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Minor Development Studies

ECTS: 30
Code: LETMIN05

Why do some countries and regions prosper while others are being left behind? How do migration, climate change and environmental degradation affect development and social transformation? How does ethnicity and culture affect the politics of development? What is the role of governments, NGO’s and global institutions in development and humanitarian aid in addressing global inequality?

For students from all backgrounds who are interested in big questions such as these the University Minor Development Studies offers a range of courses which approach these issues from a critical point of view.

The minor

In today’s world, richer and poorer countries share many challenges, such as inequality and poverty, marginalisation of minorities, limited access to health services and education, ecological degradation, climate change and failing democratic and political institutions. In some countries and regions these issues develop into outright political and humanitarian crises.

The Minor programme seeks to enable you to perceive these realities from the points of view of people living in it and to provide a conceptual framework to understand and reflect on global development issues.

The Minor Development Studies is a multidisciplinary, interfaculty minor. This means that its courses are taught by different faculties, and that the programme is open to Bachelor students from all faculties. All courses are offered in English and in the first semester only (early September to end of January).

The programme includes a compulsory introductory course and a number of electives on development economics, social change, anthropology, climate change, population, environment, culture, politics, and development cooperation. One course offers students the opportunity to write a research essay in a small thematic group or participate in a thematic summerschool.

Registration and enrollment

Registration for the minor as a whole is open from 26 May to 7 July 2023.

Please note that students must register for the minor as a whole and, in addition, for each course separately (!!) on ProgressWWW taking into account the registration dates which differ for each faculty (see the table below).

The maximum intake for the minor is 120 students. Some courses also have their own maximum capacity, so the sooner you enroll the better.

• Rethinking Global Inequality (I-A) – until 7 July 2023

• Ethnicity, Culture and Politics (I-B) – until 7 July 2023

• Aid, Trade and Beyond (I-B) – until 7 July 2023

You can choose either 15 or 30 ECTS to compose your minor package out of the courses listed below. The first course, Rethinking Global Inequality: People, Power and Poverty is compulsory for all minor students. Apart from this course you are free to choose the courses which appeal to you most.

We recommend you to take 15 ECTs in both semester blocks. However, you can also take 20 ECTS in 1A, and 10 ECTS in 1B, or the other way around. To be admitted to Topical Themes in Development Studies you need to have completed at least 10 ECTS in semester block I-A.

Please note: The schedule or locations may change, so please check later in Ocasys!

Semester I-A: (4 September – 20 October 2023)

Course and enrollment period

Course code

Lecture time + place (to be confirmed)

Seminar groups (you enroll in one group only) (to be confirmed)

ECTS

Rethinking Global Inequality: People, Power and Poverty

Compulsory

Enrollment period: 20 June – 8 July

LBA038B05

Faculty of Arts

Tuesdays, 15:00 – 17:00

Building 1111, Academy Building, Broerstraat 5

Heymans Hall (ground floor)

Group 1: Thursdays, 15:00 – 17:00, Oude Boteringestraat 34, room 103

Group 2: Wednesdays 9:00-11:00

Meerwold room A1.6, Laan Corpus den Hoorn 300, 9728 JT Groningen

Group 3: Wednesdays 11:00-13:00

Meerwold room A1.6, Laan Corpus den Hoorn 300, 9728 JT Groningen

Group 4: Thursdays 13:00 – 15:00

Calmershuis, Oude Boteringestraat 24 room 1.3

Group 5: Fridays 9:00 – 11:00 Meerwold room C.1.7, Laan Corpus den Hoorn 300, 9728 JT Groningen

