Critical Race and Ethnic Studies

416 Humanities I
(831) 459-2757

https://cres.ucsc.edu/

Programs Offered

Critical Race and Ethnic Studies B.A.

Black Studies Minor

Critical Race and Ethnic Studies Designated Emphasis

Undergraduate Program

Launched in 2014-15, the Critical Race and Ethnic Studies (CRES) curriculum has been formally organized so that undergraduate students may pursue organized study leading toward a bachelor of arts degree. CRES seek an understanding of “the public” and “the common good” as centrally constituted by racial and ethnic formations. This understanding requires the study of the dynamic power relations resulting from the cultural and institutional productions of the idea of “race” on a local, national, and global scale. Here, “race” is understood as a major ideological framework through which both practices of power and domination and struggles for liberation and self-determination have been articulated and enacted throughout modern history and in the contemporary moment. The study of “race,” as such, is a rigorous project, one which yields critical insights into the social, political, cultural, and economic processes that have defined and shaped the modern era—colonialism and slavery, conquest and displacement, genocide and warfare, migration and creolization, criminalization, imprisonment and disenfranchisement, globalization, and post-9/11 security state policies such as racial profiling. These phenomena orient our attention to particular academic fields with which CRES is necessarily in dialogue. These fields include postcolonial studies, settler colonialism studies, human rights studies, indigenous studies, migration, diaspora and border studies, mixed race studies, legal studies, environmental studies, and science studies.

Faculty from across the UC Santa Cruz campus have contributed significantly to conversations in critical race and ethnic studies for decades, with nationally renowned faculty in anthropology, community studies, feminist studies, film and digital media, history, history of art and visual culture, history of consciousness, Latin American and Latino studies, literature, politics, psychology, social documentation, sociology, and the sciences. In addition to courses specifically offered under the subject of CRES, many courses engaging critical race and ethnic studies are sponsored by these departments across campus.

Graduate Program

Also launched in 2014-2015, the Designated Emphasis (DE) in Critical Race and Ethnic Studies (CRES) is available for doctoral students to pursue alongside their doctoral degree program. To complete the DE, students must have a faculty adviser from the CRES faculty, complete four relevant courses, and complete a significant piece of scholarly writing in the area of CRES. Students pursuing the designated emphasis are encouraged to serve as a teaching assistant for at least one CRES course, and may be eligible to teach a CRES course of their own design as a graduate student instructor.