AFRC488 - Culture, Sexuality and Global Health

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
Culture, Sexuality and Global Health
Term session
0
Term
2015A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC488401
Meeting times
W 0200PM-0450PM
Meeting location
PSYCHOLOGY LAB B50
Instructors
FIERECK, KIRK
Description
2016 TOPIC, BODIES AND POWER IN AFRICA: What does it mean to claim that Homosexuality is un-African ? This course explores the linked histories of race, nation, gender and sexuality in Africa that such an ideological claim invokes, yet effaces.The polemics that produce statements like this play out through the disciplinary tensions that exist between African and sexuality/queer studies. These tensions have as much to do with the role played by the relation between sexuality and race within cultures of European colonization, as they have with the role of gender and sexuality within postcolonial power relations in Africa. Such antagonisms are sustained through the marginalization of gender and sexuality perspectives within postcolonial scholarship on Africa, as well as the bracketing of African perspectives in queer and feminist studies. This course will deconstruct these impasses by exploring scholarship at the margins of each area of study. Students will be encouraged to ask questions about how issues of race, ethnicity, nation, gender and sexuality are produced as suppressed presences in a range of texts, films and other materials. CONT.


The course will include readings from postcolonial, gender, sexuality and African studies, anthropology, history, literary studies and Marxism, giving students a grounding in historical and contemporary perspectives at the intersection of African, queer and feminist studies.


Course number only
488
Cross listings
ANTH488401 GSWS488401 SOCI488401
Use local description
No

AFRC460 - SCHOOL REFORM AND PUBLIC POLICY

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
SCHOOL REFORM AND PUBLIC POLICY
Term session
0
Term
2015A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC460401
Meeting times
W 0200PM-0500PM
Instructors
HERSHBERG, THEODORE
Description
The course examines the reforms catalyzed by the federal "Race to the Top" competitive grant program and by waivers from No Child Left Behind issued by the federal Department of Education; and explores how these reforms resemble and differ from those mandated by NCLB. Charters, vouchers and competition are discussed along with school governance and funding. Micro as well as macro policy perspectives are provided through the instructor's ongoing work helping Houston's Aldine Independent School District (the 2009 Broad Prize winner with 64,000 low-income and minority students) design and pilot a new teacher evaluation system, a new compensation system, a "peer assistance and and review" process for professional development, remediation and dismissal along with related reforms.


Course number only
460
Cross listings
EDUC712401 URBS460401
Use local description
No

AFRC448 - NEIGHBORHOOD DISPLACEMENT & COMMUNITY POWER

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
NEIGHBORHOOD DISPLACEMENT & COMMUNITY POWER
Term session
0
Term
2015A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
601
Section ID
AFRC448601
Meeting times
W 0600PM-0900PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL BUILDING 103
Instructors
PALMER, WALTER
Description
This course uses the history of black displacement to examine community power and advocacy. It examines the methods of advocacy (e.g. case, class, and legislative) and political action through which community activists can influence social policy development and community and institutional change. The course also analyzes selected strategies and tactics of change and seeks to develop alternative roles in the group advocacy, lobbying, public education and public relations, electoral politics, coalition building, and legal and ethical dilemmas in political action. Case studies of neighborhood displacement serve as central means of examing course topics.


Course number only
448
Cross listings
URBS448601
Use local description
No

AFRC437 - RACE & CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
RACE & CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Term session
0
Term
2015A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC437401
Meeting times
T 0130PM-0430PM
Meeting location
VAN PELT LIBRARY 402
Instructors
GOTTSCHALK, MARIE
Description
This seminar analyzes the connection between race, crime, punishment, and politics in the United States. The primary focus is on the role of race in explaining why the country's prision population exploded since the early 1970s and why the United States today has the highest incarceration rate in the world. Topics to be covered include: the early history of race in the development of the criminal justice system, including an examination of lynchings and the convict-leasing system; the relationship between the crime rate, patterns of offending and arrests, and the incarceration rate; public opinion and "law-and-order" politics; U.S. penal policies compared with other industrialized countries; capital punishment; the growth of the prision-industrial complex; the "war on drugs"; the courts, prisioners' rights, and political prisoners; felon disenfranchisement, elections, and democracy; and the future of penal reform. The class will take field trips to a maximum-security jail in Philadelphia and to a state prision in the Philadelphia suburbs. This seminar is intended for both advanced undergraduates and graduate students.


Course number only
437
Cross listings
AFRC638401 PSCI437401 PSCI638401
Use local description
No

AFRC435 - MODERN PRESIDENCY & RACE

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
MODERN PRESIDENCY & RACE
Term session
0
Term
2015A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC435401
Meeting times
R 0130PM-0430PM
Meeting location
FISHER-BENNETT HALL 406
Instructors
GILLION, DANIEL
Description
This seminar is designed to serve as a "capstone" experience for advanced undergrduates interested in American politics. It exposes students to some of the issues currently being studied and debated by the leading scholars in the field. For each topic we will read works that take competing or opposing positions on an issue; for example we will examine the current controversy over the causes and and consequences of divided government. Students will write a research paper analyzing one of the debates.


Course number only
435
Cross listings
PSCI434401
Use local description
No

AFRC433 - SOCIAL MOVEMENTS

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
Term session
0
Term
2015A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC433401
Meeting times
T 0130PM-0430PM
Meeting location
CHEMISTRY BUILDING 119
Instructors
GILLION, DANIEL
Description
Social movements and political protest have become some of the most effective tools for citizens and non-citizens to influence the political system. This course is designed to introduce students to the theoretical and methodological approaches taken in understanding these behaviors. Analyzing social movements that range from civil discontent to contentious political protest, the course will address a variety of questions: What is the origin of movement behavior and why do individuals turn to these actions in lieu of simply engaging in institutional modes of political action such as voting? What were the strategies of these movements? What are the political conditions that allow social movements to resonate with the American public? In addition to addressing these topics, this course surveys the policy successes of major social and political movements. From the Civil Rights and Women's Right Movement to the recent 2010 Tea Party movement, this course explores the various public policies that have resulted from citizens' protest actions. While state-level and local-level government responsiveness will be addressed, special attention will be given to how political protest influences public policy in all three branches of the federal government.


Course number only
433
Cross listings
PSCI433401
Use local description
No

AFRC420 - LAW IN AFRICA

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
LAW IN AFRICA
Term session
0
Term
2015A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC420401
Meeting times
M 0430PM-0730PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 216
Instructors
FETNI, HOCINE
Description
This course will deal with Law and Society in Africa. After surveying the various legal systems in Africa, the focus will be on how and to what extent the countries of Africa re-Africanized their legal systems by reconciling their legal systems that are used as instruments of social change and development. Toward this end, the experiences of various African countries covering the various legal traditions will be included. Specific focus will be on laws covering both economic and social relations. This emphasis includes laws of marriage, divorce and inheritance, laws of contracts and civil wrongs and African's law of investments and International Relations, among other laws. Throughout this course a comparative analysis with non-African countries will be stressed. Readings include research papers, reports, statutes, treaties, and cases.


Course number only
420
Cross listings
AFRC620401 SOCI460401 SOCI660401
Use local description
No