal rules and principles. They will be able to construct detailed, scholarly and creatively reasoned arguments supported by evidence to a sophisticated level.</p> </p> |
| 6 | <p>Evaluate mental-health law and policy in practice, critique its inadequacies, and produce an original work, relying on primary and secondary sources, proposing reform.</p> | <p>LLM - Master of Laws - Programme Capabilities <p>Graduates will be able to draw on multiple perspectives to make reasoned and innovative recommendations to respond to complex legal issues, which carefully attend to relevant context and implications.</p> </p> |
| 7 | <p>Present a research question and thesis to the class proposing normative law reform.</p> | <p>LLM - Master of Laws - Programme Capabilities <p>Graduates will listen and communicate coherently, persuasively and respectfully for different audiences, using different technologies and formats.</p> </p> |
| 8 | <p>Appraise and critique the strength and clarity of fellow students’ arguments through peer review.</p> | <p>LLM - Master of Laws - Programme Capabilities <p>Graduates will be able to initiate and maintain relationships, and collaborate, advocate and influence effectively and ethically.</p> </p> |