Dissertation Defense Schedule

Academic Excellence

Sharing original dissertation research is a principle to which the University of Delaware is deeply committed. It is the single most important assignment our graduate students undertake and upon completion is met with great pride.

We invite you to celebrate this milestone by attending their dissertation defense. Please review the upcoming dissertation defense schedule below and join us!

Dissertation Defense Form

Must be received two weeks prior to your defense.

Join Us

Celebrate your colleague’s academic success!

It's official

Download the official UD thesis/dissertation manual.

Dissertation Discourse

Need a creative jumpstart?

PROGRAM | Political Science and International Relations

The Comparative Politics of Immigration in Spain and Portugal after Democratic and Migration Transition

By: Jared Larson Chair: Daniel Green

ABSTRACT

This project seeks to determine why, according to various indicators, there is relatively less anti-immigrant sentiment among policy-makers and the public in Iberia than in most other European countries. The methodology employs a structured, focused comparative case study of Spain and Portugal. After situating the project within the fields of migration studies, comparative politics, and Iberian studies, the dissertation takes a markedly historical approach. Special attention is paid to the Moorish Conquest of Iberia, the Iberian Reconquest, a long history of authoritarian leadership, Franco’s Hispanidad and Salazar’s Portugalidade, rapid economic modernization and reintegration with Europe in the latter half of the twentieth century, the politics of democratic transition, return migration, EU membership, and the 11 March 2004 attacks in Madrid, all which are influential events to today’s discussion of immigration.

In addition to the presentation of numerous quantitative data, the dissertation draws heavily upon qualitative data from nearly 40 interviews with politicians, bureaucrats, religious leaders, and representatives of NGOs in Madrid, Barcelona, and Lisbon. In addition to considering the standard independent variables that tend to provoke negative backlashes in other immigrant-receiving polities, including rapid inflows of migrants, the perception of threats (economic, security, and cultural), and elite leadership, we examine the particular roles of democratic and migration transitions in both countries. Consideration of these transitions is important to how contemporary immigration is received in the Iberian Peninsula as they are unique within the European experience and, as such, are treated as contextual variables herein. In the case of democratic transition, the influence of an anti-immigrant rightist movement is limited in the socio-political climate of these post-authoritarian regimes; in the case of migration transition, a sense of empathy toward immigrants today is fostered given that both countries exported labor until the early-1980s. The paper concludes that relatively low levels of anti-immigrantism in the Iberian countries are due to three factors 1) late economic modernization which has stratified the labor market and thus limited competition for jobs, 2) the importance of the recent processes of democratization as an elite-driven, ideational explanation; and 3) the more recent, structural phenomenon of migration transition.

More >

Back >

The Process

Step-by-Step

Visit our “Step-by-Step Graduation Guide” to take you through the graduation process.From formatting your Dissertation to Doctoral Hooding procedures.

Your First Step >

Dissertation Manual

Wondering how to set up the format for your paper. Refer to the “UD Thesis/Dissertation Manual” for formatting requirements and more.

Download Your Manual >

Defense Submission Form

This form must be completed two weeks in advance of a dissertation defense to meet the University of Delaware Graduate and Professional Education’s requirements.

Submission Form >