Contact us

papers

communities

 

view our brochure (PDF)

 

2008 Summer research-internship program:
June 30 - August 1, 2008

interns2008

 

The Center for Global Justice (GJC) presents its forth annual, Summer-Research-Internship Program scheduled from 30 June through 01August in San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico.

This Research Internship Program is planned as a cross-cultural, cooperative learning experience for upper division undergraduate, graduate, and post-graduate students who will study under the guidance of an outstanding international faculty. Student Interns will examine and analyze the realities of corporate globalization through selected readings, lectures and on-sight, faculty-supervised, field investigations culminating in reports intended for publication on the Global Justice Centers’ Web site. The program is organized to acquaint interns with the social, economic and political realities influenced by USamerican foreign policy supporting corporate globalization over the past half century.

Joining Theory to Practice  

The entire program is designed to present participants with optimal conditions to achieve our primary objectives of creating a mutually-supportive, international, community-based learning experience with the broad goals of fostering enhanced, cooperative, learning styles that directly benefit the host communities and all the participating interns individually and collectively. Through structured, seminar-like study sessions guided by renowned scholars, the required field research will be organized to place students at the center of every phase of the investigative research plan. Focused on our efforts to heightened cross-cultural understanding through the development of cooperative working relations within the student groups and among the students in their host communities, the interns will be closely supported in their efforts to successfully live, work and learn in local Urban and Rural communities.

Every phase of the Program is planned to bring the participants into close personal contact with the host culture, with the broad intention that all members of the multi-national, intern-research teams will contribute to community projects while helping each other to lay the ground work for future cooperative leaning styles. We anticipate that all interns will enjoy and benefit from this unique international educational opportunity. We project that students, individually and collectively, will gain a clearer insight into the political changes that have been dramatically influencing their own personal growth opportunities and the broader social / economic conditions directly affecting Mexican life and the future of people of throughout the Americas. .

At this dramatic historical moment all of the program participants will have the rare opportunity to work with their counterparts from many areas of the Americas and the Caribbean, including Cuba, and learn first hand the effects of distinctive political-economic and social forces that that continue have a profound influence on all our lives. We further anticipate that the cooperative work and study plan of our internship program, which we may call “Community as School”, will broaden the career and life choices of all our participants.

Based on our prior experiences and student testimonials, we confidently project  that all our program participants will benefit from our cooperative, Participatory Research, study-model which places the participants at the center of their own investigative projects. Through their personal observations and disciplined investigations of the deepening consequences of Neo-liberal, corporate globalization and its comparison with  alternative  social / economic models currently expanding throughout the Americas , the participants should  collectively form their own critical perspective on the nature and consequences of current Economic realities and develop their particular  contributions to  alternative social-economic  possibilities.

An Urban / Rural Study –Research Program in Two Parts

During the first two weeks interns will live with Mexican families in low-income neighborhoods in the City of San Miguel de Allende, settled largely by people who have recently migrated from the country side or Ranchos/Ejidos. Through informal interaction and structured community surveys the interns will investigate the transition from rural to urban life.  During this time Interns will also participate in more formal seminar type study and discussions with Center faculty and visiting speakers.

Through the second two weeks interns will live with Mexican families in near bye rural communities where we have well-established, cooperative working relations.  Working with and supported by faculty and  host community leaders, the  interns  will conduct supervised, social investigations of the problems faced by the community members  such as, migration, transforming family structures, changing roles of women , community economic initiatives, resistance to land privatization, and the search for alternative economic means of survival and development .

Students will be required to work in community planned, cooperative development projects.  We anticipate that the combined theoretical and practical, participatory-research experience will deepen the interns’ insights into the effects of NAFTA on the Mexican people and perhaps themselves.

At the beginning of the fifth week the interns will return to San Miguel to write their reports and prepare their public presentations of their findings. During this time, students will resume living with their host Mexican families in the City of San Miguel de Allende.

Certificates of completion and letters of recommendation will be issued to the students upon successful completion of their written reports and their public presentations.

--------

Program Fees:

Total All-inclusive fee 2,200- usd.

 

Scheduled Completion Dates:

2009

Preparation Dead Lines
01 April - Applications for admissions and scholarship due at the Global Justice Center.
07 April - Acceptance letters mailed to the Applicants
22 April- Seven Hundred usd deposit due: includes a non-refundable filing fee of three hundred usd
07 May - Scholarship notices mailed.
15 June - Full payment due.

Program Schedule   
30 June - Interns arrive in San Miguel de Allende
01 July - Interns’ orientation
02 July - Classes begin in the City of San Miguel de Allende
15 July - Interns depart San Miguel to begin field research in rural communities
27 July - Interns return to San Miguel
28 July – Intern-Directed group consultation and information sharing among interns returning from the Rural communities , report writing and panel presentation planning.
31 July - Public presentation by each Intern Group
01 Aug- Interns depart San Miguel.

Early Arrival and Extend Stay visits requested by Interns can be arranged at additional cost with advanced notice by Global Justice Staff.

International Faculty will include:

Cubans.  Miguel Limia David (Presidente Consejo Ciencias Sociales)

Mexicans Atahualpa Caldera , MA. Research Associate , and special guest speakers: Fernando Sánchez Cuadros,Gerente de Programas y reuniones Técnicas de Banca -Central/Manager, Central Bank Technical Programs and Meetings;  Gustavo Esteva, Enrique, Dussell Peters Economist and  Yolanda Millan, Resident Field Ccoordinator of the Global Justice Center (GJC).

Faculty and  Field organizers of the Center for Global Justice ; and several Research Associates of the Center

Betsy Boman , Ph.D, President of the GJC.
Bob Stone , Ph.D. , Co-founder of the GJC and Research Associate.
Cliff DuRand  Ph.D ., Co-founder of the GJC and Research Associate.
Arturo Yarish, MA . Research Associate.  

Global Justice Center Staff:

Lydia Carey: Executive Director
Loenardo Maldonado: Administrator 
Norma Suarez: General Coordinator of the Summer-Research Internship Program of the GJC

 

More to Come

Retrun frequently to this section of our website for additional information , an on-line application and expanded biographical summiers of facualty and staff .