Requirements: International Studies

Interdisciplinary

The International Studies Program enables students to analyze an increasingly global society using the foundations of the liberal arts. International studies majors concentrate in one of three thematic tracks — development, environment or politics and society — taking a focused set of courses from several disciplines to develop their understanding of that topic. Majors apply that knowledge to the sustained study of a particular region of the world, where they spend at least a semester abroad studying, living in and experiencing a foreign culture.

International studies majors must have an adventurous spirit and a high level of personal motivation. They must learn foreign languages, study in distant countries and think rigorously across disciplinary boundaries. The program especially encourages students to study the problems and challenges of areas other than Western Europe and North America.

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Beginning Studies

International studies majors select an area of geographic concentration and follow a series of courses in one of the three thematic tracks. We strongly recommend that first-year students take courses in a language appropriate for the geographic area in which they plan to concentrate (Spanish for Latin America, Chinese for East Asia and so forth). This suggestion is by far the most important one we can make, for success in off-campus study in the area concentration depends heavily on language skills. Second, prospective majors should look carefully at the introductory courses listed for each of the three thematic tracks. Consider taking one or more of the courses that can serve in more than one thematic track — e.g., ANTH 113, ECON 101, PSCI 260, SOCY 105 or HIST 100. Students should consult the director of the program for additional advice.

The Curriculum

Regardless of which track a student follows, there are seven elements in the international studies curriculum:

1. Sophomore course

INST 201 (The Expansion of International Society) explores the historical origins, causes and implications of today's globalized world.

2. Core track courses

Each of the three thematic tracks has its own assortment of introductory, upper-level and research methods courses, which are listed along with the description of each track below.

3. Area concentration

Students must take at least four courses on a geographic region outside the United States such as sub-Saharan Africa, Middle East and North Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, East Asia, South Asia, Central Asia, Eastern Europe or Western Europe,  or a more culturally defined region such as the Islamic world, the Atlantic world or a diaspora community. At least two of the area courses must be historical in scope, including a course on the modern history of the region, and at least two of the area courses must be taken at Kenyon.

Although one region serves as the primary focus, students are encouraged to include at least one course that explores that region’s historical and cultural connections with other regions. Some examples of trans-regional courses are AMES 201, FREN 340, HIST 166, HIST 242, HIST 258, HIST 261, HIST 345, HIST 373, HIST 454, RLST 135, RLST 140, SPAN 330 and SPAN 365.

A required major areas form(pdf) must be completed and submitted to the Registrar's Office, indicating the courses for your area concentration.

4. Foreign language

Majors must complete at least two years of college-level instruction in one foreign language or demonstrate such proficiency through a placement exam. If studying abroad in a place where the local language is not offered at Kenyon, the student is allowed to fulfill the second year of the requirement by studying that language while studying off campus. All students are required to study a local language during their off-campus study experience.

5. Off-campus study

All international studies majors must study abroad for at least a semester and are encouraged to do so for an entire year. Students are required to study abroad in their junior year in a program relevant to their thematic track, area concentration and foreign language training, and in an area where the majority of the people speak a language different from the student’s own primary language. A maximum of two courses from each semester of off-campus study can be used to fulfill requirements in the international studies major. Students should keep in mind that off-campus study at Kenyon is competitive and writing a strong application is critical. In order to study off campus, a student must receive approval from the College and have achieved a GPA of at least 2.5.

6. Senior Seminar

INST 401 (Contemporary Global Issues) is a comparative course that brings all international studies majors together during the fall of their senior year to look at significant global problems from the various perspectives they bring based on their specializations.

7. Senior Capstone

The Senior Capstone provides an opportunity for majors to undertake a substantial, independent research project that combines and reflects their thematic training and regional knowledge. It usually builds on their experience and research abroad and then examines it from a broadly intellectual and comparative perspective. Seniors are encouraged to consult with any faculty whose expertise has bearing on their investigations. Projects take the form of a research paper of about 20 to 30 pages. They are due in mid-February. Additional information about the Senior Capstone is available through the department website.