5

Inhabiting Cultural Worlds: Introduction to Anthropology

2 lectures a week

Elective

Enrollment: 1 June – 31 August

THMIN-ICW5

Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies

1. Mondays 11:00 – 14:00

Oude Boteringestraat 38, room 253

2. Thursdays, 12:00 – 13:00

Same location

No seminar groups

5

Environment and Development

Elective

Enrollment: 1 June – 7 August

WBEE001-05

Faculty of Sciences and Engineering

Thursdays 9:00 – 11:00

Building 5419, Kapteynborg, Landleven 12, room 0005

No seminar groups

5

Migration and Development

Elective

2 lectures a week, not on 16 September

Enrollment: approx. early July – 14 August

GEMIGRDEV

Faculty of Spatial Sciences

1. Wednesdays, 9:00-11:00
Building 5412, Duisenberg Building, Nettelbosje 2, Room 0020

2. Fridays 13:00 – 15:00
Same location

Friday 16 September, 13:00 – 17:00

10

semester I-B: (13 November 2023 – 12 January 2024)

Course and enrollment period

Course code

Lecture time + place (to be confirmed)

Seminar groups (you enroll in one group only) (to be confirmed)

ECTS

Global Development Studies

Elective

Enrollment: 1 August – 6 November

EBB921B05

Faculty of Business and Economics

Tuesdays, 15:00 – 17:00
Building 5433, Duisenberg Building, Nettelbosje 2, Room 0005

Group 1: Wednesdays 9:00 – 11:00, Building 5419, Landleven 12, room 0011

Group 2: Wednesdays 11:00 – 13:00, Building 5419, Landleven 12, room 0011

Group 3: Wednesdays 15:00 – 17:00

Building 5419, Landleven 12, room 0005

Group 4: Fridays 9:00 – 11:00, Building 5419, Landleven 12, room 0111

Group 5: Fridays 11:00 – 13:00, Building 5419, Landleven 12, room 0111

5

Topical Themes in Development Studies (only students taking the full minor; entrance requirement: at least 10 ECTS in 1-A)

Elective

Enrollment: 1 August – 6 November

EBB922A05

Faculty of Business and Economics

TBA: one introductory session in week 1 of I-B

3 to 4 group meetings, to be arranged between the coach and the groups

One poster session in mid or late January (TBA)

5

Ethnicity, Culture and Politics

Elective

Enrollment period: 20 June – 8 July

LBA025B05

Faculty of Arts

Mondays, 15:00 – 17:00

Building 1111, Academy Building, Broerstraat 5

Heymans Hall (ground floor)

Group 1: Wednesdays, 9:00 – 11:00

Academy Building, room A12.

Group 2: Wednesdays, 11:00 – 13:00

Building 1314 (Harmonie building, under the arches), room 0014.

Group 3: Fridays, 13:00 - 15:00

Meerwold room A1.5, Laan Corpus den Hoorn 300, 9728 JT Groningen

Group 4: Fridays, 15:00 - 17:00

Meerwold room A1.5, Laan Corpus den Hoorn 300, 9728 JT Groningen

5

Population and Development

Elective

2 lectures a week

Enrollment: 5 September – 23 October

GEPOPDEV

Faculty of Spatial Sciences

1. Tuesdays, 13:00 – 15:00
Building 5419, Kapteynborg, Landleven 12, room 0112

2. Thursdays, 13:00 – 15:00
Same location

No seminar groups

5

Please note:

Classes usually start on the hour and end at a quarter to the hour.

Information on where to find university buildings can be found here. Search by the numbers of the buildings (or parts of buildings)

Overview per day

L = Lecture

S = Seminar group

Bold = overlap

Semester 1-A

Mon
Tues
Wed
Thurs
Fri

Rethinking Global Inequality

L: 15-17

S 2: 9-11

S 3: 11-13

S 1: 15-17

S 4: 13-15

S 5: 9-11

Inhabiting Cultural Worlds

L: 11-14

L: 12-13

Environment and Development

L: 9-11

Migration and Development

L: 9-11

L: 13-15

(16 Sept: S 13-17)

Semester 1-B

Mon Tues Wed Thurs Fri

Global Development Studies

L: 15-17

S 1: 9-11

S 2: 11-13

S 3: 15-17

S 4: 9-11

S 5: 11-13

Topical Themes TBA

Aid, Trade and Beyond

L: 9-11

Ethnicity, Culture and Politics

L: 15-17

S 1: 9-11

S 2: 11-13

S 3: 13-15

S 4: 15-17

Population and Development

L: 13-15

L: 13-15

Course Descriptions

Rethinking Global Inequality: People, Power and Poverty

In a world defined by extraordinary levels of wealth and breath-taking scientific progress, why does poverty, marginalisation, and vulnerability continue to destroy so much human potential – and why are so many countries and people being left behind? Is globalisation a force for shared prosperity or a driver of rising inequality? Are our global institutions equipped to respond to the defining challenges of the 21st Century, including the eradication of poverty, the climate crisis, and pandemic preparedness? Do people in rich countries have a moral responsibility to provide development assistance to poor countries – and does aid help or hinder development?

