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Mediterranean Migration
Málaga, Spain; Rabat, Morocco; Toulouse, France
Program Terms: Mosaic,
Spring
Restrictions: Dickinson applicants only
Budget Sheets Spring
Dates / Deadlines:
Term Year App Deadline Decision Date Start Date End Date
Spring 2014 09/15/2013 10/20/2013 TBA TBA
Fact Sheet:
Language of Instruction: English Minimum GPA: 2.8
Maximum Credits Earned (per semester): 4.0 Academic Area of Study: History, Sociology
Program Description:

Mediterranean Migration

Spring 2013

Morocco, Malaga, Toulouse

Professors Borges, Rose, and Toux

This innovative program, linking our global centers abroad, will be offered for spring 2013.  The Mediterranean Migration will focus on migrations between Morocco, France and Spain, exploring the multiple and interacting identities embodied by individuals, communities, regions, and the nation-state. It will examine the creation of transnational communities, ethnic and religious tensions and cooperation, philosophical orientations to diversity, and social policy. 

The Mediterranean has witnessed the circulation of ideas, people, and goods between Northern Africa and Southern Europe across the centuries. Both during times of conflict and cooperation, colonization, religious expansion, and human migrations have shaped the lives of individuals and the history of cultures. Current migrations and conditions associated with globalization date back to the centuries of contact that began with the Berber and Arabic conquest of the Iberian Peninsula in the 8th Century and continue with the colonial and post-colonial realities of the 19th and 20th centuries.

Sustainability, broadly conceived, will be another important component of this program. Mediterranean Migration will explore cultural sustainability (the ways in which migrant and immigrant communities maintain their dynamic culture even as they adapt to their new transnational reality); and economic and environmental sustainability (how the state, employers, and workers negotiate economic and environmental costs and benefits related to productivity, labor, and health of humans and the environment).

Multi-lingual research teams will explore these dynamic interactions, with a focus on labor and family migrations. Through oral histories, ethnographic, and survey research we will begin to trace migration patterns; the contexts and conditions of both sending and receiving communities; the journeys and life experiences of (im)migrants; and community building and reception. Debates over social policy, national identity, religious diversity, and collective memory will inform our discussions.

This full semester program will include four courses to be taken by all Mosaic students.

HIST 215 /SOC 230 Mediterranean Migrations (cross-listed in History and Sociology) will focus on the development of migratory flows between Morocco and southern Europe in the context of trans-Mediterranean migration history. In addition, the course will place migration from Morocco within the larger historical contacts between Europe and Morocco—including colonialism and its aftermath—and it will consider the impact of larger socioeconomic and political changes on geographic mobility across the Mediterranean. The course will address the interplay of structural socioeconomic and political factors with individual trajectories of migrant men and women, and the impact they have on families and communities. FLIC option: Spanish TH 9-10:15

HIST215/ SOC 240 or 340 Qualitative Research Methods will introduce students to ethnographic research methods, interviewing, oral history, mapping, demographic, and archival research. Students will be actively engaged in all phases of the research process from research design to data collection, analysis, and presentation. FLIC option: Spanish W 1:30-4:15

SOC 230 Representations of (Im)migrants will focus on the ways in which 1) (im)migrants are represented in various cultural contexts through film, the arts, and the media; and 2) individual (im)migrants and collectivities represent themselves. We will explore how (im)migrants and receiving societies negotiate demographic, religious, and cultural changes as well as changing conceptions of identity at individual, collective, and national levels. We will examine topics such as: accommodation and resistance; inclusion and exclusion; gender and generational dynamics; globalization and identities in flux; art and politics; borders and border-crossings; and nativism. FLIC option: Spanish or French 10:30 TH

HIST/SOC 500 Independent Research/Study 500 level.  The first 4-5 weeks of this course will take place on campus.  Students will then fly to our global centers abroad, Toulouse, Morocco, and Malaga, for a month of research abroad.  The program then will return to campus to process and analyze the data during the last 5-6 weeks of class.

These courses may count towards others majors after consultation with the chair of that major and one of the participating faculty.

Program Cost

The comprehensive program fee is approximately $3800. Airfare and visa fees are not included; however, group travel will be arranged.

Included while abroad:
Room and board
Academic excursions
In-country transportation
Pre-departure orientation
Emergency insurance

Financial Aid

Financial aid is available to eligible Dickinson students. Requests for financial aid must be submitted via the online application by the application deadline. 

Eligibility

Students with a minimum 2.8 GPA are encouraged to apply.

Applications

Please click the “Apply Now” button to begin the application process. The application fee is $35.

Payments

A $300.00 non-refundable confirmation payment will be required approximately two weeks after notification of acceptance.

Program Contacts

Prof. Susan Rose
Professor of Sociology
Email:
rose@dickinson.edu
Tele: 717.245.1244

Prof. Marcelo Borges
Associate Professor of History
Email:
borges@dickinson.edu
Tele: 717.245.1186

Dr. Sylvie Toux
Resident Director, Dickinson in France
Email:
touxs@dickinson.edu