Guatemala 2025 Field School

INFO SESSION - ZOOM Recording. 8 November 2024

Eligibility

We hope you will consider participating in this field school and, perhaps, inform other students who may be interested as well. This field school is for UNBC students as well as students at universities across Canada – both senior undergraduates and graduate students. We will facilitate non-UNBC student participation via Zoom before our departure.

The plan

Plan de Sanchez

Week 1

The first week of the course takes place at the UNBC campus in Prince George in late April and early May 2025. Students will prepare for this intense week of classes by reading material made available one month before the course commences. During the UNBC-based seminars we will discuss both theoretical issues of power and human rights as well as specific historical and contemporary aspects of Guatemala's violent past and present. Pre-reading and course work will help to prepare you for an intense field school experience in Guatemala.

Weeks 2 and 3

Weeks two and three take place in Guatemala. Grahame Russell of Rights Action will facilitate all aspects of our time in Guatemala including set-up, guiding, translation, transportation, and so forth. All students will return to Antigua for a final day of reflection, discussion, and analysis of our various experiences. The final form and content of the field school will be worked out in consultation with Rights Action, participating students, and Dr. Nolin.

Over the course of approximately 14 full days in Guatemala, participants will meet with Guatemalans and some North Americans working for human rights and the environment. The group will travel (by rented van) to and spend nights in rural communities seeking justice for environmental and health harms caused by North American mining companies; to the coffee-growing regions of the country to meet with indigenous organizations working for Fair Trade and equitable trade arrangements; communities resisting forced eviction from their ancestral lands to make way for African palm 'for export'; meet with people working for the rights of sweat-shop (maquiladora) workers; and human rights organizations & the Guatemalan Forensic Anthropology Foundation who work to clarify past violence, historical memory and justice. (Closer to the actual dates, Nolin & Russell will set out a detailed 14-day itinerary.)

Field school leaders

Testimonio

Grahame Russell and Catherine Nolin have worked together since 2004 to organize and facilitate these experiential learning opportunities in Guatemala. They recently co-edited and co-wrote several sections of their new book Testimonio: Canadian Mining in the Aftermath of Genocides in Guatemala (2021).

We encourage participants to access this book via Between the Lines Press, the UNBC Bookstore, or the UNBC Library. View the accompanying website at: TestimonioTheBook.org

Grahame Russell

Grahame Russell is a non-practising lawyer, author, and, since 1995, co-director of Rights Action. Grahame is also an adjunct professor at the University of Northern British Columbia. Rights Action funds community-controlled development, environmental defense and human rights projects in Guatemala and Honduras, as well as Chiapas, El Salvador and Oaxaca; and carries out education and activism work in the USA and Canada related to global human rights, environmental and development issues. See: Grahame Russell and Rights Action

Catherine Nolin​

Dr. Catherine Nolin is a Professor of Geography and has long-standing interests in issues of Maya refugee movement (particularly to Canada), Guatemalan survival migration, and critical development studies related to resistance to Canadian mining operations in Guatemala. Catherine and Grahame have organized and facilitated nine field schools to Guatemala in 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010 (plus a graduate student delegation in August 2010), 2012, 2014, 2018, and 2023. See: Catherine Nolin

Required courses

Undergraduate​ courses

  • GEOG 333 – Geography Field School
  • GEOG 426 – Geographies of Culture, Rights and Power

Graduate​ courses

  • NRES 763 – Geography Field School
  • GEOG 626 – Geographies of Culture, Rights and Power

Optional course

  • Independent study (arranged with your home program taken concurrently or immediately after the field school)

Costs

Cost is to be determined; approximately $2500 CDN + airfare and tuition.

  • Weeks 1 and 2: $2500 CDN (approximate) – based on 14 days in-country
  • Airfare: $1,400 CDN (approximate)
  • UNBC course fees: See UNBC tuition and fees

This field school fee covers: approximately 14 nights of hotel; 2-3 meals a day for 14 days; transportation in-country; trip organization, guiding, translation; honorariums for some people and communities we meet with, etc.

Participants pay for their own travel to and from Guatemala, though we will coordinate schedules to travel together.

Risks

Grahame and Catherine will have discussions with interested persons about the possible risks involved with this delegation, before people decide to join or not. Since 1995, with Rights Action, Grahame has planned and led over 80 such delegations to Honduras, Guatemala, Chiapas and Oaxaca, and never had any serious problems.

Apply to the Guatemala 2025 field school

Please download and complete the form below to apply for the Guatemala 2025 field school. Please bring completed forms to Dr. Catherine Nolin's office at the Prince George campus in the Teaching Lab, room 8-148.

Guatemala 2025 field school application form

For more information

Grahame Russell, info@rightsaction.org, 860-352-2448
Catherine Nolin​, catherine.nolin@unbc.ca, 250-960-5875

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