- Flashback Friday: Rachael on Liberal Arts in Athens, Greece
- Flashback Friday: Jordan on Brazilian Studies and Portuguese Language in Sao Paulo, Brazil
- Flashback Friday: Magdalena on Advanced Language and Culture in Madrid, Spain
- Throwback Thursday: Ana on University Study: St. Andrews
- Throwback Thursday: Living with a Host Family (Sarah on GIEU Uganda)
- Throwback Thursday: Williamena on Contemporary London
- Throwback Thursday: Building Connections Through Study Abroad (Asia on GCC: Japan)
- Flashback Friday: New Perspectives (Brigitte on GIEU Israel and West Bank)
- Flashback Friday: Life in China (Heather on ASIANLAN 203 in Nanjing)
- Flashback Friday: Abroad in the time of Brexit (Zoe on Kings College London)
- Flashback Friday: Dos and Don'ts (Reid on Spanish 230 in Granada)
- Throwback Thursday: Mi Bonito Barrio (Anna in Spain)
- Throwback Thursday: Toledo, No, Not Ohio (Ashley in Spain)
- Throwback Thursday: Week One in Salamanca (Ashley in Spain)
- Recording the Journey by Bailey Burke, LSA ‘23
- Flashback Friday: GCC in Rio de Janeiro and Florianópolis, Brazil (Theatre & Incarceration)
- Flashback Friday: Azia speaks on being Black in Costa Rica
- Flashback Friday: Molly discusses identity, ethnicity and mental health in Argentina
- Flashback Friday: Allyson explores anxiety as a foreigner in Czechia
- Throwback Thursday: Phoebe's take on Health and Community in Argentina, South Africa, Vietnam, and the U.S.
- Throwback Thursday: Jonathan talks about being Vietnamese American in South Africa
- Stockholm vs. Copenhagen: How Do They Compare?
- Flashback Friday: Kelsey Pease - I am: A Transfer Student
- Flashback Friday: Hira Khan - I am: Muslim
- Flashback Friday: Emmanuel Saint-Phard - I am: Black
- Flashback Friday: Thu Tran - I am: A Heritage Seeker
- Throwback Thursday: Taiye reflects on her spring term in Cuba
- Flashback Friday: Illya reflects on Cross Cultural Psychology in the Czech Republic
- Flashback Friday: Haleigh shares about volunteering with the HOME Project in Athens
- How to Save Money While Studying Abroad in Barcelona
- Throwback Thursday: Rachael shares story of final night in Athens
- Some Food for Thought: Eating My Way Through Santiago de Compostela, Spain
- Flashback Friday: Jordan shares about classes in Brazil from Brazilian Studies & Portuguese Language
- Flashback Friday: Alana explores differences between African Americans and Black Londoners
- Things To Do in DIS: Copenhagen, Denmark and DIS: Stockholm, Sweden
- Student perspectives about scholarships and identity from GCC: Environmental History in Tokyo, 2019
As I set off for my semester abroad in London, UK, last January, “Brexit” had been only a quiet rumbling in the American news cycle. I do my best to keep up on international affairs and understood the basics of the proposed referendum: as promised by David Cameron as part of his reelection campaign, the British people would be given a chance to vote on continued membership in the European Union in June 2016.
The roots of each argument were clear to me as well: the British government was struggling to justify its continued efforts at liberalization to a people whose parents and grandparents had been at the center of the manufacturing economy not long ago and who felt left behind by increasing globalism and off-shoring of production. At the same time, the project of the European Union—an organization which has made immense interconnection across the continent more possible than ever—had benefits of its own, even outside the free trade zone many in the “leave” campaign bemoaned. One of these benefits is the Erasmus program, which allows university students in EU member states to study abroad without accruing costs outside of the tuition they pay at their home institution. This program has increased access to study abroad opportunities across Europe, and bears a striking resemblance to the opportunity CGIS afforded me.
I remained in Britain until mid-June, departing a week before the referendum was held. Over the course of that time, I witnessed a deepening and darkening of rhetoric surrounding the decision the British people had been vested with. As the economic arguments for leaving the EU were more and more criticized by leading experts, UKIP, the party most strongly advocating for the Brexit, began to emphasize the need for control and self-determination over immigration and refugee resettlement issues in Britain, rather than remaining tied to EU recommendations and regulations. Late in May, a billboard that I walked past at least once a week was displayed outside Parliament, depicting vaguely-Middle Eastern refugees as an invading mass, an overwhelming burden. On June 10th, MP Michael Gove encouraged British voters to ignore the voices of experts and other elites when considering the referendum question. On June 16th, the same day I flew out of London, a young MP named Jo Cox—who had spent her short parliamentary tenure advocating for the protection of civilians caught up in the Syrian Civil War—was shot and stabbed to death by a man shouting “Britain First,” the name of another right-wing party backing the campaign to leave the EU.
I watched the results of the referendum closely as they came in, and a the vote, which split 51%-49% to leave, messages from friends I had made in my time abroad began to surface. A lifelong friend of mine who is a British citizen currently attending Utrecht University in the Netherlands questioned whether she’d be permitted to complete her studies following the vote. Friends I had met at in London from elsewhere in Europe, many of whom were in the UK on the Erasmus program, questioned whether their siblings would have the same opportunity to travel across the continent that they had been given. A somber comment in the Financial Times went viral the morning after the vote: “We will never know the full extent of the lost opportunities, friendships, marriages and experiences we will be denied.”
The irony I believe, in all this, is that global education is one thing that could have mitigated the fear that gripped much of Britain and put the leave campaign over the top. To turn our backs on giving all students—and all people, for that matter—a chance to meet their neighbors and to learn about them in a meaningful way, only invites further resentment and rhetoric of the type seen at the end of the Brexit campaign. This tension between the direction of our politics and a desire to see peace and cooperation in the world is something I encountered again and again on my time abroad, and is something I’ll be exploring here in a couple future posts.
Click here to find more information about the Kings College London program.