D.E. Related Programs at UCD
The Chicana/Latina Research
Center is a group of
Chicana/Latina and Native American
faculty, researchers, and librarians
from diverse disciplines whose goal is
to encourage and foster the voices of
Chicana/Latina and Native American
women graduate students through
research, analyses and creative works.
The C/LRC fosters and supports
scholarship on Chicana/Latina issues,
including the development of theory,
methodology, and pedagogy pertinent to
Chicanas and Latinas in contemporary
society. We are dedicated to the
development and promotion of
Chicana/Latina scholars and scholarship
on Chicana/Latina issues covering a
broad range of disciplinary and
interdisciplinary interests. 2221 &
2223 Social Sciences and Humanities
Building, UC Davis, 530-752-8882.
The Consortium for Women and
Research is dedicated to the
support of research by and on women and
on gender in its multiple intersections
with race, class, sexual, and national
identity. The Consortium expresses this
support through research and travel
awards, fostering interdisciplinary
dialogue among scholars and activists,
off campus communities, and policy
makers; recognizing and rewarding
accomplishments in mentoring;
advocating support for women s
professional advancement in the
university; and contributing to
community and mentoring among women
scholars on campus. 168 Kerr Hall, UC
Davis, 530-754-8851. http://cwr.ucdavis.edu
Cross-Cultural Women's and
gender history (CCWgH) is a
minor offered by the History
department. Beginning in 1992,
Cross-Cultural Women's History was
offered as a minor field in the history
department at UC Davis. In 2004 the
minor was renamed to acknowledge the
increasing importance of gender studies
to the understanding of women's
history, and the minor is now
designated as Cross-Cultural Women's
and gender History (CCWgH). History
Department, 2216 Social Science and
Humanities Building, UC Davis,
530-752-0776.
http://history.ucdavis.edu/ccwh/index.shtml
Gender and Global Issues
(GGI) is a research, teaching,
and outreach subgroup of the Women and
Gender Studies Program at UC Davis that
focuses on intersections of gender,
social conditions and praxis for
equitable conditions in contemporary
life. Our interdisciplinary approach
includes diverse area and cultural
studies, the sciences, and the
humanities represented in a faculty
advisory group and graduate student
staff. We link professional activist
work with academic theory in the
following ways: our GGI
Post-Baccalaureate Certificate Program,
our UC Davis undergraduate and graduate
student GGI International Internships
with grassroots non-governmental
organizations, an undergraduate seminar
for local internships, and in
occasional campus events. M. Swain,
Director. 166 Kerr Hall, UC Davis (send
mail to Women and Gender Studies
Program) 530-752-8205. ggip@ucdavis.edu
http://wms.ucdavis.edu/ggisite/GGIHomepage.htm
The Humanities
Institute organizes
interdisciplinary research seminars
open to graduate students and faculty,
and seeks to promote creative exchanges
between the humanities, social
sciences, and environmental sciences.
Many D.E. affiliated faculty working on
issues of women or gender are
associated with research clusters
housed in the Humanities Institute. 227
Voorhies Hall, UC Davis, 530-752-2295.
http://dhi.ucdavis.edu/
The Middle East/South Asia
Research Cluster was founded
in fall 2002 by Suad Joseph with
funding from UC Davis' Center for
History, Society and Culture and later
with co-funding from the UC Davis
Humanities Institute. It includes about
35 faculty and graduate students
researching and teaching the history,
culture, society, economy,
anthropology, literature, geography and
religion of the Middle East and South
Asia. The ME/SA RC is committed to
rethinking 19th/20th century "area
studies" with new theoretical paradigms
addressing state formation, early
civilizations, family systems,
religions, economies, cultural
dynamics, and world systems. The Middle
East and South Asia have been in
contact throughout history. Islam,
Christianity, and Hinduism have been
points of connection and conflict;
migration of workers has linked
economies, and family systems; and the
flow of products, peoples and ideas has
continually invigorated dynamic
exchanges within this area. The region
accounts for 14% of the world's land
mass, around two billion (30%) of the
world's peoples, two-thirds of the
world's oil reserves, and a treasure
trove of the world's history. The ME/SA
Research Cluster meets on a quarterly
basis in the evenings in the homes of
members. Activities include: Scholarly
exchange concerning the research
projects of ME/SA members; Planning and
sponsoring symposia, conferences,
speakers and other activities on
campus; supporting the ME/SA Studies
Program (http://mesa.ucdavis.edu).
Dr. Suad Joseph, Facilitator (sjoseph@ucdavis.edu;
http://sjoseph.ucdavis.edu)
The Undergraduate Minor in
Sexuality Studies at UC Davis
brings together a variety of
perspectives from the humanities and
social sciences on the study of
sexuality, including literature,
history, religion, anthropology, law,
sociology, and psychology. As such,
this field, and the way we approach it,
links sexuality to other social and
historical formations, insisting on
their simultaneity and interdependence.
Over the past decade, Sexuality Studies
has become increasingly influential in
our critical understanding of social
formations, political institutions,
scientific knowledge, and cultural
expressions. Previous formulations of
sexuality couch it as either something
deeply private and personal or, in the
case of sexual minorities such as
lesbians and gay men, as a benign
aberration of normal physical or
psychological development. In doing so,
and even with the best of intentions,
these paradigms treat sexuality as that
which defines who we are as individuals
at our very essence or core. Much of
the work in the new field Sexuality
Studies, by contrast, interrogates
contemporary systems of sexual
classification, such as heterosexuality
and homosexuality, and questions their
taken-for-granted or purely biological
nature. As a field, Sexuality Studies
seeks to contextualize the concept of
sexuality by tracing its changing
histories, meanings, and effects across
different political, scientific,
geographic, temporal, and cultural
landscapes. The field also examines the
ways sexual minorities have produced
vibrant cultures, communities and
histories that contest their supposed
pathology and marginality. At UC Davis,
researchers, scholars, and teachers in
Sexuality Studies pay particular
attention to how related social and
historical formations such as gender,
race, class, nation, empire and
globalization have constituted popular
understandings of sexuality. Sponsored
by the Women and Gender Studies
Program. 2222 Hart Hall, UC Davis.
530-752-8986.
http://wms.ucdavis.edu/wgssite/sexualitystudies/
The Women's Resources and
Research Center (WRRC)
provides services, a supportive
environment, and resources for campus
women-students, staff and faculty at UC
Davis. We have an extensive current
library collection on feminist theory,
gender, sexuality and cultural
diversity, ranging from philosophy to
poetry, for teaching, research,
personal growth/enjoyment. Our career
staff consults on campus policy, gender
education, self- defense, and academic
development, and plan campus community
targeted events. Our student interns
run peer education programs for the
dorms, provide graduate student
outreach, and participate in annual
programming. Ongoing WRRC programs
include the weekly Math Cafe, the Women
in Science and Engineering Initiative,
and the Ellen Hansen Memorial Prize for
the arts. Co-Directors: M. Swain (also
Women and Gender Studies) and R.
Whitmore. First Floor, North Hall.
530-752-3372 http://wrrc.ucdavis.edu
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