Seniors in the Global Studies Capstone Seminar will be presenting their theses this week and next. All presentations are open to the public.
Monday, December 3
4:00: Sophia Levin-Hatz
Bolivia’s sustainable development: An alternative approach
4:20: Ryan Cowen
Speaking out: China's restriction of free speech and why it should change
4:40: Elizabeth Bailey
A hidden reality: Normalizing racism against the Afro-Ecuadorian
Wednesday, December 5
4:00: Joe Davis-Lockhart
Crime in Communist China: A comparison of policies from the Maoist and the reform eras
4:20: Baldwin Saer
Alternative strategies for food sovereignty in Latin America
4:40: Nathan Bell
The mobility of ethics: Addressing inequalities by changing tourism development in Honduras
5:00: Dan Weisshaar
Globalization in the land of Goshen: How rural America is being used and neglected in the global marketplace
Monday, December 10
4:00: Leslie Springs
Examining the place(ment) of a community: Warren Wilson College and its Appalachian home
4:20: Jackie Fitzgerald
U.S. Immigration: The labor shortage myth and the shortcomings of guest worker programs
4:40: Curry Anton
“When two elephants fight, the grass always suffers”: Formerly abducted child soldiers and the need for their rehabilitation in northern Uganda
Wednesday, December 12
4:00: Rachel Melo
Examining citizenship and human rights: Bolivian immigration to Buenos Aires
4:20: Ariel Gordon
Aluminum companies in Jamaica: Assessing the ethical responsibilities of multinational corporations in the dynamic global arena
4:40: Jessica Giles
Picking up the tab: Corporatizing AIDS prevention and treatment in South Africa
5:00: Megan Betts
North African assimilation and Arab communities in modern Parisian culture