Students can keep track of their progress with a checklist for majors.

Honors

The International Studies Honors Program offers qualified students the opportunity to work intensively on a research project during their entire senior year under the close guidance of one or two faculty members. Students who think they might want to pursue this option should consult early with the director, preferably before going off campus in their junior year, as the study abroad experience will usually shape or inform the honors project. Honors students produce a written work of an appropriate length in their thematic track (minimum of 80 pages and often more), and an outside examiner reads and assesses each student’s work at the end of the spring semester.

Kenyon requires a minimum GPA of 3.33 to be eligible for honors, and honors candidates enroll in INST 497Y and INST 498Y each semester.

For more detailed information about honors in international studies, see the INST Honors Guidelines.

Development Track

This track appeals to those drawn to the study of Asia, Africa and Latin America because of an interest in the prospects for socioeconomic change in those regions. Development is studied as an inherently interdisciplinary and global issue, incorporating the perspectives of economics and other social sciences while exploring the roles of trade, aid, governments and international institutions in shaping relations between wealthier and poorer countries. Students also focus on a particular geographic region in the “developing world,” studying the culture and society of the area in which they undertake off-campus study in order to better understand the development challenges faced by people in that area. Those regions include sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and North Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, East Asia, South Asia, Eastern Europe, Central Asia and the Islamic world.

Development Track Core Courses

Introductory (three courses)
  • ECON 101: Principles of Microeconomics
  • ECON 102: Principles of Macroeconomics
  • Choose one course from:
    • ANTH 113: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
    • SOCY 101: Powers, Energies and Peoples
    • SOCY 103: Society and Culture
    • SOCY 105: Society in Comparative Perspective
    • SOCY 107: Institutions and Inequalities
    • SOCY 108: Public Life
Upper-level (four courses)

One course on international economics:

  • ECON 331: Economics of Development
  • ECON 338: International Trade
  • ECON 339: International Finance and Open-Economy Macroeconomics
  • PSCI 342: Politics of Development

Challenges of development in a broader context (two courses from two different departments:

  • ANTH 200: Commodities and Consumption: Anthropological Perspectives
  • ANTH 320: Anthropology of Food
  • ANTH 358: Medical Anthropology in Biocultural Perspective
  • ECON 335: Economics of Immigration
  • ECON 473: Economic Growth
  • ECON 474: Economics of Oil and Gas
  • HIST 226: The British Empire
  • HIST 256: Global Crisis (And The History Of How We Have Addressed It)
  • HIST 311: Immigrant Experience in the United States
  • HIST 342: History of Public Health
  • PSCI 361: Globalization
  • PSCI 362: America and the World in the 21st Century
  • PSCI 366: Global Poverty, Policy and Politics
  • PSCI 470: Power, States and Markets: The Making of Modern Social Order
  • PSCI 476: Rules for the World: International Organizations' Role in World Politics
  • SOCY 222: Economic Sociology
  • SOCY 223: Wealth and Power
  • SOCY 233: Sociology of Food
  • SOCY 237: Borders and Border Crossings
  • SOCY 243: Social Justice: The Ancient and Modern Traditions
  • SOCY 321: Social Change, Dictatorship and Democracy

Cultural dimension of recent global interactions and social changes (one course)

  • AMST 331: Visions of "America" from Abroad
  • ANTH 253: Anthropology of Mass Media
  • ANTH 310D: Music, Human Rights and Cultural Rights
  • ANTH 312D: Music, Film and Culture: Ethnographic Perspectives
  • ENGL 266: Decolonization and Violence
  • ENGL 363: Writing the Global City
  • ENGL 367: The Global South Novel
  • SOCY 322: Cultural Foundations of Politics
  • SOCY 432: Global Cities
  • SOCY 466: The Politics of Identity Formation in the Global South
Research methods (one social science methods course)
  • ANTH 464: Methods in Cultural Anthropology
  • ECON 205: Introduction to Econometrics
  • HIST 387: Practice and Theory of History
  • PSCI 280: Political Analysis
  • SOCY 271: Methods of Social Research
  • SOCY 373: Qualitative Research Methods
  • SOCY 474: Comparative-Historical Analysis

Other courses, particularly special topic courses not offered regularly, may be acceptable substitutes for area concentration courses or, occasionally, introductory, upper-level or research methods courses. If you have questions about a particular course, contact the program director.

