Earlham College Peace and Global Studies
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Plowshares Peace Studies Project


What do you do with a PAGS major? Possible careers and the job search

Where are PAGS
Graduates Working:
A Sampling

Peace Studies as a Social Science: Developing analytical and practical skills

What do you do with a
PAGS major?

Earlham's PAGS Graduates:
Engaging the World
Caroline Higgins, Peace and Global Studies Convenor

Since its inception in 1974, Peace and Global Studies has produced scores of graduates who have worked all over the world as teachers, attorneys, professors, activists, medical doctors, nonprofit agency workers, civil servants, and ministers. Keeping in touch through the PAGS list-serve, alumni share with each other news of their professional and career development, alerting others to job openings, grants, and apprenticeship opportunities for recent graduates. Some alumni return to the sites of their internship experiences to seek employment on the U.S.-Mexico border, in Northern Ireland, or in the Middle East; many others find stimulating and educational work environments in the fifty states.

While PAGS graduates can carve out careers for themselves on the basis of their undergraduate degrees, there are those who opt for graduate school, earning advanced degrees in the liberal professions, ministry, social services, and the sciences. PAGS graduates are regularly accepted at leading institutions of higher learning, and some alumni are now themselves senior faculty at prestigious schools.

PAGS graduates can be depended on to link their expertise to projects aiming at peace and social transformation. They are pleased with their jobs and dedicated to making a difference in the world.

Click on one of the subects at the left to learn more.

 

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This page last updated: May 16, 2003