- January 23, 2023
Over the summer, 24 students from George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School delved deep into issues of constitutional law, separation of powers, and national security in Padua, Italy—a place of inspiration for many of these ideals. The two-week study-abroad trip was co-taught by Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch and National Security Institute Founder and Executive Director Jamil Jaffer.
- August 16, 2022
A visit to South Korea on the heels of President Biden provided Schar School students an unparalleled opportunity to learn about the region. After pandemic restrictions, study abroad is back.
- August 5, 2022
From Colorado to Ecuador, this Schar School freshman is going places.
- July 25, 2022
Twenty George Mason University students traveled to Spain this summer as part of a field study summer course called “Leadership Across Difference: Lessons from Medieval Spain.”
- February 4, 2022
Study abroad students traveled to Scotland to participate and observe the climate change conference COP26. Here’s why, and what they learned.
- October 27, 2021
We ask Cato Abbot, a fulltime Schar School senior, what it’s like living—and studying—in Rome.
- September 2, 2021
George Mason University is your ticket to the world. With more than 200 programs in more than 60 countries, students can study abroad for as little as a week or as long as a full academic year.
- June 28, 2021
An impressive list of thought-leading speakers take on global climate change in a first-ever Schar School summer study-abroad course.
- June 3, 2021
George Mason University Provost and Executive Vice President Mark Ginsberg announced on Wednesday that Marie alice Arnold will serve as interim executive director of the Global Education Office (GEO). Currently associate director of GEO, Arnold will assume her new position later this month.
- September 23, 2020
Fakhira Halloun holds two contradictory identities: She is Palestinian and an Israeli citizen.
It wasn’t until she began facilitating peace dialogues between Israelis and Palestinians in Jerusalem in 2000, that she realized Palestinian citizens of Israel could be the missing link in bridging ties between the two groups.