Global South Studies
Institute of Arts and Humanities
Arts and Humanities Building, Sixth Floor
(858) 534-6477
globalsouth@ucsd.edu
All courses, faculty listings, and curricular and degree requirements described herein are subject to change or deletion without notice.
The Global South Studies Program (formerly Third World Studies) has three main objectives:
- To provide an understanding of the Global South and its relationships to the West. In order to understand these relationships, it is necessary to study the historical context out of which the present relationships developed. For example, besides trying to understand what kind of society existed in Meso-America when the Spaniards arrived in 1520, the student must also have an understanding of the historical development in Europe that resulted in Spain’s decision to seek wider trade abroad. There is insistence on both the similarities and differences that Global South societies have among themselves and the similarities and differences with Western societies.
- To provide an interdisciplinary approach to the study of the Global South. The program is not conceived as being exclusively historically oriented nor as being predominantly a social science program, but rather one that integrates both the social sciences and the humanities.
- To provide an understanding of the shifting economic and political nature of the countries designated as belonging to the “Global South,” especially in light of the dramatic political and economic changes worldwide in the late 1980s and 1990s. To this end, our Global South Studies courses will, where appropriate, address and contextualize the history of the term “Global South” and its current applications in scholarship and the broader international media.
The Major Program
Students interested in Global South Studies may focus on a theme, problem, or geohistorical area. A Global South Studies major must be interdisciplinary. Students must choose course offerings from at least three disciplines (anthropology, economics, history, literature, political science, sociology, etc.).
A Global South Studies major requires a minimum of twelve upper-division courses plus three lower-division courses from the Global South Studies sequence (GSS 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, or 26). Students at Eleanor Roosevelt College may substitute up to two courses, Making of the Modern World 13 and 14, for two of the three-course lower-division sequence, but must take at least one course in the GSS 20–26 sequence. Selection of a specific concentration, discipline, or department should be determined in consultation with a Global South Studies faculty member or program adviser.
Students majoring and minoring in Global South Studies are encouraged to experience their areas firsthand by studying abroad in any number of ways. Most convenient, depending on the area, is the University of California’s Education Abroad Program (EAP), whereby students can gain UC credit for study at foreign universities. This is especially convenient for students who cannot find sufficient courses at UC San Diego pertaining to such regions as the Caribbean and the Indian subcontinent. Moreover, Latin America, Asia, and Africa course work is available in these regions through the Education Abroad Program (EAP) and various programs available through other US universities.
Double Major
Students interested in Global South Studies as a double major must have at least ten upper-division courses that are unique to each departmental major. The remaining two upper-division courses may overlap with the other major requirements with approval from both departments. Students should consult a Global South Studies program adviser for approval of a double major program.
Minor
A student may minor in Global South Studies by selecting two courses from the lower-division Global South studies sequence (GSS 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, or 26) and five upper-division courses in disciplines dealing with the Global South.
Global South studies faculty members offer courses in the Departments of Anthropology, Communication, Literature, Political Science, Sociology, History, and in the Global South Studies Program. Appropriate courses in other departments may also be considered. Students should consult departmental and program listings for Global South area offerings.