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Wednesday, 10 June 2009 |
BOLIVIA FIELD SCHOOL
01:070:365, 01:070:366 Conducted in the city of Cochabamba, Bolivia, this pair of courses (each worth three credits in Anthropology or Latin American Studies) will focus on topics related to the practices and realities of the Bolivian justice system, from the perspectives of those who create, manage, and work in the system, and those who are affected by it. Through readings, lectures, discussions, informal meetings, and direct participation, students will have the opportunity to learn first-hand about the workings of the Bolivian legal system, the meanings of justice, and the practice of rights by poor, indigenous people living in a Bolivian city. Students will meet and study with justice professionals in Bolivia, to learn about how a foreign judicial system operates, and will meet with human rights advocates to develop a sense of how human rights promotion and defense works “on the ground” in Latin America.
Click here for detailed description
Professor Daniel Goldstein's Bolivia Blog
Click here for web site designed by students
For more information on studying abroad: Rutgers Study Abroad Office KFFS Information |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 02 July 2009 )
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