Sexual Violence
Spring 2018
Wednesdays 11:30am – 2:30pm, Ross Blakely Hall, room 171
Why is immigration controversial?
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How do labels shape the debate?
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What’s the purpose of borders, walls, and boundaries?
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Does immigration = innovation?
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How does migration define your identity?
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This lab course will seek ways to respond to these difficult, transdisciplinary questions on migration and movement.
Together, students and faculty will engage with current and historical immigration and refugee movement at the local, national, and global level. The course trains students with a variety of methodological tools that will be applied as teams of students and faculty explore resolutions
or approaches to these complex situations. Through engaging in research exercises that probe, interrogate, explore, and design collaborative group projects, the course will share their outcomes and the course experience beyond the classroom.
Course Learning Outcomes
- Identify contemporary issues in immigration/refugee movement.
- Compare different understandings of migration, immigration, and global movement.
- Determine the appropriate research methods for addressing and understanding these issues.
- Design a collaborative research project that investigates immigration, global migration, and/or refugee encounters.
Enrollment Information
Spring 2019: Monday and Wednesday, 10:45am-12:00pm |
Ross Blakely Hall, Room 171, Session C |
Humanities Lab | Anthropology |
HUL 494 and 598 | ASB 494 |
History | School of International Letters and Cultures |
HST 494 | SLC 494 |
Women and Gender Studies | |
WST 494 |