COURSE OBJECTIVE COURSE STRUCTURE

Similar documents
INTE-GE 2545: INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES ON THE NEW IMMIGRATION NEW YORK UNIVERSITY

Tentative and subject to change

LATINA/LATINO STUDIES PROGRAM FALL 2010 COURSES

Immigrants, Human Rights and Society: Mexico as a Migration Case Study

METHOD OF PRESENTATION

Global Latinidad: Racial Translations and National Belonging in the Age of Immigration SPANISH 228 Fall 2016 Tuesdays 1:00pm 3:00pm

This course will analyze contemporary migration at the urban, national and

Proposal for Interdisciplinary Learning and Service Course

Does Acculturation Lower Educational Achievement for Children of Immigrants? Emily Greenman

University of Illinois at Chicago BSB 1115 Fall 2008 T 11-1:30. International Latino Politics: Migration, Foreign Policy, and Conflict

Menchaca Spring 2013 Anth 389K/LAS 391/MAS392 W /40645/36250 SAC AMERICAN IMMIGRANT CULTURAL EXPERIENCES

EDUCATION 177/277 EDUCATION OF IMMIGRANT STUDENTS: PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES. Winter Quarter 2004 Monday and Wednesday 1:15 to 3:05 Cubberley 313

UNESCO S CONTRIBUTION TO THE WORK OF THE UNITED NATIONS ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION

Migration ANTH /SOCI Course Objectives

Cultures & Contexts: Spain At the Crossroads of Europe, North Africa, and America (in English)

The Chinese Diaspora: Space, Place, Mobility, and Identity (review)

Ethnic Studies 135AC Contemporary U.S. Immigration Summer 2006, Session D Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday (10:30am-1pm) 279 Dwinelle

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY. Immigration and the Transformation of American Society Spring 2014

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE March 2014 Current Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of Hyderabad

Diaspora in the Caribbean

This section provides a brief explanation of major immigration and

Online access: readings marked with (*) will be available via the Sakai class website

Political Science. Political Science-1. Faculty: Ball, Chair; Fair, Koch, Lowi, Potter, Sullivan

Engaging the Diaspora development the case of Albania

Immigration. Min Shu Waseda University. 2018/6/26 International Political Economy 1

Instructor Dr. Stephen Lin Office: SSC 5209 Office Hours: by appointment

Texas Education Review

University of Illinois at Chicago BSB International Latino Politics: Migration, Foreign Policy, and Conflict

New Trends in Migration

Social Movements, Contentious Politics, and Democracy

Core Curriculum Supplement

Postwar Migration in Southern Europe,

MIGRATION POLICY Announcement in Brief. Course Type: Short Term Course

America s Pacific: Asian American History History Fall 2017 Tuesday, 2:30-5:10

MA International Relations Module Catalogue (September 2017)

B.A., Excelencia Academica, Universidad de Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Gto. (July 2001). International trade major.

Professor Radha S. Hegde E SP08 Transnational Communities and Media Cultures

Fear of the Unknown: Views on Immigrants in Metropolitan St. Louis. Emily Hager University of Missouri-St. Louis

Chapter 3 Learning Guide Migration. 3. Migration may be classified as either international or internal. What is the difference?

Geography 320H1 Geographies of Transnationalism, Migration, and Gender Fall Term, 2015

4. Briefly describe role of each of the following in examining intervening obstacles and migration: a) physical geography

QUANTIFYING TRANSNATIONALISM: ASIAN SKILLED MIGRATION TO AUSTRALIA

University of Maryland. Department of Government and Politics

Responsibilities of Migrant Sending States and their Migrants Abroad

HISTORY EXPLORE HUMAN PAST LANDSCAPES OF THE

ACCULTURATION AMONG SECOND GENERATION SOUTH ASIAN IMMIGRANTS LITERATURE REVIEW

Kauffman Dissertation Executive Summary

Example of a Well-Designed Course in: HISTORY

HI 310: 2016 M/W/F/:1-2 CAS

Varieties of Capitalism in East Asia: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and China

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES 205: INTRODUCTION TO EUROPEAN STUDIES

SO 1000 LE Introduction to Sociology or SO 1001 LE Sociology of Modern Life, plus any additional course in Sociology.

None. As a result of taking this course, the students could be able to:

Internal and International Migration and Development: Research and Policy Perspectives

GOVT43X Professor Peter Mandaville. GLOBAL MIGRATION: Borders, Economies, Identities

Winner, Theda Skocpol Best Dissertation Award from the Comparative- Historical Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association, 2013

SAMPLE Course Clusters

IMMIGRATION: THE CHANGING FACE OF AMERICA HIST (CRN# 27121) Spring 2007, T,Th 3:30-4:45 p.m. Room: Palmer Hall 205

Debating Civil Military Relations In Latin America (Sussex Library Of Study: New Perspectives On Latin America Society, Culture, History) READ ONLINE

LESSON PLAN: A Panther in Africa

INTL 463/563 Spring COURSE SYLLABUS (Draft, Subject to Change)

