Dialogue of Civilizations

Short-term experiences. Long-term impact.

Dialogue of Civilizations (DOCs) are short-term (4- to 6- week) faculty-designed and led programs during the summer that promote global engagement through an academic experience that integrates coursework, international travel, and cultural immersion. In the process, students earn credits for completing two four-credit-hour courses.

Every year, Northeastern offers more than seventy DOCs all around the world.

Run during both Summer 1 and Summer 2, students can choose from a variety of options to fit their unique interests and majors.

The Global Experience Office is a great resource to explore how you can build a DOC into your Northeastern experience.


Honors Dialogues of Civilizations

While Honors students can select from any of the DOCs offered by Northeastern, every summer, the Honors Program offers Honors Dialogues of Civilizations.

Honors DOCs are unique because they are:

  • Led by an Honors faculty member, who is familiar with the Honors Program mission
  • Specifically designed for Honors students
  • Take a rigorous, interdisciplinary approach to learning
  • Includes an Honors Interdisciplinary Seminar (HONR 3309) as its cornerstone

*Students who are part of our Legacy Program can fulfill two Honors requirements (including the Interdisciplinary Seminar) through an Honors DOC.

Summer 2024 Honors DOCs

Ancient Forests: Legal and Philosophical Perspectives (Summer 1)

Professor Andrew J. Haile (School of Law) and Professor Meica Magnani (Philosophy and Computer Science, CSSH)

This Dialogue explores legal and philosophical frameworks for protecting “old growth” forest—woods that have never been logged since European settlement of North America. Combining an overview of key environmental laws and a philosophical exploration of foundational questions in environmental ethics, the trip will immerse students in the magic of ancient forests. We will study indigenous approaches to conservation and take a deep dive on the “timber wars” in the Pacific Northwest as a precursor to modern culture wars. The Dialogue will take place in British Columbia in western Canada (Vancouver and Vancouver Island) and the Olympic peninsula in Washington state and will include a 5-day guided backpacking trip into Olympic National Park, home to one of the largest intact old growth forests in the country.


Climate Science, Engineering Adaptation, and Policy in Emerging Economies (Summer 1)

Professor Auroop R. Ganguly (Civil and Environmental Engineering, COE)

Climate change has been called the defining challenge of our era. While this grand challenge is global, the magnitude of the challenge is especially intense in emerging economies. This course will study the scientific basis, impacts and adaptation, as well as mitigation related to climate change, with a focus on emerging economies. Transformative solutions such as AI and data sciences will be discussed, along with principles in natural and engineering sciences as well as social sciences and policy. The 2024 program with travel to Bangkok in Thailand, Angkor Wat in Cambodia, as well as Jakarta and Bali in Indonesia, idyllic places where a diverse tapestry of history, culture, customs, religion, and lifestyles intersect.


Novel Antibiotic Discovery and Landscape Photography in Chile (Summer 2)

Professor Veronica Godoy-Carter (Biology and Biochemistry, COS) and Professor Joey Morris (Art and Design)

This Dialogue will cultivate two ways of seeing and pursue two fields of endeavorfor which the extreme environment of the Atacama are uniquely suited: microbial sampling and landscape photography. The world’s oldest desert and one of the driest on earth offer the chance to sample novel bacteria, enhancing our knowledge of bacterial diversity, plant associated bacteria (whenever plants are found) that could potentially aid plant growth in dry and salty environments, and potentially the discovery of new antibiotics. We will also visit oasis in which we will sample soil and plant associated bacteria to learn whether these are the same or different to the ones isolated in the drier areas. Later in the Dialogue, the samples will be analyzed using molecular methods. In parallel with their microscopic investigations, students will also learn how to view and capture the otherworldly landscape on film. San Pedro de Atacama with some of the most beautiful and unusual settings in the world, as well as unparalleled views of the stars. Students will thus learn to see their surroundings anew at both the micro and the macroscale.​​​​​​​


Finding Refuge in the World and the Self: Asylum and Refugee Law and the History and Practice of Mindfulness Meditation (Summer 2)

Professor Elizabeth Knowles (School of Law)

This Dialogue explores asylum and refugee law, and the practice of mindfulness and meditation through the lens of Thailand’s unique history, culture, and geography. This program will introduce honors students to the human rights framework of asylum in the United States and provide opportunities to become familiar with the history of Myanmar and Cambodian refugees in Thailand, visit UNHCR and refugee assistance orgs, and learn about issues affecting the large refugee population in Thailand. We will also explore the practice of mindfulness and meditation in Thailand from a secular perspective, immersing ourselves in the rich landscape and history of Thailand to illustrate and bring to life the practice of meditation in temples and monasteries and how these practices were brought to the West.

