Identity Abroad
Navigating your identity in a new environment is challenging, especially when the social and cultural norms are foreign to you. Before you apply and depart for your program, we encourage you to think about your multiple and intersecting identities and how they may interact with your cultural environment abroad.
Navigating a New Environment
While abroad, you could face a different cultural and structural understanding of race, ethnicity, nationality, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, and more. All these parts of your identity can impact your experience abroad and influence the ways in which you are perceived in your host country. Although such encounters with different cultural perspectives can generate opportunities for intercultural learning, they can also be disconcerting, awkward, and uncomfortable.
You could find that you have more affinities with your host community than you expected, but you could also come up against harmful stereotypes and microaggressions surrounding your identities. These encounters can be unsettling and harmful; however, researching your host country’s cultural environment before you leave can help prepare you for stressful situations and mitigate harm.
Prompts for Reflection and Research
We encourage you to ask yourself the following questions as you explore program options and prepare for your upcoming term abroad:
- How do my identities grant or deny me power and privilege with the people of my host country? What about with my fellow students studying abroad with me?
- What identities have historically and currently face discrimination in my host country? How has the history of my host country shaped the current landscape?
- Do I know any students with whom I share identities who have studied abroad previously in the same country or region?
- Who will be my support network abroad? Who can I confide in if I experience harmful stereotypes and microaggressions? Are there any organizations within my host university or city that bring together people with shared identities?
- What social justice movements are taking place in my host country? How can I be an ally for marginalized peoples in my host country?
Resources
In addition to the resources below, you may find it helpful to connect with a Study Abroad Ambassador. Study Abroad Ambassadors are current Wesleyan students who have previously studied abroad. You can also check out the written by former study abroad students.
- Host Country Research
- The contains country-specific information including a People and Society section which outlines statistics regarding ethnicity, religion, gender, and more.
- The State Department’s webpage includes a “Learn about your destination” search function. On your host country’s webpage, explore the Local Laws and Special Circumstances section.
- The State Department maintains which cover internationally recognized individual, civil, political, and worker rights.
- shine a spotlight on the situation for LGBT people in different countries.
- Within WesPortal, you can access submitted by current and former Wesleyan students.
- First-Generation Students
| IFSA Butler
| I Am First
| Know Without Borders
| IFSA Butler
| DePaul Study Abroad, YouTube
| IES Abroad
| Go Abroad
| Know Without Borders
| IFSA Butler - Race and Ethnicity
| IES Abroad
| Go Abroad
| Diversity Abroad
| IFSA Butler
| Diversity Abroad
| PLATO Project
| Diversity Abroad
| Northwestern Business Review
| HuffPost
| Initiated by Howard University
Resources for Black and African American Students:
| Temple University
| Black Girls Abroad
| Go Abroad
| AFS-USA
| New York Times
| Go Abroad
| Blackandabroad.com
| IES Abroad
| IES Abroad
| Natural Hair Nomad, YouTube
| Go Overseas
| Go Abroad
| Arcadia Abroad
| Go Abroad
Resources for Latinx Students:
| IES Abroad
| Latinas Who Travel
| NASPA
| IES Abroad
| The Atlantic
| IES Abroad
| All Abroad
| The Mash Up American
Resources for Asian and Pacific Islander Students:
| UM Learning Abroad Center, YouTube
| Here with Dia
| IES Abroad
| IES Abroad
| All Abroad
| IES Abroad
| Go Abroad
| All Abroad
Resources for Native American, American Indian, and Alaska Native Students:
| UM Learning Abroad Center, YouTube
| All Abroad
| Northern Arizona
| PLATO - Gender and Sexuality
Laws pertaining to gender expression, sexual orientation, sexual contact, cultural attitudes, and understanding of gender identity vary widely from country to country. The resources below can help you research more about laws, cultural norms, and other necessary considerations. You’ll also find stories and perspectives from students who have studied abroad previously.
Resources for LGBTQ+ Students:
Queer Resource Center | 九色视频
| Diversity Abroad
| Stonewall
| Chapman University
| IES Abroad
| OutRight Action International
| IES Abroad
| Man About World
| U.S. State Department
| Go Abroad
| OutTraveler.com
| IES Abroad
| National Center for Transgender Equality
| U.S. TSA
| U.S. Department of State
| ILGA World
| ILGA World
| Global Gayz
Resources for Women Travelers:
| Department of State
| Diversity Abroad
| Journeywoman.com
| Transitions Abroad - Students with Disabilities
If you have a documented learning, physical, sensory, health, or psychiatric disability, you are able to request reasonable accommodations through Wesleyan Accessibility Services to ensure access to education, housing, meal, and co-curricular activities during your time abroad. These requests should be made prior to your departure.
Resources for Students with Disabilities:
| Diversity Abroad
| MIUSA.org
| Google Maps
| Go Overseas
| U.S. Department of State
| U.S. CDC
| U.S. CDC
| ETIAS.com
| Curb Free with Cory Lee
| Go Abroad
| Diversity Abroad
| Go Abroad
| MIUSA
- Religion and Spirituality
| Diversity Abroad
| Department of State
| IFSA
| IFSA
| HalalTrip
| Yeah That's Kosher
| Kahal
| Buddhanet
| FOSIS
| IslamicFinder.com
| IES Abroad
| Salatomatic - High Financial Need
If you receive Wesleyan financial aid, your aid goes with you on semester and year-long study abroad programs. Work-study is also replaced by a grant that will be included in your financial aid award for your term abroad.
- Finances and Funding | Office of Study Abroad
- | Office of Study Abroad
- | IFSA Butler
- | IES Abroad
- | IFSA Butler
- | IFSA Butler
- | Go Overseas
- Allyship Abroad
Allyship and Anti-Racism Resources:
Once You're Abroad
Below are some suggestions regarding cultural immersion that all students should keep in mind at all times but especially in cases of harassment or discrimination:
- Call us, write to us. Remember you are still a Wesleyan student while you are abroad. We care about you and will be eager to monitor your progress while abroad. Check in with the Office of Study Abroad from time to time, via email, phone call, or Zoom.
- Talk to your program staff. Your program staff abroad is the front line for all concerns, whether personal or academic. It is crucial that you stay in regular contact with them and seek their assistance when needed.
- Build a strong cohort. Never underestimate the value of processing your experience abroad with your peers. Not only can they be supportive, they are often the source of unique and unanticipated insights.
- Speak candidly. The most effective tool for combating discriminatory habits, either of mind or behavior, is to discuss them candidly, in an open forum and in private counseling. The Office of Study Abroad launches this discussion pre-departure and expects that such conversations will continue abroad.