These are among the big questions at the heart of this introductory module. The course will not offer easy answers, but will challenge students to reflect critically on the world and the issue at the heart of development studies – namely, the human condition. Adopting a cross-disciplinary approach, it will appeal to students taking majors in all faculties.

The lectures will guide students through some of the central themes in international development which will discussed in depth during the seminars. The aim of the course is not simply to transmit evidence and information, but to engage students in dialogue and debate. Beyond a guided reading list, the course will draw on wider materials, including film, audio-recordings of contemporary voices, and literature.

Lecturer: TBA

Course coordinator: F.H. (Flávio) Eiró de Oliveira.

Social and Institutional Change

This course focuses on the emergence and development of formal and informal institutions and their effects on behavior as well as on individual integration processes into society. We will explore how various forms of institutions influence each other and the extent to which institutions have desired or undesired effects. Moreover, we will focus on the conditions under which institutions lead to coordination and cooperation. Several examples will be given from the field of migration and integration. Special attention will also be paid to the role of the state in a market economy, and the effect of cultural norms on economic development.

To this end, we will discuss classical theories (Weber, Durkheim, Smith) that have been used to explain social institutions. Examples will be based on current empirical research studying inequality and the interplay between migration, integration, and welfare states. We will debate among others how migration leads to institutional change and how formal and informal institutions shape integration chances of migrants.

Coordinator: dr. B. Bilecen.

Environment & Development

This course studies the relation between environment and development in developing (and developed) countries. The focus is on a natural science approach linked to societal issues, such as poverty, population, migration, and a weak institutional and political structure. Possible strategies for environmental improvement are reviewed using case-studies from different countries and sectors. The causes of environmental problems are analyzed on the local, national and international level.

The following issues will be touched upon: the depletion of natural resources; energy; climate change; land use and food; water use. Each week is organized around one particular theoretical or thematic topic of environment and development.

The course consists of lectures and group assignments. During class key concepts and theories related to the topic will be explained.

Coordinator: drs. M.R. Berger.

Inhabiting Cultural Worlds: Introduction to Anthropology

Anthropology addresses humans as social and cultural beings. All over the world, people organize themselves empirically—giving rise to various forms of social structure, which anthropologists study under rubrics such as kinship, age, gender, caste and class. Such structures are continually expressed, reproduced and modified in meaningful ways. Not only do people arrange themselves in various ways, they also devise a wide array of rules to regulate social interactions in the natural and supernatural (spiritual) worlds. Anthropologists study and compare how all of this is achieved—and contested—around the globe, in the present as well as in the past.

Students will be introduced to the field of cultural anthropology and to how it relates to other fields of anthropology—linguistic anthropology, physical anthropology and anthropological archaeology. We will discuss crucial concepts and methods in the field, and students will engage with some of the key themes of anthropological research, such as Indigeneity, decolonialization and local worldviews.

Course coordinator: Dr. P. Berger

Migration and Development

Migration is a powerful mechanism in the social and economic dynamics both of migrants themselves and of the places that are involved in migration. At the regional level, for example, we observe that human capital is an increasingly important determinant of economic development. Migration of skilled employees therefore importantly shapes regional differences in economic growth. At the other end, we see places that lose people as a result of migration and suffer the social and economic consequences. At the individual level, migration may be a means to improve your socio-economic position, for example when searching for a new job, or perhaps when running from harsh political circumstances. Migration thus plays a key-role in the lives of people as well as for the regions people live and work. Understanding process of migration is therefore key in understanding the socio-economic development of people and places.

