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SOCIOLOGY. Courses related to BIDS Presentation spring 2014. Introduction. The Department of Sociology has created four (4) courses that suit the interest of BIDS-students Reflect the research tradition in the department
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SOCIOLOGY Courses related to BIDS Presentation spring 2014
Introduction • The Department of Sociology has created four (4) courses that suit the interest of BIDS-students • Reflect the research tradition in the department • Focus: migration, social policy, sustainable development, and development sociology • Together, the courses cover a whole academic year • They are also open to other students • Lectures, seminars and take-home exams
Courses 2014-2015 • The fall semester offers two courses: • SOCB27: Sociology: International Migration & Development, 15 credits (half-speed) • SOCB28: Sociology: Development and Social Welfare Policies, 15 credits (half-speed) • The courses run in parallel (amount to a full-time course)
Courses 2014-2015 • The spring semester offers two courses: • SOC B29: Sociology: Managing Sustainability, 15 credits (half-speed) • SOC B26: Sociology: The Sociology of Human Development, 15 credits (half-speed) • The courses run in parallel (amount to a full-time course)
SOCB27: Sociology: International Migration & Development • Introduction to international migration: background, basic concepts and theories • The politics of migration in developed countries, e.g. labor, regulations, policies • The impact of migration in developing countries, e.g. the issue of brain drain, brain gain, brain circulation
SOCB27: Sociology: International Migration & Development • Migration, governance and international development, e.g. remittances, donor perspectives, migration as development strategies • The politics of incorporation, e.g. assimilation and integration • Guest lectures, e.g. Chinese migration perspectives (guests from Peking University)
SOCB27: Sociology: International Migration & Development • Migration to Western Europe, e.g. the case of Sweden • Migration control, security and the state • Diasporas and transnational identities • Gender and labor migration • Human trafficking
SOCB28: Sociology: Development and Social Welfare Policies • Typologies of social policy systems and welfare ideologies, theories and concepts etc. • Social welfare policies in development strategies, e.g. donor perspectives and policies • Social welfare policies: The Northern/Scandinavian context • Poverty and pro-poor growth, the role of the market
SOCB28: Sociology: Development and Social Welfare Policies • Country cases, e.g. social protection arrangements in different contexts • Population policy and social protection/welfare, usually with focus on China • Gender issues, e.g. the role of care work and women in social policy strategies • Welfare Policies in authoritarian contexts
SOC B26: Sociology: The Sociology of Human Development • The historical background of development, e.g. structural transformation in Europe and the legacy of colonialism • Development philosophy, e.g. ideas and concepts • Sociology and development, e.g. the classical sociological thinkers, and how sociology can be used in the analysis of development • Contemporary sociological theories on development
SOC B26: Sociology: The Sociology of Human Development • Southern perspectives on development and post-colonial theory • Defining poverty, e.g. concepts and dimensions • Measuring poverty, e.g. definitions, indexes and approaches • Researching the reality of the poor, e.g. participatory approaches and bottom-up methodology • Case studies and mixed methods in development sociology • Guest lecturers (often from India)
SOC B29: Sociology: Managing Sustainability • Theories on the nature-society relationship, e.g. the role of nature in relation to socio-economic development • The constructivist approach to environmental problems, e.g. are environmental problems ‘real’ or are they ‘socially created’? • The rise of ‘green politics’, e.g. the history of ideas and concepts related to sustainability • Policy-making and approaches for sustainable development, e.g. regimes and ideas
SOC B29: Sociology: Managing Sustainability • Development and the environment, e.g. the ‘costs’ of industrialization and modernization • Capitalism and sustainable development, e.g. are they compatible? • Social organization and sustainability, e.g. are collective efforts possible at a global scale? • Researching environmental sociology, e.g. examples and lectures on research experience
Minor Field Studies (MFS) • The Department of Sociology has eight (8) scholarships • Six (6) will be awarded to applicants who study Sociology, Social Anthropology and Education. • The remaining two are for students from other departments. • Several scholarships are available for 2014/15 – contact Ulrika Reichert (MFS Advisor) Ulrika.Reichert@soc.lu.se