This cluster builds on the premise that the study of international development is an intrinsic dimension of population movement, both within and across national boundaries. In addition to the study of immigration to the United States and the adaptation experiences of immigrant groups now and in the past, course offerings and research seminars consider the causes and consequences of population movement in both receiving and sending societies, as well as the policy implications of migration. This cluster is bolstered by a Center on Migration and Development housed in the Woodrow Wilson School in partnership with the Office of Population Research. Course offerings will include: Theories of International Development; Immigration and Ethnicity; and Migration in the Periphery. Related courses include: Urbanization and Development; Population and Development; Demography of International Migration; and Gender and Development. The Cluster sponsors a monthly seminar involving scholars from within and outside the Princeton Campus.