Ricardo D. Martínez-Schuldt UNC-CH Department of Sociology 102 Emerson Drive CB#3210 Chapel Hill, NC Office

SOCIOLOGY T240z (#9684) Contemporary Immigration & the Second Generation Spring 2017 Tues/Thurs 11:45AM-1:05PM BA215

Transnational Ties of Latino and Asian Americans by Immigrant Generation. Emi Tamaki University of Washington

Geog 741 Population Geography Spring 2007 Course Outline

State, Law and Politics in Society L , G and G Furman Hall, Rm 316 Wednesday: 4:05-5:55

IS - International Studies

Special Topic: Philosophy of Law Phil. 299, Spring 2015

World Migration in Figures

Two PhD Scholarships and One Postdoctoral Scholarship on Migrants Social Protection Strategies

Human Rights and Social Justice

Gabrielle Oliveira tel: skype: gabrielleoliveira

LATIN AMERICAN ICONS COMM Spring 2010

Bela Hovy Chief, Migration Section Population Division, Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA)

Week 1 September 4 Introduction

Course Syllabus Spring 2015 FLL 470: Multiculturism in Literature and Film

Office hours: Wednesdays and Thursdays 10:00-11:30 and by appointment 226 Bay State Road, Room 209, tel

Class code CORE-UA Instructor Details. Professor: Eugenio Suárez-Galbán Guerra. Office Hours: Wednesdays 5:00-6:00

HI 102 The Emergence of Modern Europe: Renaissance to the Present Spring 2016 MWF, 1:00-2:00

The Cultural Landscape by Rubenstein Chapter 3: Migration

Key Issue 1: Where Are Migrants Distributed?

The Boston Principles on the Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights of Noncitizens

Mershon Center events

History 3252 People on the Move: Migration in Modern Europe

Mexico. Brazil. Colombia. Guatemala. El Salvador. Dominican Republic

Pol S 345: Immigration Policy Spring 2012 MWF 2:00-3:00 PM W0162 Lagomarcino

DOES THE ELEPHANT DANCE?: CONTEMPORARY INDIAN FOREIGN POLICY BY DAVID M. MALONE

Learning Outcomes/ Standards Having followed the history course at the higher or standard level, students will be expected to:

AIX Australia Today Trimester 3/Summer Intensive

Chapter 3 Lecture. Chapter 3 Migration. Tim Scharks Green River College Pearson Education, Inc.

JAMES MADISON COLLEGE

Canada Research Chair on International Migration Law

AMST 383/ ER&M 384: U.S. BORDER & IMMIGRATION POLICY. Yale College Summer 2017 Session B: July 3 August 4, 2017 M and W, 9:00 a.m. 12:15 p.m.

Migration. Topic Background

Ladies and gentlemen

History 160 Asian American History: Processes of Movement and Dislocation

Anthropology of Global Health & Development ANTH 463 Spring 2015, MW 1:30-2:45 University of Hawai`i at Manoa

MULTICURALISM, IMMIGRATION, AND IDENTITY IN WESTERN EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES WORKSPACE SITE

Journals in the Discipline: A Report on a New Survey of American Political Scientists

Course Schedule Spring 2009

Transcription:

E53.2545001 (same as E52.0531001; V18.0807001; G10.154500) Prof. Marcelo M. Suárez-Orozco Co-Director, Immigration Studies at NYU 726 Broadway, 5th Floor New York, NY 10003-6644 http://www.nyu.edu/education/immigration mso3@nyu.edu 212-998-5284 Mondays 2:00pm to 4:30pm For arguably the first time in human history, all countries in the world are deeply involved in the massive movement of people: as countries of immigration, emigration, or as transit countries and sometimes as all three at once. In these times of economic crisis, immigration has become civilization s new discontent. In virtually all-major postindustrial democracies few topics are as unsettling as immigration and the economy, immigration controls, the fate of growing numbers of undocumented immigrants, and the adaptation problems of the children of immigrants. Likewise, in countries of emigration, similar heated debates are taking place: the problem of Brain Drain, the issue of remittances from overseas workers, the political influence of absentee citizens residing in the Diaspora. With approximately 214 million transnational immigrants and some 15 million refugees worldwide, immigration is the human face of globalization and has become a defining feature of the new transnationalism. COURSE OBJECTIVE The objective of this course is to introduce students to a sampling of recent research, in various academic disciplines, dealing with immigration. We will achieve this objective by examining research in comparative and interdisciplinary perspectives with a particular focus on the emerging Inter American migration system. Students will learn about the most recent trends of Latin American, Caribbean and to a lesser extend Asian migration to the U.S., and will compare the nature of current immigration scholarship in the U. S. to developments in other countries. An examination of the comparative materials will highlight isomorphic conditions --as well as differences-- in immigration debates, policies, processes, and outcomes. This course will be interdisciplinary. We shall examine recent data and theoretical work in a variety of fields such as economics, education, law, policy, psychology, sociocultural anthropology, sociolinguistics, and sociology. COURSE STRUCTURE

