Migration Course Offerings
Featured Courses
Mapping Art, Race, & Community in the US-Mexico Borderlands
First-Year Seminar: Chinatown: Migration, Identity, and Space
Migration and Health
Additional Related Courses
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First-Year Seminar: Immigrants and Exiles
The widespread changes and upheavals of the last century have vastly expanded the ranks of such people, accelerating the processes of immigration and exile while fundamentally altering traditional notions of home and belonging.
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African Immigration to the United States of America
This country has consistently been a magnet for millions of people from all over the world, and this course seeks broadly to understand recent African immigration.
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Ampersand: Mediterranean Migration: Dynamics and Consequences on the EU and MENA Regions
What are the causes, dynamics and consequences of international population movements? What are the key trends and patterns of migration in the major world region?
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Race, Ethnicity, and Migration: A Transatlantic History
This course will explore theoretical and empirical analyses of race, ethnicity and migration through a sociological lens, focusing on children of immigrants and later-generation descendants of migrants in the United States
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Mapping Art, Race, & Community in the US-Mexico Borderlands
This upper-level undergraduate seminar will delve into the history of "border art" as a category, whether in terms of public art, sculpture, installation, new media, or performance, using the U.S.-Mexico border as an extended in-depth case study.
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Introduction to Migration Policy and Politics
In this course, we will trace the process of migration and discuss the impact of migration on sending and host societies as well as on the migrants themselves.
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Immigration Law & Policy
This course is an introduction to the rules, policies, and justifications governing non-U.S. citizens entering, staying, and exiting the United States.
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Social Work Practice with Refugees and Immigrants
An historical view of international refugee policy and immigration is presented as context for present-day issues.
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First-Year Seminar: Chinatown: Migration, Identity, and Space
Our survey starts with a historical and geographical glimpse of Chinatowns and ethnoburbs in the U.S. through real-life stories of their residents.
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Migration and Health
This course explores the complex relationship between migration and health, with a focus on immigrant health in the United States.