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Global Programs >>
Graduate Students >> Global South Program
Global South Program:
Policy and Civil Society
August 21 - December 8, 2006
2007 Program TBD
The
Program
Global
South pulls together the academic, experiential and professional strands
of the MA-IR program to focus on the Latin American region. Global South
has three elements: 1) a seminar on the history and politics of
twentieth-century Latin America; 2) a seminar on contemporary social, political,
and cultural issues in Chile and Latin America; and 3) the choice of either
a supervised internship in Chile or an guided research course led by a
Chilean academic. These three elements result in nine credits for the
MA-IR Program, and place the students in an ideal position for
completing their program paper. This program also plays an important
role in preparing students for their professional lives. This is
truly a unique opportunity that lets students pursue both their regional
interests and their topical concentrations in an environment that lets
them experience directly what their studies at Maxwell have introduced.
Global South is offered by the
International
Relations Program, Syracuse University's
SU Abroad, and the
Program
on Latin America and the Caribbean as a collaborative effort.
Part I: Seminar
on History and Politics of 20th Century Latin America (IRP 600-Z1)
View 2006 course syllabus
The Latin
American History and Politics Seminar is the introductory element of the
Global South Program and also serves to pull the program together. This
two-week intensive seminar will focus on twentieth-century Chile and Latin America. It will
explore the rise and fall of populist, interventionist state projects in
Latin America. Current-day globalization and neoliberalism will be
explored as reactions to previous forms of state-civil society
relations.
The seminar begins informally late
in the spring semester prior to departure with (a) a series of discussions
about what is going on in Latin America, and (b) meetings of the
individual students with the instructor in search of Latin American
internships or research topics pertinent to their interests. Following
the program orientation in Syracuse in the late spring, and a series of
readings assigned over the summer, the seminar
officially
convenes at the beginning of the fall semester at our site in Chile.
Once there, Karin will help to
prepare the students for the immediate demands of their internships and
independent studies. The semester-long program concludes at the end of the fall
semester with a collective debriefing. The credits from this seminar
will be applied to the fall semester.
Preparation for the Fall 2004
seminar portion of this program involves reading a course packet and the
following works, which will be available at the Orange Bookstore:
1. Peter Winn, Weavers
of Revolution: The Yarur Workers and Chile's Road to Socialism
2. Tomás Moulian, Chile actual: Anatomía de un mito
3. Daniel James, Doña María's Story: Life History, Memory, and
Political Identity
4. Heidi Tinsman, Partners in Conflict: The Politics of Gender,
Sexuality, and Labor in the Chilean Agrarian Reform, 1950-1973
5. Mary Kay Vaughan, Cultural Politics in Revolution: Teachers,
Peasants, and Schools in Mexico, 1930-1940
These books and essays will form
the basis of discussion when the group meets in Chile.
Part II: The
Seminar on Contemporary Latin America (IRP 600-Z2)
This seminar will
meet twice a week in Santiago and will be coordinated by Carolina
Stefoni, a scholar at the
Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO) and current
professor at Universidad Alberto Hurtado, in downtown Santiago. Students will do readings, view films
and documentaries, and hear invited speakers from academia, policy
circles, culture, economy and politics. Professor Stefoni will also coordinate field trips to
surrounding cities. Students will also travel to
Argentina. Topics to be covered include human
rights, free trade, security, democratization, indigenous peoples,
migrations, and gender.
Part III: The
Independent Study (IRP 690)/
Professional Internship in Chile (IRP 600-Z3) Option
View 2006
internship requirements
The
third element of the Global South Program includes the choice of
either a guided research project or a professional internship.
The guided research/ independent study course enables students to
research a topic of interest to them. The topics for these independent
studies will be developed during the spring prior to departure. In
partnership with a Maxwell faculty sponsor, each student defines the
parameters of the subject of study and how the work will proceed during
the Fall Semester and be evaluated. In Santiago, the student will be
paired with a leading academic who will meet regularly with the student
during the course of the semester to provide guidance, secure contacts,
and provide assistance with bibliography.