The course will be structured around three analytical "currents." The first current will examine recent empirical and theoretical developments in the social science literature dealing with immigration. These materials will be discussed during our scheduled lectures. The second current will involve analysis, discussion, and writing on literary representations of the immigrant experience (see The Literature of Immigration: Required Books). These materials will be examined in the context of student-led discussions of narratives of immigration. The third current will be a "Film Festival" devoted to cinematographic representations of the immigrant experience. Students will view and write about a number of films dealing with various aspects of immigration. Students can chose to view a variety of films such as: America, America, American Me, The Class; Dirty Prettry Things, Eastern Promises, El Norte, East is East, Grand Torino, Joyluck Club, La Ciudad (The City), La Tragedia de Macario, Lone Star, Mississippi Masala, My Family/Mi Famila, New Yorican Dreams, The Namesake, The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez, Romántico, The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada, The Visitor, Under the Same Moon, The Wedding Banquet, Zoot Zoot, and others. GRADES Grades will be based on 1) a Term Paper (no more than 15 pages) due on Monday May 3 rd for a total of 45 percent of the final grade. All students are required to turn in a thorough Term Paper Outline consisting of a-title, b-hypothesis or main scholarly arguments and/or claims, c-a list of between five and ten lightly annotated scholarly sources such as books, journal articles, and the like, d- a plan of work indicating the needed steps to complete the Term Paper. The Term Paper Outline is due on Monday March 8 th and will count for 20 percent of the total grade for the Term Paper; 2) three reviews of books discussed on the Literature of Immigration (no more than 3 pages each due the day we discuss the book for a total of 30 percent of the final grade); and 3) two film reviews (no more than 3 pages each due the meeting after you view the film for a total of 20 percent of the final grade) and, 4) student leadership and participation in discussion (5 percent of the final grade). Students should meet with Professor Suárez-Orozco during the first month of classes to discuss a suitable topic for their term papers. OFFICE HOURS Professor Suárez-Orozco will have office hours every week on Mondays. 11:00am to 1:00pm -- 726 Broadway, 5th Floor. SOCIAL SCIENCE: REQUIRED BOOKS Page 2

Carola and Marcelo M. Suárez-Orozco. 2001. Children of Immigration. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN: 0674008383 Carola Suárez-Orozco, Marcelo M. Suárez-Orozco, and Irina Todorova. 2008. Learning a New Land: Immigrant Students in American Society. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN: 0674026756 THE LITERATURE OF IMMIGRATION: REQUIRED BOOKS Guène, Faiza. 2006. Kiffe Kiffe Tomorrow. New York: Harvest Books. ISBN: 0156030489 Rodriguez, Richard. 1982. Hunger of Memory: The Education of Richard Rodriguez. Boston: D. R. Godine. ISBN: 0553382519 Tan, Amy. 1989. The Joyluck Club. New York: Penguin. ISBN: 9780143038092 Course readings and class meetings will be centered on specific themes within the study of immigration. Below you will find the progression of the course broken down by class meetings. Please note that you should complete all required readings for each specific date before attending class that day. January 25 No Required Readings INTRODUCTION TO THE COURSE WHY DO PEOPLE MIGRATE? February 1 & February 8 February 1 Children of Immigration, Introduction & Chapter 1 Learning A New Land, Introduction & Ch 1 February 8 Learning A New Land, Ch 2 IMMIGRANT AGENCY: ASSIMILATION AND BEYOND Page 3

February 22 February 15 President s Day No Class February 22 Children of Immigration, Chapter 2 Read Kiffe Kiffe Tomorrow. PAPER DUE on February 22 March 1 LANGUAGE March 1 and March 8 On March 1 we will screen the documentary film Fear and Learning at Hoover Elementary in class. Read 1 st half of Hunger of Memory: The Education of Richard Rodriguez. March 8 Read 2 nd half of Hunger of Memory: The Education of Richard Rodriguez. PAPER DUE on March 8 TERM PAPER OUTLINE DUE ON MARCH 8, 2010 Spring break March 15 th to March 19 th March 22 Children of Immigration, Ch. 3 IDENTITIES March 22 and March 29 The New Immigration: An Interdisciplinary Reader, Ch. 7 in Blackboard March 29 On March 29 th we will watch documentary AKA Don Bonus in Class PSYCHOCULTURAL THEMES: IMMIGRANT FAMILIES RESPOND TO CHANGE April 5 & April 12 Page 4

April 5 The New Immigration: An Interdisciplinary Reader, Ch. 10 in Blackboard Read 1 st half of The Joyluck Club. April 12 Read 2 nd half of The Joyluck Club. PAPER DUE on April 12 April 19 Learning A New Land, Ch 3 EDUCATIONAL THEMES April 19, April 26, May 3 April 26 Learning A New Land, Ch 4 & 5 May 3 Learning a New Land, Ch 6, 7, 8 & Conclusion TERM PAPERS DUE ON MAY 3, 2010 Page 5