Environment Track

The study of issues related to the environment, ecosystems and natural resources requires an interdisciplinary and international approach. Many environmental issues are global in scope or are best studied comparatively between different regions. Other issues central to international studies have fundamental implications for the environment. Students in this track combine scientific training with international studies in order to examine complex environmental issues. They are expected to take advantage of a growing number of off-campus study programs that deal primarily with environmental questions, and students majoring in this track must also fulfill the requirements for the concentration in environmental studies.

Environment Track Core Courses

Introductory (five courses, one from each group)
  • ENVS 112: Introduction to Environmental Studies
  • ECON 101: Principles of Microeconomics
  • BIOL 115: Energy in Living Systems
  • Choose one introductory chemistry course:
    • CHEM 110: Environmental Chemistry
    • ENVS 104: Solar Power Systems: Science, Policy and Practicum
  • Choose one introductory course on the global social context:
    • ANTH 113: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
    • PSCI 260: International Relations
    • SOCY 101: Powers, Energies and Peoples
    • SOCY 103: Society and Culture
    • SOCY 105: Society in Comparative Perspective
    • SOCY 107: Institutions and Inequalities
    • SOCY 108: Public Life
Upper-level

Three courses on the challenge of human interaction with the environment

  • One, preferably both, of the following foundational courses:
    • ECON 336: Environmental Economics
    • PSCI 363: Global Environmental Politics
  • One of the following courses:
    • ANTH 200: Commodities and Consumption: Anthropological Perspectives
    • ANTH 320: Anthropology of Food
    • BIOL 328: Global Ecology and Biogeography
    • ECON 336: Environmental Economics
    • ECON 342: Economics of Regulation
    • ECON 347: Economics of the Public Sector
    • ENVS 231: Earth Systems Science
    • ENVS 240: Permaculture and Homestead Winter Farming
    • ENVS 253: Sustainable Agriculture
    • ENVS 341: The Science of Climate Change
    • PSCI 361: Globalization
    • PSCI 363: Global Environmental Politics
    • PSCI 463: American Environmental Politics and Policy
    • PSCI 480: Science and Politics
    • RLST 350: Religion and Nature
    • SOCY 233: Sociology of Food
    • SOCY 238: Environmental Sociology
    • SOCY 242: Science, Society and the Environment
    • SOCY 432: Global Cities
Research methods (one course, plus lab for science courses)
  • ANTH 464: Methods in Cultural Anthropology
  • BIOL 228: Ecology and BIOL 229: Ecology Laboratory
  • BIOL 352: Aquatic Systems Biology and BIOL 353: Aquatic Systems Lab
  • CHEM 231: Organic Chemistry I and CHEM 233: Organic Chemistry Lab I
  • ECON 205: Introduction to Econometrics
  • ENVS 220: Applied Environmental Analysis
  • ENVS 261: Geographic Information Science
  • PSCI 280: Political Analysis
Senior Seminar (one course)
  • ENVS 461: Seminar in Environmental Studies

Other courses, particularly special topic courses not offered regularly, may be acceptable substitutes for area concentration courses or, occasionally, introductory, upper-level or research methods courses. If you have questions about a particular course, contact the program director.