Students
are prepared to begin challenging internships or research-ships in NGOs,
government agencies, and private sector firms involved in international
trade, commerce or banking. Former students have interned at such
locales as: The Chamber of Commerce, UN Economic Commission for South
America and the Caribbean; US Embassy and Consulates, and the Ford
Foundation. During the course of the internships, students met twice a
week for a seminar and worked on independent research projects.
The
internship may be with a governmental, non-governmental or business
organization in Chile. The Maxwell faculty member directing the program
works with the on-site internship supervisor to ensure a professionally
rewarding experience for the student. Such dual supervision includes
in-person and electronic modes of communication complemented with site
visits by the program director. The students write reports on the
objectives of the internship and how it is shaping up and finally offer
a critical assessment of it.
Congratulations to the 2006 Global South participants!
Michael LaGiglia: ProChile
Eric Olsen: US Commercial
Service, Chile
Ky Sisco: FOSIS or TBA

2005 Global South participants:
Leticia Cano: FOSIS
Jonathan Gupton: DIRECON
Jessica Hartman: FLACSO
Dianna Squillace-Manno: Ciudad Viva

The following list of 2004 Global South participants can only
hint at the participants' valuable internship experiences:
Autumn Figueroa: Diego Rojas N 900 (local primary school)
Jonathan Kindron: Direccion General
de Exteriores Economicas Internacionales (DIRECON)
Joanne Neukirchen: FLACSO
Matthew Pietz: Amnistia
Internacional (AI)
Elizabeth Snyder: Movimiento pro
Emancipacion de la Mujer Chilena (MEMCh)
Eligibility
Any student who has been accepted
into the Maxwell School's MA in International Relations Program is
eligible to apply. In addition, graduate students in other degree
programs at the Maxwell School are eligible to apply, as well. The
program is also open to qualified graduate and undergraduates from
Syracuse University or a comparable institution. Advanced
proficiency in Spanish is required.
>Plans for the 2007 program are still in the works. Please check
back for more information on the future of this program.
Application for the Fall 2006 Program
**
**To apply, please complete the online application
through the Division of International Programs Abroad (see link above).
Scroll down and click on "Fill out an online application." Select
your home school as "Syracuse U." and your desired term of study as
"Fall only." Continue on to enter your personal information.
In part 3 of 5, select "Direct: Chile-Global South (IR)" as your First
Choice Country/Site. Complete the remaining personal information.
In part 5 of 5, complete the personal statement. Be sure to
address your research interests and/or internship interests. Be as
specific as possible, providing proposed research topics and/or specific
organizations that you have in mind. Also, be sure to provide
information about your preparation for this program (e.g. prior
experience abroad, language proficiency) and how this program is
relevant to your career goals. The Global Programs Coordinator will be submitting a letter of recommendation on your
behalf; please provide this information in this section, as well.
The $60 application fee will be waived for MAIR applicants to this
program. If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Sue
Shane at DIPA.
Admission to the
Program and Procedures
Participants are admitted to the
program by the Global South Program Director. They will confirm their
intent to participate in writing.
Participants begin Part I of the
Global South Program upon admission, conferring with the director about
their research and professional interests.
The Global South Director will
serve as the faculty liaison for Part II of the Global South Program
(the seminar at Universidad Alberto Hurtado).
The Global South Director will
serve as the faculty liaison for Part III of the Global South Program
(the independent study or internship).
Participants in the Global South
Program are subscribed to a listserv, engaged in spring sessions as
indicated above, and travel to Chile in the late summer of the year in
which they participate.
Registration for the fall semester
portion of the Global South Program occurs during normal registration in
April, and includes (a) the Seminar on the History and Politics of
Twentieth-Century Latin America; (b) the seminar on Contemporary
Latin America; and (c) the internship or independent study forms. See
the Global Programs Coordinator for details.
Travel and Living
Arrangements
Participants arrange and pay for
their own flights, and are responsible for their daily transportation to
and from the site of their internship.
Housing with Chilean families will
be provided through our on-site coordinator. Computer and research
facilities are available at the Universidad Alberto Hurtado (left) for student use.
