It provides a learning opportunity for students interested in the study and analysis of societies and post-conflict.
Interdisciplinary in its nature, drawing from the fields of Peace and Conflict Studies, History, Anthropology, Education, Law, Political Sciences and International Relations, it provides students with an interactive learning experience utilizing frontal lectures and class discussions focusing on comparative conflict analysis of different case studies.
Eligibilities
Courses are offered to graduate students, advanced undergraduate students, and professionals working in related fields.
All courses are in English.
Applicants can choose only one course from the list below:
Citizenship and Violence: From States to Streets
Rethinking Peace Education: The Work of Identity and Culture Conflict Ridden Societies
Migrants, Borders, Power(s): Contemporary Struggles, Moral Claims, and Regimes of (im)mobility
Religion and Conflict: The Balkans’ Explorations vs. Explorations of the Balkans
From Intervention to Non-Intervention: The Triumph of State Sovereignty over Human Rights?
Memory and Conflict: Remembering and Forgetting in Divided Societies