Politics and Society Track

This track appeals to students who are interested in the impact of recent globalization on how societies are governed in different areas of the world and how international institutions have been engaged in world affairs. Students explore ways that political science, sociology and other social sciences have described global phenomena such as human rights, migration, democracy, and terrorism, studying the efforts of states and non-state actors to manage people, forces and ideologies that transcend national borders. As with the other tracks, students focus on a particular geographic region, but their off-campus study program and area courses should include study of issues and interactions that extend beyond their primary regional focus.

Politics and Society Track Core Courses

Introductory (four courses, one each from four of the five following categories)
  • ANTH 113: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
  • ECON 101: Principles of Microeconomics
  • One introductory course on international relations
    • PSCI 240: Modern Democracies
    • PSCI 260: International Relations
  • One introductory course on sociology
    • SOCY 101: Powers, Energies and Peoples
    • SOCY 103: Society and Culture
    • SOCY 105: Society in Comparative Perspective
    • SOCY 107: Institutions and Inequalities
    • SOCY 108: Public Life
  • One course on global historical and cultural relations
    • HIST 100: Making of the Contemporary World
    • HIST 226: The British Empire
    • HIST 256: Global Crisis (And The History of How We Have Addressed It)
    • HIST 275: World War II
    • MLL 251: World Cinema
    • RLST 101: Encountering Religion in Its Global Context: An Introduction
Upper-level (three courses on global sociopolitical issues from two departments)
  • ANTH 310D: Music, Human Rights and Cultural Rights
  • ANTH 312D: Music, Film and Culture: Ethnographic Perspectives
  • ANTH 460: Whiteness, Power and Race
  • ECON 335: Economics of Immigration
  • ECON 338: International Trade
  • ECON 339: International Finance and Open-Economy Macroeconomics
  • HIST 311: Immigrant Experience in the United States
  • HIST 322: Human Rights in Latin America
  • HIST 342: History of Public Health
  • HIST 345: History of the Indian Ocean
  • HIST 374: The Atlantic World
  • HIST 454: Asians in Diaspora
  • HIST 458: Gandhi and Civil Disobedience
  • PSCI 351: States, Nations, Nationalism
  • PSCI 355: Immigration, Citizenship and National Identity
  • PSCI 361: Globalization
  • PSCI 366: Global Poverty, Policy and Politics
  • PSCI 374: Civil Wars and Failed States
  • PSCI 444: Revolutions
  • PSCI 446: The Politics of the Welfare State
  • PSCI 447: Inequality and Democracy
  • PSCI 449: Democracy in Crisis
  • PSCI 450: Human Rights in World Politics
  • PSCI 465: International Terrorism
  • PSCI 470: Power, States and Markets: The Making of Modern Social Order
  • PSCI 471: Politics of Transitional Justice
  • PSCI 476: Rules for the World: International Organizations' Role in World Politics
  • RLST 135: African Spirituality in the Americas
  • RLST 140: Islam's Diverse Paths: An Introduction to the Islamic Tradition
  • RLST 217: Christianity in the Global South
  • RLST 335: Religious Fundamentalism in the Contemporary World
  • SOCY 235: Transnational Social Movements
  • SOCY 237: Borders and Border Crossing
  • SOCY 321: Social Change, Dictatorship and Democracy
  • SOCY 432: Global Cities
  • SOCY 466: The Politics of Identity Formation in the Global South
  • WGS 242: Transnational Feminisms
Research methods (one methods course)
  • ANTH 464: Methods in Cultural Anthropology
  • ECON 205: Introduction to Econometrics
  • HIST 387: Practice and Theory of History
  • PSCI 280: Political Analysis
  • RLST 390: Approaches to the Study of Religion
  • SOCY 271: Methods of Social Research
  • SOCY 373: Qualitative Research Methods
  • SOCY 474: Comparative-Historical Analysis

Other courses, particularly special topic courses not offered regularly, may be acceptable substitutes for area concentration courses or, occasionally, introductory, upper-level or research methods courses. If you have questions about a particular course, contact the program director.