We
have arranged for a representative from Universidad Alberto Hurtado to pick students up at
the airport and drop them off at their host family's house upon arrival
to Santiago.
Please note that we have also arranged a group trip to Buenos Aires
during the semester in order for students to extend their 90-day tourist
stay allowed to visitors with a U.S. passport (note that participants
are not traveling on a student visa). The trip is scheduled for
late-October with students leaving on a Friday and returning on Sunday
(or leaving Saturday and returning Monday). Hotel accommodations
and travel arrangements (flight and bus tour) will be included. We
will also try to arrange for students to visit sites in Argentina during
their trip and perhaps visit one to two local NGOs.
Program Cost and
Expense Estimate
Students pay Syracuse University
graduate tuition and a program fee. Tuition for 2005-2006 is $940 per
credit (tuition for 2006-2007 is expected to increase). Airfare and
ground transportation to Chile are approximately $800 (one way) but may
vary. Costs also vary by the location and relevant living expenses of
the internship site, and students may wish to research these variations
in advance of their departure. Some students may be interested in
pursuing fellowships and other ways to fund their Global South
experience (see Funding Opportunities).
All students who are pursuing an MAIR degree at Maxwell are eligible to
be considered for a Global Programs Award. If you are interested
in being considered for this scholarship, please contact the
Global Programs Coordinator.
In addition, it is recommended that all students consider applying for
the PLACA grant if they
would be interested in beginning their research in the summer.
The costs noted below reflect 2006
estimates of living costs. Students should be aware that
usual costs include airfare, program administration fees, tuition, and
some living expenses. The program fee below covers housing, as well as
some meals.
*
The program fee includes: Room and board in host family with 3 meals per
day; Buenos Aires trip (airfare,
hotel, activities, one group meal); Airport
pickup upon arrival & transport to host family; Orientation
transportation, activities, welcome dinner; and Administrative fee.
** Includes personal travel expenses, toiletries, laundry, personal
hygiene and other miscellaneous supplies, and communication expenses.
*** Includes additional food and miscellaneous meals
during weekend travel.
***Please note that undergraduate students pay undergraduate tuition,
and joint JD/IR students must pay law school tuition for
any credits that they take through the IR program. This includes
credits taken on global programs such as the Global South Program.
For more information, please
contact the
Global Programs Coordinator, (global@maxwell.syr.edu) in the
International Relations Program of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and
Public Affairs. She can also be reached at 315-443-5339 or 315-443-9204
(fax).
A Student's View
of the Experience
Arne Corneliussen, a joint IR/MPA
graduate student, participated in the 1999 Global South program held in
Uruguay during his second year. Occasionally Arne sent us a message
describing his experiences. He has agreed to let us post them as an
online "journal" so that other students may gain a better understanding
of the program.
August 23, 1999 "I am
speechless. Republic del Oriental del Uruguay, what an exceptional
country. "
September 7, 1999 "What a
wonderful city Buenos Aires."
September 14, 1999
"Santiago, my host-family, and my internship."
October 26, 1999 "Dear
Students of International Relations,"
December 16, 1999 "A Final
Word from Arne in Rio de Janeiro"
Program on Latin
America and the Caribbean
The
Program on
Latin America and the Caribbean (PLACA) promotes multidisciplinary
research on Latin America and the Caribbean. Within Syracuse
University and beyond the campus, faculty and students work to expand
understanding of Latin American and Caribbean issues. PLACA
collaborates closely with our University's undergraduate Latino-Latin
American Studies Program and its African American Studies Department to
promote awareness of Latin American and Caribbean peoples throughout the
hemisphere.
PLACA's longstanding interest in state-civil
society relations addresses changes that have resulted from
globalization. We study transformations in social movements and
national governments and their relation to international institutions.
Faculty and graduate student research on transnational activism and
networks includes attention to feminist, environmental, human rights,
and religious movements, as well as non-governmental organizations
(NGOs), international agencies, and legal issues such as drug
trafficking. Other research areas include state reform,
development, the environment, migration, and race and ethnicity.
This page current as
of: August 11, 2006
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