This course is dedicated to the mutual relationship between migration and the economic and social development of people and places. It offers theories to understand why people migrate and the outcomes of migration. At the same time, theories that highlight the role of human capital and migration in regional development are explored. In addition, the course aims at providing the latest research and trends about migration flows within and between countries as well as the changing economic and social framework in which migration takes place.

Course coordinator: prof. dr. C.H. Mulder.

Ethnicity, Culture and Politics

The course discusses political, social and cultural aspects of globalisation and of development problems, focusing especially on societies outside the North-Atlantic world. It discusses questions such as: Which processes have led to the development of the modern state, democracy and civil society? What is the historical, social and cultural basis of nationalism and ethnicity? How can identity be understood, what is identity politics and how does it operate in contemporary conflicts in developing countries as well as in our own? What approaches are available in the analysis of contemporary globalisation?

Political, historical and cultural dimensions of development and globalisation are central in this course. It applies innovative anthropological, political and philosophical theories of identity, nationalism and globalisation from the last few decades and discusses several case studies from Africa.

The course is part of the Minor Development Studies but can also be followed separately. It provides students with a good background to further specialise in development related aspects of their own main field of study.

Lecturer: F.H. (Flávio) Eiró de Oliveira.

Global Development Studies

This course is about the main determinants of socio-economic development in developing countries. Students learn about the similarities and differences in the socio-economic development of various regions in the world such as China, India, South-East Asia, Latin-America, Eastern Europe and Africa. In the course, the role of trade, technology, health, education, structural change, and foreign aid on socio-economic development is explained. The usefulness of various empirical methods to measure socio-economic development and its determinant is discussed, and theories of socio-economic development are evaluated. Throughout the course, national and international policies to generate socio-economic development are discussed and evaluated.

Lecturer: dr. Gaaitzen de Vries.

Aid, Trade and Beyond: Dutch international development policy, past and present

This course introduces you to the historical and political development of the international system of development cooperation as it evolved from 1945 onwards, taking Dutch policy development and execution and Dutch perspectives as a starting point. We will discuss the “aid or trade” dilemma that was (and to a point still is) central to Dutch development policy and how this translates into international relations and policies. We will also discuss how the epistemology of the concepts of development and international development relations changed over time and what this means for our current understanding. Special attention will be given to debates on the post-colony, the continent of Africa, and the role of international organizations

Lecturer: dr. M.R. Doortmont.

Population & Development

This is a taught course that aims at understanding differences in fertility, mortality, and migration across regions and countries, taking an interdisciplinary approach (biological, socio-cultural, and economic). Topics include: health, poverty, urbanisation, nutrition, culture, ageing, HIV-AIDS and population policy.

Coordinator: dr. Billy de Haas.

Topical Themes in Development

This course aims at providing an in-depth understanding of a particular set of problems in development, working in a small-group setting with a mentor-lecturer. The core of this course is to write your own research essay. Students can choose from a number of theme groups which change every year. Last years the themes were Sustainable Health; Education and Development; Local Sustainable Development; Gender, Masculinity and Development; Security, State and Development.

This is an advanced course. Students are only admitted after having completed at least 10 ECTS in block I-A. There is also a limited intake.

Subject to prior approval from the course coordinator, this course can be exchanged for participating in a thematically relevant summer school and writing an academic paper.

Course coordinators: dr Bartjan Pennink (Faculty of Business and Economics); Prof. dr. Josje van der Linden (GSG); Drs Ingrid Sennema (GSG)

More information

Future career options

Knowledge of global development issues may be required or relevant in many career options, such as government and banking, working in international organisations or a local or international development NGO, in health care or in a water or energy company.

For those who want to continue in a Master programme in Development Studies or International Humanitarian Action (NOHA), this minor will be an important first step.

Contact

This multi-faculty Minor is hosted by International Relations and International Organization (IRIO) – Faculty of Arts.

Questions about the Minor can be addressed to Flávio Eiró, the Director of Studies of the Minor: f.eiro rug.nl.

Last modified:12 October 2023 2.41 p.m.