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M.Phil/Ph.D programme
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The Centre for Research in Ethnic Relations (CRER)
is Britain's leading academic centre for the study of issues concerning
migration, racism and ethnic relations. CRER encourages and co-ordinates
multi-disciplinary research in the field; employs researchers to
undertake fundamental and applied research; offers teaching and
supervision to postgraduate students and provides hospitality for
visiting scholars and European Commission funded research fellows.
The Centre is recognised as an approved department for the award
of ESRC research competition studentships and as a Marie
Curie Training Site on Ethnic Relations, Immigration
and Refugees. The Centre offers an excellent range of resources
for its students including computing facilities and help towards
research or conference expenses. Students also enjoy access to CRER's
Resources Centre which is the
country's premier academic collection on race and ethnic relations.
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Professor John Oucho
The recent appointment of Professor John O. Oucho
as holder of Marie Curie Chair in CRER has given a significant boost
to the Centre and the University of Warwick in the study of international
migration. He is determined to spearhead research, training and
networking on an African international migration in the context
of Euro-African relations thereby innovating on the current practice
of doing so mainly from either perspective. He is a world-renowned
scholar of both voluntary and forced forms of internal and international
migration, experienced on various African countries having worked
in universities in his native home of Kenya for over two decades,
Ghana for three years and Botswana for eight years, and as United
Nations expert in South Africa for one year. He has written extensively
on migration in Eastern and Southern Africa, was for four years
in the network of the Southern African Migration Project and is
aspiring to improve work in the Greater Horn of Africa. His widely
read university texts based in extensive research include Urban
Migrants and Rural development in Kenya (1996) and Undercurrents
of Ethnic Conflict in Kenya (2002) as well as journal articles and
numerous conference papers.
John Oucho has a special responsibility to advise
and mentor PhD students in the School and CRER throughout the duration
of their PhD.
- New research and PhD area
In the next three years, Professor Oucho will
mentor researchers and tutor new PhD students in the following research
themes.
Year 1: Participation of Africa's Brain
Drain, Migrant Associations, Migrant-Stayer Networks and Diaspora
in Africa's Development.
Year 2: Changing Gender Relations and Roles
among Africa's Brain Drain and Diaspora.
Year 3: NEPAD-United Kingdom and French
Partnerships in Managing Africa's Brain Gain and Diaspora for Euro-African
Interdependent Development.
The basic premise of this new PhD area is to provide
training to European and African researchers, personnel in public
and private sectors as well as NGOs and civil society activists
working on emigration, immigration and Diasporas. Through research,
will be addressed substantive issues in the migration-development
nexus; open a window for interpreting implications of Africa's brain
drain and diaspora for development in individual African countries
and in mutually agreed upon relations between African and European
countries; and equip students for the writing of theses or research
reports.
This will enable students to understand and appreciate
development perspectives of contemporary African immigration to
Europe and its implications for as well as prospects of changing
African-European relations. Students will either undertake original
research or analyse secondary data to prepare their theses on topics
approved by selected multi-disciplinary teams of researchers, and
will be required to make presentations in seminars/ conferences,
ultimately leading to their choices of research topics on which
to prepare theses. All student research will address issues pertaining
to the three sub-themes that have already been explained. To strengthen
their research capability, PhD students will attend a research methodology
course offered by lecturers in CRER, School of Health and Social
Studies and other departments of the University of Warwick.
CRER will be running a Summer School on International
Migration and Development from 2008. This programme will be facilitated
by the staff or CRER, as well as from the wider University of Warwick,
the European CRER network and other CRER networks to be initiated.
Participants of the Summer School will be European and African PhD
students, young researchers and practitioners with an ambition to
cut out careers in research; the course will enable them to forge
links among themselves for future activities and will permit exchanges,
cross-fertilisation between research and practice, thereby informing
policy and helping to develop appropriate programmes.
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All students registered for degrees by research
in the Centre are expected to complete the doctoral training programme
provided by the highly rated Sociology department. The majority
of full-time students will be expected to complete the programme
in their first year, whereas part-time students normally complete
it in their first two years. Each course in the programme takes
the form of a seminar with active participation from students. The
aim is a lively, supportive seminar in which students feel challenged
and inspired to share their different experiences. Modules are as
follows:
- Research process and design
- Connecting qualitative and quantitative
- methods and analysis
- Exploring contemporary qualitative methodologies
- Quantitative analysis: measures and models
- Philosophy of social science
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Bilingualism in the Pakistani Diaspora.
Black Identity
Bosnian Refugee Resettlement.
Educational Inequalities of South Asians in Birmingham.
Ethnic Minorities and Refugees: Mobilisation and
Group Strategies in Interaction with Majority Society in Europe.
Human Rights and Minorities.
Identity and Communication
Lost Generation or Future Peace-Builders: The
Effects of Political Violence on Youth
Refugee Housing Policy and Refugee Settlement
in England and France
Refugees in Europe and the Concept of Successful
Integration
Representing Blackness: Move, the Media and The
City of Philadelphia
The EU and the Muslim Minority
The Experiences of Muslim Policy Officers: An
Examination of Processes of Categorisation and Self-Identification
in English Constabularies
Understanding Turkish Educational Underachievement
in Belgium and Britain: A Sociological Account
Unfinished Business - The Development of Racial(ised)
Identity in People of Mixed Parentage.
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Research students are able to attend the CRER
Open Seminar series and other events which are announced each term.
See Events. In the Spring Term there is
a PhD workshop where students will present their research.
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Postgraduate
Admissions Tutor: Dr
Wolfgang Markham.
Each student will be assigned a named supervisor for the duration
of their research degree.
For further information, please explore the Centre
for Research in Ethnic Relations' entry in the University's Graduate
School Prospectus or contact Caroline
Oakman, Graduate School of Race and Ethnic Studies, University
of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL. Tel: +44 (0)24 7652 2980, Fax: +44
(0)24 7652 4324.
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