본문 바로가기
HOME 대학생활 대학공지 외부기관공고

외부기관공고

[영국대학강의 제17편] 런던메트로폴리탄대 파빈알리자데 교수의 경제학 강의 2010.06.23
공통 주한영국문화원 첨부파일( 1 ) british.jpg CLOSE TOOLTIP


영국대학강의 제17편! 런던메트로폴리탄대 파빈알리자데 교수의 경제학 강의
“Identity and Economics - A Case Study with Female Muslim University Students in the UK”

· 일 시: 7월 28일 수요일 18:30~20:00
· 장 소: 주한영국문화원 이벤트 스페이스
· 사전예약: http://db.britishcouncil.or.kr/eduevent/form.php?lang=kr§ion=EducationUK&eventdate=2010-07-28
· 웹사이트: http://www.educationuk.org/Korea/Page/EventDetailsLayout/EventsDetailsPage?eventID=1262433448627

강의 내용
Casual observation points to growing Islamisation among Muslim students in British universities. This is well reflected in growing adoption of Islamic veil, hejab, by Muslim female students. Sociologists and political scientists interest in the issue of hejab has been tackled in the context of multiculturalism. Debates on multiculturalism and identity politics, aims at legitimising the heterogeneity of national culture and the necessity of accommodating diversity and difference within democratic polities. In Europe this debate is concurrent with the demand by non-European migrants and politically disfranchised social groups for appropriation of their own cultural distinctiveness.

This paper is a pilot project based on primary data collection. The target population are sampled from female Muslim students from London Metropolitan University. The objective of this study is to provide an empirical analysis of economic and social factors affecting the formation of a Muslim identity among female Muslim students. The significance of this study lies in its interdisciplinary structure, its empirical nature and focus on economics. It is also centred on the formation of identity in the young Muslim population in the UK.

During her lecture, she will also get a chance to take about an identity of Korean university students in the UK.

교수 약력
Parvin Alizadeh is a senior lecturer of Economics at London Metropolitan Business School, London Metropolitan University. She was also an associate professor of economics at Denison University, Ohio, USA over 2000-2003. She has worked as a consultant for the International Labour Office (ILO), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and the World Bank.

She was borne and brought up in Iran where she did her first university degree. She completed her doctoral dissertation at the University of Sussex in Brighton.

Her main research interests are in ‘female employment’ and ‘late industrialization’. She has published in Journal of International development, International Journal of Interdisciplinary Social science, and the Brown Journal of the World Affairs.