Social Justice Studies
This program is designed for students who care deeply about an array of social justice issues related to race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and intersectionality. The program provides a Social Sciences understanding of systemic roots of inequality as well as potential solutions and remedies to social injustices. This program links students to social justice issues in the greater Long Beach community.
The sociological study of diverse racial and ethnic groups in the U.S., including Latino, Asian American, African American and Native American sub-groups is covered. The course also includes an analysis of migration patterns, stratification, gender, social movements and inter- and intra-group relations. An examination of how social, political, economic and historical forces affect contemporary race and ethnic relations will be included.
Transferable to both UC and CSU; see counselor for limitationsThe sociological study of diverse racial and ethnic groups in the U.S., including Latino, Asian American, African American and Native American sub-groups is covered. The course also includes an analysis of migration patterns, stratification, gender, social movements and inter- and intra-group relations. An examination of how social, political, economic and historical forces affect contemporary race and ethnic relations will be included.
Transferable to both UC and CSU; see counselor for limitationsThrough different sociological perspectives, this course focuses on the contemporary experiences of various Latino/Latina/Latinx groups in the United States, including global processes, structural forces, group interactions, and individual identity formation. It examines the extent to which Latino/Latina/Latinx groups have been incorporated into (and contributed to) the economic, political, cultural, educational, and social fabric of the U.S. It also examines how intersecting social categories such as race, social class, gender, sexuality, age and national origin impact their lives and their responses to individual and structural discrimination.
Transferable to both UC and CSU; see counselor for limitationsThis course takes a sociological approach to understanding the impact of gender and gender roles on social institutions and interactions in American society.
Transferable to both UC and CSU; see counselor for limitationsThis introductory course examines a broad range of contemporary gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer issues in various contexts including bio-medical (ethics), sociological, philosophical (ontology, metaphysics, epistemology), political (political philosophy), racial and sexual (feminist philosophy).
Transferable to both UC and CSU; see counselor for limitationsThis course will examine feminist thought on philosophical issues in the history of feminist philosophy, metaphysics and epistemology, feminist philosophy of language and science, intersectionality, and ethics, politics, and aesthetics.
Transferable to both UC and CSU; see counselor for limitationsThe course provides a basic understanding of the scientific method, research designs, and statistical tests used in psychological investigation. Students perform a literature review, design an original research study, collect and analyze data, and write an APA-style research report.
Transferable to both UC and CSU; see counselor for limitations