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  • 3.00 Credits

    This is an upper-division course focusing on Black Political Thought in the U.S. context. The course focuses on a distinctive intellectual tradition developed in relation to institutionalized slavery ' a regime of 'propertized human life' ' and its 'afterlife.' We will closely read and reflect on work by thinkers including David Walker, Frederick Douglass, Ida B. Wells, W.E.B. Du Bois, Marcus Garvey, Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, James Baldwin, Angela Davis, and Saidiya Hartman, among others. We will tend to both the critical and visionary dimensions of these theories, recognizing that African- American political philosophy is not only forged in response to domination but also constructively reimagines the terms of American public life. Our engagement will probe how different thinkers understand struggles for freedom and equality in the Antebellum, post-Emancipation and post-Civil Rights eras, paying special attention to whether and how these struggles are seen as connected to other emancipatory projects, particularly concerning class and gender. The course treats U.S. Black Political Thought not as a specialized or niche enterprise but as a theoretical canon that rethinks the foundations of contemporary democracy.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Graduate students should register for POL S 6140 and will be held to higher standards and/or additional work. Exploration of the bases of feminist political theory and the influences and effects of feminist thought on various public political debates.
  • 3.00 Credits

    The feminist economics project provides a critique of standard economics from a gender-aware perspective and proposes alternative conceptualizations of the economy, economic agency, work, and well-being. After reviewing the basic features of this critique and the alternative approach, the course examines theories and evidence on the causes and consequences of contemporary gender inequalities in how people secure their livelihoods in the US. The third part focuses on policies implemented or proposed to address gender inequalities in the household and in the labor market'anti-discrimination, workplace, anti-poverty, work-family balance, and macroeconomic policies. Graduate students should register for ECON 6170 and will be held to higher standards and/or additional work.
  • 3.00 Credits

    How do some bodies and minds come to be seen as deviant or and others as normal? What makes some subjects worthy of care and others disposable? How have the rubrics of 'health' and 'treatment' historically operated to discipline black and brown bodies? This course approaches narratives of race, disability, and illness through the frameworks of critical disability, critical ethnic, and feminist-of-color studies. It explores how illness, debility, and precarity are produced in and as racial violence. We will consider the categories of health and illness as historical products of medical knowledge and practices, studying the legacies of scientific racism, medical experimentation, and reproductive control. We will also examine contemporary iterations of environmental racism, tracing forms of structural inequality and violence that targets people of color'namely those who are poor and working class, queer and gender non-conforming, women, and (im)migrants. Finally, it asks what legacies of resistance we might find in various forms of art and cultural production, as well as in movements for racial, economic, and disability justice. We will approach these questions through a range of critical essays, novels, poetry, artwork, and community engagement.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course examines the gender dimensions of economic development and globalization from the perspective of feminist economics. The main focus is on gender inequalities in paid and unpaid work, control over resources, and well-being outcomes in the global South. The course first provides a historical overview of the policy-oriented field of gender and development that emerged in the 1970s, the conceptual frameworks of feminist economics, and measures of gender inequality. The second part reviews selected topics, including structural adjustment/austerity macroeconomic policies; women's employment and working conditions in export sectors; poverty, microcredit, conditional cash transfers; international migration, trafficking; violence against women; gender-responsive budgets. Graduate students should register for ECON 6560 and will be held to higher standards and/or additional work.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Teaching Queer Representation in Media is an opportunity for graduate and advanced undergraduate students to develop skills in design and facilitation in direct partnership with the lead instructor. Students will meet prior to the semester to review and update the syllabus. Throughout the semester students will meet with the teaching team outside of class to discuss teaching and facilitation strategies, plan specific lectures and class activities, and learn about the evaluation and assessment process. Students must have permission from the instructor to join this class.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course focuses on women of color feminisms: ideas, ideologies and praxis created and embraced by women and feminists of color, focused on the experiences of not just women of color but all marginalized peoples. Such feminist work focuses deeply on gender, race, class, sexuality, faith, language, location, ability, and more. The course explores agency and resistance to oppressive structures' through feminist movements, women's activism, anti-colonial and civil rights movements around the world.
  • 3.00 Credits

    The purpose of this course is to introduce undergraduate students to the field of Gender Theory & Community Organizing. The course is divided into broad sections that will expose students to the general areas that encompass its field of study. The prevailing themes of this course are in multiple social justice theories to understand how institutions produce oppression by undermining human wellbeing and self determination and how to organize communities to support gender justice. This is a course that develops students' ability to develop their own praxis and participate in making positive change in the community.
  • 3.00 Credits

    The purpose of this course is to introduce undergraduate students to the process of Community Lobbying through the field of Gender Studies. During the Legislative session the course meets at the State Capitol and works with elected officials on bills.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course will help students develop skills to conduct research alongside community partners. By bringing community organizations and students into the same classroom, this class will assist with the development of partnerships and a framework for working together on community-based research projects. Students will learn about the whole process of community-based research design.