Lower-Division

LALS1 Introduction to Latin American and Latino Studies

Interdisciplinary introduction presenting the elements for studying Latin American politics and economics, culture, and society as well as the dynamics of Latino communities in the U.S. Special attention paid to issues of colonialism, human rights, U.S. foreign policy toward Latin America, racism, capitalist globalization, migration, to emerging political and economic shifts in the Americas, and to new local and transnational efforts for social change on the part of Latin America's peoples and Latinos in the U.S.

Credits

5

Instructor

The Staff

General Education Code

ER

Quarter offered

Fall, Winter, Summer

LALS5 Introduction to Human Rights and Social Justice

Introduces human rights as a way to study social justice. Students gain an understanding of interdisciplinary approaches to human rights as a theory, legally, and as a basis for global social movements.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sylvanna Falcon

General Education Code

PE-H

Quarter offered

Spring

LALS20 Latino Politics

Offers a domestic (U.S.) and transnational approach to Latino politics, focusing on the five largest Latino groups: Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Cubans, Salvadorans, and Guatemalans. Issues addressed include Latino electoral participation, Latino public opinion, migrant political incorporation, and transnationalism among others.

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

LALS30 Social Movements in Latin America

Examines contemporary social movements in Latin America, especially those that arose from popular response to different forms of social exclusion and to authoritarian political systems. Explores a variety of popular movements, their successes and setbacks, including rural and urban uprisings, native nations and their descendants, women, labor, human rights, and transnational movements.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jessica Taft

General Education Code

CC

LALS32 Citizens, Denizens, Aliens

Explores theories and practices of citizenship with a focus on how institutions, such as the immigration apparatus, school, and prison, produce and shape inclusion, marginalization, exclusion, and mobility and how social actors envision and enact home and belonging. (Formerly course 132).

Credits

5

Instructor

Catherine Ramirez

General Education Code

PR-E

LALS40 Latinos and Labor

Explores the historical, social, economic, and political dynamics of inequality, stratification, and segmentation that shape the occupational pathways and workplace conditions of Latinos in the United States. Students learn about the structures, policies, and ideologies that influence Latinos' working lives as well as how individuals experience their work in a variety of sectors. (Formerly Latinos, Work, and Organizing.)

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

LALS45 Intersections of Race, Class, and Gender

Introduces theories of race, class, and gender which shape understandings about racial/ethnic issues in the United States. With particular attention to the experiences of U.S. racial/ethnic groups, including Latinas/os, African Americans, Asian Americans, and Native Americans, this course draws from interdisciplinary research to address how race, class, and gender are also crosscutting dynamics. (Formerly Race, Class, Gender.)

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

Quarter offered

Fall

LALS50 Transnational Feminist Organizing in the Americas

Explores key aspects of transnational feminist organizing in the Americas, including transnational feminist theories and feminist activism in Latin America and the Caribbean. Discusses how women from throughout the Americas region organize politically and socially across gender, race, ethnicity, sexuality, and nationality.

Credits

5

Instructor

Sylvanna Falcon

General Education Code

CC

LALS60 Latin American Childhoods

Introduces research on childhood in contemporary Latin America. Explores discourses about Latin American children, the regional institutions shaping children's lives, and how children experience and negotiate these larger social forces.

Credits

5

Instructor

Jessica Taft

General Education Code

CC

LALS70 Cinema and Social Change in Cuba

Examines selected feature-length films and documentaries produced after the Revolution of 1959 as a venue to study social change in Cuba. Cinema is used as artifact to document and critique social change. Topics include: the role of art and artist in Revolution, literacy campaign, changing gender relations, dissident sexualities, racial politics, and others.

Credits

5

General Education Code

IM

LALS75 Art and Social Change in Latin America: Diego Rivera

Explores the works of Diego Rivera, other Mexican muralists, and the Latin American cultural movements that developed to address relevant social and political issues.

Credits

5

Instructor

Greg Landau

Quarter offered

Summer

LALS80D Political Change in Mexico

Reviews broad trends in contemporary Mexican politics against the backdrop of long-term historical, social, and economic change throughout the 20th century, analyzing how power is both wielded from above and created from below. The course covers national politics, grassroots movements for social change and democratization, environmental challenges, indigenous movements, the media, and the politics of immigration and North American integration.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LALS80F Latinos in the U.S.: A Comparative Perspective

Analyzes the Latino experience in the U.S. with a special focus on strategies for economic and social empowerment. Stresses the multiplicity of the U.S. Latino community, drawing comparative lessons from Cuban-American, Puerto Rican, Chicano/Mexicano, and Central American patterns of economic participation and political mobilization.

Credits

5

General Education Code

ER

Quarter offered

Fall, Summer

LALS80H Comparative Latina/o Histories

Designed to survey recent works in the field of Latina and Latino histories, with particular emphasis on historiographical approaches and topics in the field. Readings are chosen to expose a selection of the varied histories and cultures of Latina/os in the U.S., and focus primarily on Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and Cubans.

Credits

5

Instructor

Gabriela Arredondo

General Education Code

CC

LALS80J Race, Nation, and War

Evaluates the relationship between processes of racial formation, war, and nationalism in Latin America. Case studies range from the wars of independence to more recent forms of transnational violence. Students engage historical and anthropological perspectives and critiques of modernity.

Credits

5

Instructor

Cecilia Rivas

General Education Code

ER

LALS80P Environment and Society in Latin America

Examines the implications of environmental degradation and resource extraction for economic growth and social inequality in Latin America. Course focuses on the connections between race, ethnicity, power, poverty, and environmental problems. (Formerly Energy, Society, and Ecology in Latin America.)

Credits

5

General Education Code

PE-E

LALS80S Sexualities and Genders in Latin American and Latina/o Studies

Introduction to issues and themes surrounding sexualities and genders within Latin American and Latina/o studies. Provides background in the basic theoretical and historical frameworks of gender and its relationship to sexuality. In addition to cross-border perspectives, course also examines how gender and sexuality are structured and experienced through other social categories.

Credits

5

General Education Code

CC

LALS80X Central American Peoples and Cultures

Examines contemporary societies and peoples of Central America considering how, in recent decades, media, history, war, cultural production, and migration have shaped Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica both as individual nations and as a region.

Credits

5

Instructor

Cecilia Rivas

General Education Code

CC

LALS90 Contemporary Brazil

Introduces issues affecting contemporary Brazilian society and culture, such as the legacy of slavery and persisting social, racial, and gender inequities. Analyses of how different representations of Brazil sustain distinctive national projects, which, in turn, attribute specific meanings to blackness, whiteness, masculinity, femininity, and upper- and lower-class identities.

Credits

5

Instructor

Patricia Pinho

General Education Code

ER

Quarter offered

Fall

LALS95 Undergraduate Research Seminar

Seminar for undergraduates participating in the Cultivamos Excelencia program supporting the development of students as researchers and active participants in academic communities; including lectures on disciplinary methods by participating faculty, work-in-progress sessions for mentors and student researchers, and workshops on formulating research questions, developing a research plan, writing a research paper, and professional development. Enrollment is by instructor permission.

Credits

2

Instructor

The Staff