Course Name |
History - From the Goldmines to Trump: A Global History of Nativism & Anti-Immigration Since the 19th Century |
Course Provider |
University College Dublin |
Course Code |
HIS21260 |
Course Type |
Lifelong Learning |
Apply To |
Course provider |
Attendance Options |
Part time |
Location (Districts) |
Belfield |
Enrolment and Start Dates Comment |
TRIMESTER: Spring |
Application Date |
2022-2023 Academic Year
Pre-Registration for Autumn 2022 will be reopening in August!
Please keep in mind that Open Learning module offerings and details are subject to change and are available on a first-come-first-serve basis. Should your preferred module be at capacity, please email us at all@ucd.ie so that we can discuss your options. |
Duration |
Expand+Spring Trimester - January to May
MODE OF DELIVERY: Face-to-Face
Student Effort Hours:
Student Effort Type Hours
Lectures 11
Seminar (or Webinar) 11
Specified Learning Activities 45
Autonomous Student Learning 45
Total 112
Approaches to...
Hide-Spring Trimester - January to May
MODE OF DELIVERY: Face-to-Face
Student Effort Hours:
Student Effort Type Hours
Lectures 11
Seminar (or Webinar) 11
Specified Learning Activities 45
Autonomous Student Learning 45
Total 112
Approaches to Teaching and Learning:
The module combines large-group and small-group teaching, through a weekly lecture and seminar. The lectures provide an introduction to the topic. Autonomous learning is fostered through assigned weekly readings. The seminars encourage active learning and critical reflection through a combination of class discussion and group work.
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Link to Course Fee |
Web Page - Click Here |
Eligibility |
Requirements, Exclusions and Recommendations
Not applicable to this module.
Module Requisites and Incompatibles
Not applicable to this module. |
Course Content |
Expand+HIS21260 From the Goldmines to Trump: A global history of nativism and anti-immigration since the mid-19th c.
Academic Year 2022/2023
Nativism and anti-immigration (both terms will be used interchangeably throughout the course) refer to people's ...
Hide-HIS21260 From the Goldmines to Trump: A global history of nativism and anti-immigration since the mid-19th c.
Academic Year 2022/2023
Nativism and anti-immigration (both terms will be used interchangeably throughout the course) refer to people's opposition and/or hostility to immigration or minorities. These terms have appeared repeatedly in explanations put forward to explain Brexit and Trump’s victory. But they have a much longer history. This course will examine nativism since the mid-nineteenth century around the world, starting with the fallout from anti-Chinese protests at goldmines in Australia. We will also look at the American anti-Chinese movement, South African efforts to exclude Indian immigrants, moves towards restrictionism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century United States, anti-Semitism in the inter-war period, and the varying treatment ‘postcolonial’ migrants, ‘guestworker’ immigrants and people in search of asylum in Europe received after 1945. The course will try to understand why anti-immigration rhetoric became prominent at certain times. Do people, political parties and certain media outlets communicate hostility towards immigrants and minorities more for economic or cultural (identity) reasons? Is anti-immigration inevitable when extensive immigration takes place? Is nativism bottom-up or top-down – that is, does it come from normal people reacting to economic and societal pressures or is it due to the arrival of charismatic politicians saying things that established parties will not? Why do men tend to vote for anti-immigration parties more so than women? Why do higher educated people vote less frequently for anti-immigration parties? What role has the media, including social media more recently, played in the rise of anti-immigration sentiments? Most readings will take the form of journal articles, but primary sources will be provided most weeks to enable us to examine the rhetoric used by prominent anti-immigrant voices in the past.
Learning Outcomes:
By the end of this course students will be able:
- apply social theories relating to anti-immigration to historic case studies
- engage with various disciplinary perspectives on nativism/anti-immigration
- compare the political and public reaction to immigration in different countries over time
- relate past political and public immigration debates with more recent discussions
- examine primary sources relating to historic case studies
Indicative Module Content:
The module addresses such topics as:
- What role can history play in debates about anti-immigration?
- Demand-side factors: Cultural backlash or economic insecurity?
- Supply-side factors: What is the role of politicians in nativism?
- Anti-Irishness in Britain, 1840s-1880s
- Xenophobia in Australia: From the goldmines to federation
- The Anti-Chinese movement and restrictionism in the United States, 1880s-1920s
- Excluding Indians from white South Africa, 1890s-1910s
- Anti-Semitism in interwar Europe
- Opposition to post-colonial immigration in Britain
- The rise of the radical right since the 1980s
- Why is there no major anti-immigrant party in Ireland?
- Brexit in the UK, Trump in the US and Modi in India: Is this the ‘age of anger’?
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Number of Credits |
5 |
Careers or Further Progression |
Open Learning is one of our most flexible pathways for entering into UCD undergraduate study. With 12 UCD undergraduate programmes, learners are able to accumulate 30 credits towards a NFQ Level 7 Certificate in Open Learning at their own pace from a variety of undergraduate modules. We have a dedicated team ready to support you in planning your unique learning journey, contact us via: all@ucd.ie. |
Course Web Page |
Web Page - Click Here |
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