Interculture and Migration: Identity, Borders, and Belonging
                                
                                Interculture and Migration: Identity, Borders, and Belonging Course Overview
                            
                            
                                OVERVIEW
                                    CEA CAPA Partner Institution: CEA CAPA Florence Center
                                                                    Location: Florence, Italy
                                                                    Primary Subject Area:  Sociology
                                                                                                    Instruction in: English
                                                                    Course Code: SOC375
                                                                    Transcript Source: University of New Haven
                                                                    Course Details: Level 300
                                                                    Recommended Semester Credits: 3
                                                                    Contact Hours: 45
                                                                                                                                                                                                                             
                            
                                    DESCRIPTION
                                    
                                        Migration is a profoundly human experience, as people have always moved from one place in the world to settle in another, with the same longings and aspirations for a better life for themselves and their families. In this course, we will examine the complexities of migration through the lens of identity, borders, and belonging and explore questions such as: Why do people migrate? What are borders, both political and psychological? Who decides who "belongs" and based on what criteria? Who is welcomed and who is not, and why? What are the parallels, intersections, and distinctions regarding migration in Italy and in the US? What are the current and historical debates about migration? How do long-standing narratives of race, culture, and national identity contribute to fear, prejudice, racism, and xenophobia? What does integration and intercultural engagement look like? And ultimately, who is "Italian"? Through lectures, readings, films, reflective assignments, and experiential exercises, we will engage together in this interactive class to expand our awareness, build our content knowledge, and develop communication skills to discuss these powerful, poignant, and pressing current issues of human rights and dignity.