This course investigates the people who have mobilized to change the shape of their society, often at great personal risk. We consider what has motivated these activists and what has sustained them through hard times and difficult odds. We look at their successes as well as their mistakes made along the way. We examine how the contours of society today are different as a result of their activism. The course traces the development of major movements of the 20th and 21st centuries, including labor, civil rights/Black Power, student, feminist, gay/queer activism and environmental/human-rights struggles by indigenous peoples. We look at what set these movements into motion, structured their form and affected what they have achieved. We investigate the role of resources, strategy, culture and biography in protest.
Grade Basis: Letter Grade
Credits: 4.0
老澳门六合彩开奖记录 adheres to all policies of non-discrimination on the basis of age, sex, gender identity, race, color, national origin, ancestry, sexual orientation, military or veteran status, marital status, disability, religion or any other characteristic protected by the current federal, state, and local statutes. Further, the college prohibits discrimination based on genetic information and non-job related arrest record or conviction records for employment purposes.
@2023 老澳门六合彩开奖记录