In this course, students explore the practice of mindfulness and engage in various practices for cultivating compassion and present moment awareness. We will visit Thich Nhat Hahn’s meditation center near Khao Yai National Park and learn from readings and engagement in meditation opportunities locally. We will also explore the benefits of mindfulness meditation for students and professionals and explore readings from Western mindfulness leaders.

Past Honors DOCs

Ancient Forests: Legal and Philosophical Perspectives

Professor Andrew John Haile, School of Law & Professor Meica Magnani, Philosophy and Religion, CSSH

This Dialogue explores legal and philosophical frameworks for protecting “old-growth” forests—woods that have never been logged since the European settlement of North America. Combining an overview of key environmental laws and a philosophical exploration of foundational questions in environmental ethics, the trip will immerse students in the magic of ancient forests. We will study indigenous approaches to conservation and take a deep dive into the “timber wars” in the Pacific Northwest as a precursor to modern culture wars. The Dialogue will take place in British Columbia in western Canada (Vancouver and Vancouver Island) and the Olympic peninsula in Washington state and will include a 5-day guided backpacking trip into Olympic National Park, home to one of the largest intact old-growth forests in the country.


Storytelling, Landscape & Contested Identities in the North of Ireland

Michael Patrick MacDonald, Honors Professor of the Practice

Join us for a trip through lush glens and along the rugged coastline of Ireland, North and South, with stays in urban Dublin, Derry, and Belfast as well as in the rural Donegal area where Gaelic is still a first language. We will take excursions to places such as the Carrowmore Megalithic Cemetery and the Antrim Coast. Through visual art, music, poetry, story, and even political testimony, we will witness how the primary cultural, social, and political life of this island is bound up in the esteemed position of the Storyteller. This dialogue will look at the role of storytelling in both the landscape and the contested identities of “Northern Ireland” in particular. The dialogue will be informed by an understanding of the social, political, and geographic history of Ireland and the role of story in establishing political and social worldviews in a colonized country. Students will read, write about, and discuss the social, political, and geographic history of the island of Ireland, North and South, with an eye on colonization, trauma, and recovery, as well as the role of storytelling as a way to make sense of one’s world, to connect with one another and to the bigger picture, as well as its role in asserting either pride and resistance, or power and dominance.


Novel Antibiotic Discovery and Landscape Photography in Chile

Professor Veronica Godoy-Carter, Biology, COS

This Dialogue will cultivate two ways of seeing and pursue two fields of endeavor for which the extreme environment of the Atacama is uniquely suited: microbial sampling and landscape photography. The world’s oldest and driest desert on earth offer the chance to sample novel bacteria, enhancing our knowledge of bacterial diversity, plant associated bacteria (whenever plants are found) that could potentially aid plant growth in dry and salty environments, and potentially the discovery of new antibiotics. Samples will be analyzed using molecular methods. In parallel students will learn how to view and capture the otherworldly landscape on film. San Pedro de Atacama has some of the most beautiful and unusual settings in the world, as well as unparalleled views of the stars. Students will learn to see their surroundings anew at both the micro and the macro scale.


Climate Science, Engineering, and Policy

Professor Auroop Ganguly, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, COE

From the Taj Mahal in Agra to the world’s highest mountain peaks near Kathmandu, from the Little Tibet of Leh in Ladakh to the houseboats in the backwaters of Kerala, from the ancient capital city of Delhi to the beautiful beaches of Kovalam, we will travel across Nepal and India from the high Himalayas in the north to the Indian Ocean in the south during the Summer Monsoon season as we learn about climate change in emerging economies. We will learn about the sciences, engineering, data sciences, social sciences, public health, and policy aspects of climate change as well as how resilience can be developed across multiple sectors ranging from water, energy and food resources to critical infrastructures and hazards management. We will discover adaptation and mitigation through role playing exercises called climate war games, and frugal innovation (such as India’s Mars mission which it is said cost less than the production cost of the movie Gravity) through experiential learning. We will explore cultures ranging from Tibetan Buddhism practiced in Ladakh to one of the oldest form of Christianty in Kerala, an amalgamation of Hindu and Islamic traditions and architectures in Delhi and in Kovalam, the tradition of Tantric Hinduism including the worship of the Mother Goddess in Nepal, and an ethos that passionately welcomed persecuted minorities including the Zoroastrains and the Jewish peoples. We will learn about a culture that developed the concept of zero and the decimal system, arguably the world’s first urban civilization, and Golden Age economies that were the envy of the contemporary world, but which also let itself be devastated by divisive forces within and inconceivably cynical destructive forces without, only to gradually attempt to rise again from the ashes post Independence in 1947.