– Deadlines Extended –

Due to the delay in FAFSA data being supplied to the University of Oregon, the UO is extending the confirmation deadline to June 1, 2024, for first-year students admitted for fall 2024. We are also extending the priority FAFSA filing deadline to April 1, 2024, for all UO students.

Black studies

Undergraduate minor

About the minor

Born out of the Black freedom struggle of the 1960s and 1970s, Black studies is a political and an intellectual project, through which scholarly inquiry serves as a path to the empowerment and liberation of people of African descent socially, politically, and spiritually. The Black studies minor also honors centuries-long histories of Black thought, from pre-colonial, thriving African civilizations through the anti-slavery abolition movement to the prison abolition movement, from decades of Race Men to Black feminism and Black Queer studies, from the African continent to the Americas to the Caribbean and all throughout the Diaspora.

Black studies spans centuries, crosses oceans, and is shaped by multiple geographies and cultural practices. Students can immerse themselves in histories of African and African-descended people rooted in and routed through the Atlantic slave trade, colonialism, and imperialism across the Diaspora.

A little more info

  • Black studies offers students flexibility in planning their course work, allowing students to gain an interdisicplinary understanding of the field of Black studies.
  • Black studies advisors work closely with students to help them map out their course of study and successfully complete the minor.
  • Black studies offers an advanced set of skills employers need more than ever right now: deep critical thinking and cultural competency.

Career opportunities

The Black studies minor complements many other programs. As the US and the world grapple with histories of racist oppression and anti-Black violence, the Black studies minor prepares students for a world of employment and governance based on radically imagined Black liberation and a more just future.

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