STPEC in : Studies in Economic Equality and Social Justice 10th - 29th July 2016

Y ECONOMIC EQUALIT RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHER CHARI SOLIDARITY PRIN CE ARTICLE LABOR TY CIPL LIBERTY

PEA CONCEPT E INJUSTICE INEQUALITIES APPROPRIATION SECULAR TES INCOME STA TICE Y ABILIT JUS TAIN SUS HEAL PUBLICATIONS SOCIALTHPR MOVEMENT OPER MOR TY Y EGALIT DENIGRATE PHILOSOPH W ARIANISM ORD RIGHTAL TE Y AC SOCIET HIN DEGREE G IDEOLOGICA S L THCARE POVERTY PRIVATE HEAL TICEBASIC OBJECTIVEJUSTERRITORIAL POOR ARGUED INEQUITIE HUMAN CITZEN ISSUE LEFTIS THEORY CAPI T POWERS TALISM POLITICS S PRESUMPTIONPERSON POLITICAL E W VA ARIANISM DUCA ORL LUES TOTALIT TION D ROLE Y REDISTRIBUTIOTHEOLOGY TGLOSSI N GUES NG AR SOCIALLUNJUS Contents

02 Welcome message 03 Credits, Cost, Application 04 Programme Team 05 Arrival/Meet & Greet Welcome 06 Week 1 Schedule 07 Week 2 Schedule Welcome to Scotland, and Glasgow Caledonian 09 Week 3 Schedule University. We are delighted that you have chosen to come here to complete a course of study in Economic Equality and Social Justice issues. Over the next three weeks you will take part in an exciting and packed programme of study which will include lectures, seminars and field trips. A group of highly qualified professionals will deliver a programme which will keep you engaged and make your learning experience.

For many of you, this will be your first visit to Scotland. You have arrived into a country steeped in rich heritage and cultural tradition. In this programme you will experience some of the vast cultural wealth the country has to offer such as a tour of , Stirling Castle, the and Falkirk. It will also include an overnight visit to the World Heritage site of New – the utopian socialist centre created by .

Glasgow has much to offer in the arts, music, dance and nightlife. It is a vibrant city and you will have plenty of activities to choose from during your time here. The way of life here can be very different to where you live and the idea is to absorb the culture and enjoy it.

Some form of International experience is becoming an important requirement of University education. What you will accomplish here in Glasgow Caledonian University will be educationally rewarding, interesting and something you will be able to draw on in any future career plans.

I wish you a pleasant stay.

Professor Sara Cantillon Programme Leader WiSE Research Centre Glasgow School for Business & Society

01 02 Credits, Cost and Application

Credits Students participating in the program will be required to complete preparatory readings and to write a final paper to be submitted after their return to the United States. There will also be an end of course assessment in Glasgow. After satisfactory completion of all requirements, student will be awarded 6 credits toward the UMASS degree. For STPEC students, the programme will further satisfy 2 of the major’s 5 upper-level requirements (specifically, the requirement in Modern Social Theory and Social Movements and the requirement in Political Economy). Programme team Cost Because this summer programme generates 6 credits, financial aid Academic Leads will carry over. For students on financial aid, your usual financial aid package will be applied automatically. There are also Professor Sara Cantillon Professor Sigrid Schmalzer scholarships available through the UMass International Program Director, WRC Director, STPEC Office and through the College of Social and Behavioural Sciences GCU Glasgow UMass Amherst (and for students in other majors, perhaps also from your College) – please apply for these! Programme Team The fees for the programme are as follows. Please note that these fees do not include airfare, which you can expect to be around Emily Thomson Alison Lockhart Duncan Harcus $800-$900 roundtrip from Boston. Director - Summer School Senior Programme International Office Administrator £2,350 (approx. $3,300) which covers tuition, self-catering accommodation with free wifi at Buchanan View www.unite-( students.com/glasgow/buchanan-view), airport transfers, the Dr Angela O’Hagan, Dr Umut Korkut Professor Kathleen Lynch social and cultural programme and associated transportation. Lecturer Reader in Politics Chair, Equality Studies UCD Dublin $250 UMass education abroad fee.

Dr Katharina Sarter Dr Zofia Lapniewska Application Ailsa McKay Post-Doctoral Fellow WiSE Post-Doctoral Fellow To apply, please contact the UMass International Programs Office at 413-545-2710 or [email protected]. The website for IPO is www.umass.edu/ipo PhD Student Mentors

Alyson Laird Naveed Hakeem Jen Broadhurst Student Tutor Student Tutor Student Tutor GCU Glasgow GCU Glasgow GCU Glasgow

03 04 Week 1 Monday 11th July – Friday 15th July 2016

Monday 11 July 2015 9.30am – 4.00pm Induction (Welcome Meeting, Registration, Campus Tour, GCU Information Systems and Online Access, Health and Safety issues and Course Outline)

Tuesday 12 July 2016 9.00am-6.00pm Cultural Programme Bus departs at 9.00am Edinburgh Castle and City from ARC, GCU Student Tours Glasgow

