Undergraduate Program
LALS integrates the study of Chicano/a and Latino/a communities in the United States with analysis of the histories, politics,
cultures, and societies of Latin America and the Caribbean. LALS courses deal with changing political, social, economic and
cultural realities, including immigration and transnational communities; gender, racial, sexual,and ethnic identities; social
movements; diverse forms of cultural expression; ongoing political and economic restructuring in Latin America; and the challenges
of political and economic empowerment for Latino/a communities in the United States. We draw from interdisciplinary perspectives
to understand these processes, including the social sciences, the humanities and the arts.
In addition to academic knowledge, LALS also provides opportunities for students to acquire practical, "real-world" skills.
Through program-related internship and field study experiences, students can acquire useful, pre-professional skills in any
of the following key areas: community development/advocacy, public policy, education, journalism, media, performance, and
research/writing (among others).
Graduates of the LALS major have made careers in a wide variety of fields, including teaching, community organizing, community and
government service, journalism and the media, environmental science, global economics, health care, legal services, library science,
music, publishing, and research. Many have gone on to pursue advanced degrees in the United States or abroad in anthropology,
bilingual education, communications, cultural studies, ecology, economics, geography, history, law, literature, media, public health,
and sociology to name a few.