Wednesday 13 July 2016 9.30pm – 11.00am Lecture Room tbc Lecture 1: Egalitarian Theory & Practice Professor Kathleen Lynch (Chair of Equality Studies UCD Dublin) 11.00am – 11.30am Coffee Break 11.30am – 1.00pm Lecture 2: Equality Domains - Political, Economic, Cultural and Affective Professor Kathleen Lynch 1.00pm – 2.15pm Lunch 2.15pm – 4.00pm Seminar 1 - Small Group Discussion

Thursday 14 July 2016 9.30pm – 11.00am Lecture 3: Achieving Egalitarian Change Professor Kathleen Lynch 11.00am-11.30am Coffee Break 11.30am – 1.00pm Lecture 4: Solidarity & Social Movements Arrival/Meet & Greet Professor Kathleen Lynch 1.00pm – 2.15pm Lunch

Friday & Saturday 8th/9th July 2016 2.15pm – 4.00pm Seminar 1 - Small Group Discussion

Meet and Greet at Glasgow Airport by International Office Team. Friday 15 July 2016 Settle into accommodation 9.30am – 12noon Assessment Preparation Session 1 Poster, Video or Oral Presentation Sunday 10th July 2016 1.00pm – 4.00pm Field Trip Visit to Glasgow People’s Palace 11.00am – 1.00pm Glasgow Walking Tour The People’s Palace is set in historic and explores the social history of the people and city of Glasgow from 1750 to the end of the 20th Meet at Buchanan View Walking Tour of Glasgow century through a wealth of historic artefacts, paintings, prints and photographs, Reception Gary Brown, Student Tours Scotland film and interactive computer displays.

05 06 Week 2 Monday 18th July – Friday 22nd July 2016

Monday 18 July 2016 9.30am – 11.00am Lecture 5: Discursive Governance - Cross European Approaches Dr Umut Korkut, Reader in Politics 11.00am – 11.30am Coffee 11.30am – 1.00pm Lecture 6: Population and Migration Dr Umut Korkut 1.00pm – 2.15pm Lunch 2.15pm – 4.00pm Seminar: Small Discussion Group

Tuesday 19 July 2016 9.30am – 11.00am Lecture 7: Institutional Approaches to Equality Dr Angela O’Hagan 11.00am – 11.30am Coffee 11.30am – 1.00pm Lecture 8: The Impact of Devolution in the UK; The aftermath of the Scottish referendum for independence Dr Angela O’Hagan 1.00pm – 2.15pm Lunch 2.15pm – 4.00pm Seminar: Small Discussion Group

Wednesday 20 July 2016 9.30am Departure Field Trip New Lanark World Heritage Site Robert Owen Centre for Educational Change & Cotton Textile Museum 2.00pm – 4.00pm Lecture 9: Utopian Socialists - Then and Now Professor Sara Cantillon Group Discussion Evening Dinner and Overnight stay in New Lanark Wee Row Hostel

Thursday 21 July 2016 9.30am – 3.30pm Falls of Clyde Trek and Picnic

Friday 22 July 2016 9.30am – 12.30pm Assessment Preparation Session 2 Afternoon Cultural Programme Visit to Stirling Castle, Deanston Distillery

New Lanark

07 08 Thursday 28 July 2016 Week 3 9.30am – 11.00am Lecture 16: The Political Economy of Care Emily Thompson Monday 25th July – Friday 29th July 2016 11.30am – 1.00pm Lecture 17: Alternative Economic Futures Sara Cantillon Monday 25 July 2016 2.00pm – 5.00 pm Cultural Programme 9.30am – 11.00am Lecture 10: Feminist Economics & Political Economy Visit to Burrell Collection Emily Thomson Friday 29 July 2016 11.00am – 11.30am Coffee 9.30am – 1.00 pm Assessment Individual and Group Presentations 11.30am – 1.00pm Lecture 11: Orthodox and Heterodox Approaches in Economics Professor Sara Cantillon 6pm Finale Dinner & Prizegiving 1.00pm – 2.15pm Lunch 2.15pm – 4.00pm Seminar: Small Discussion Group

Tuesday 26 July 2016 9.30am-11.00am Lecture 12: Gender Equality and Public Procurement Dr Katharina Sarter 11.00am – 11.30am Coffee 11.30am – 1.00pm Lecture 13: EU Institutions Dr Katharina Sarter 1.00pm – 2.15pm Lunch 2.15pm – 4.00pm Seminar – Small Group Discussion

Wednesday 27 July 2016 9.30am – 11.00am Lecture 14: Urban Commons Dr Zofia Lapniewska 11.00am – 11.30am Coffee 11.30am – 1.00pm Lecture 15: Reading Elinor Olstrom Dr Zofia Lapniewska 1.00pm – 2.15pm Lunch 2.15pm – 4.00pm Field Trip Glasgow City Chambers Glasgow City Chambers In the very heart of Glasgow stands one of the city’s most important and prestigious buildings - the City Chambers. A grand and imposing edifice overlooking George Square, the City Chambers is an impressive symbol of Glasgow’s political strength and historical wealth. Completed in 1888, the City Chambers has for over a hundred years been the headquarters of successive councils serving the City of Glasgow.

Glasgow City Chambers 09 10 Cowcaddens Road, Glasgow G4 0BA, Scotland,

T:+44 (0)141 331 3000 E: [email protected] www.gcu.ac.uk

Glasgow Caledonian University is a registered Scottish charity, number SC021474. © Glasgow Caledonian University 2016. 94338_02/16.