Latino studies

Latino studies is an academic discipline which studies the experience of people of Hispanic ancestry in the United States. Closely related to other ethnic studies disciplines such as African-American studies, Asian American studies, and Native American studies, Latino studies critically examines the history, culture, politics, issues, and experiences of Hispanic people. Drawing from numerous disciplines such as sociology, history, literature, political science, religious studies and gender studies, Latino studies scholars consider a variety of perspectives and employ diverse analytical tools in their work.

Origins of Latino studies

In academia, Latino Studies stemmed from the development of Chicana/o Studies and Puerto Rican Studies programs in response to demands articulated by student movements in the late 1960s in the United States.[1] These movements unfolded amid a nationwide climate of heightened social and political activism, incited by opposition to the Vietnam War, the American Feminist movement, and the Civil Rights Movement.[1]

At some institutions of higher education in the United States, the 1970s and 1980s saw the consolidation of Latino Studies as an autonomous discipline while other institutions chose to maintain Chicano and Puerto Rican Studies programs—reflecting a diversity of institutional responses to the nascent academic discipline.

Debates on the academic and institutional location of Latino Studies continue to present day: while some scholars strive to maintain Chicano and Puerto Rican Studies programs that explore the exceptionality of national experiences, in the context of a globalizing Latino diaspora and diversifying Latino student populations at U.S. universities, many others support the notion of Latino Studies as an “umbrella” field designed to explore pan-Latino experiences and histories that transcend nation-bound analytical frameworks introduced by pioneering Chicano and Puerto Rican studies programs.[2] Yet others advocate for the absorption of Latino Studies into broader comparative disciplines such as ethnic studies, American studies, and Latin American Studies. Accordingly, the status of Latino Studies significantly differs from institution to institution in terms of nomenclature, pedagogical practice, and disciplinary location—with examples ranging from degree-granting autonomous departments to interdisciplinary (and multidisciplinary) programs to university-affiliated research centers.[2]

Chicano Studies

The first Chicano Studies program was established at California State University, Los Angeles (CSULA) in Fall 1968 in response to demands articulated by student activism movements.[3] Initially named the Mexican American Studies Program, the program was instituted at CSULA as the Chicano Studies Department in 1971. Similar initiatives developed simultaneously at other California universities. In 1969 at a statewide conference held at the University of California, Santa Barbara, Chicano students, activists and scholars drafted the Plan de Santa Bárbara a 155-page manifesto for the implementation of Chicano Studies in institutions of higher education in California.[4] While the Regents of the University of California did not formally adopt the manifesto as an institutional mandate, it served as a blueprint for the establishment of Chicano Studies programs across public universities in the state. However, in calling for the establishment of comprehensive Chicano Studies programs—including departments, research centers, a Chicano studies library—and recommending the adoption of a host of institutional practices, many California universities implemented only certain elements of the plan.[5]

While Chicano studies programs proliferated across campuses in California, Texas-based institutions also played pivotal roles in development of early Chicano Studies programs, including the Center for Mexican American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin in 1970.[6]

Puerto Rican Studies

In 1969, a parallel wave of student activism took place at City University of New York (CUNY) south campus, spearheaded by the efforts of Puerto Rican and African American Students.[7] These efforts culminated in the spring of 1969 when students staged the Open Admissions Strike. The students’ central demand was the adoption of a non-competitive open admissions policy.[8] The expanded admissions policy would, in effect, diversify the student body by guaranteeing placement at CUNY for all New York City high school graduates. In addition to demands for an open-admissions policy, student activists demanded academic programs in Black and Puerto Rican Studies.[9] In response, CUNY created the Department of Urban and Ethnic Studies. With continuing student activism, the Department of Puerto Rican Studies was formed in 1971, followed by the establishment of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies as a university-based research institute in 1973.[7][10] Student activism related to the demand for Puerto Rican Studies was not limited to CUNY, and effervesced across New York public campuses including Brooklyn, Lehman, Queens and Bronx Community Colleges.[7]

New directions in Latino Studies

As Chicano and Puerto Rican Studies programs stemmed largely (but not exclusively) from the east and west coasts, institutions in the American Midwest pioneered some of the first academic departments with a multinational or transnational Latino Studies focus. These programs included the Center for Chicano-Boricua Studies at Wayne State University (established in 1972) and the Chicano-Boriqueño Studies Program (now the Latino Studies Program) at Indiana University (established in 1976).[11][12]

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, dozens of universities across the country followed suit and established academic programs and departments (see list of major departments) in Latino Studies.[2] The 1980s and 1990s also saw the emergence of a number of research initiatives and professional societies dedicated to the advancement of a Latino Studies research agenda. These initiatives including fellowships offered by the Ford, Rockefeller, Compton and Mellon Foundations and the establishment of research institutes including the The InterUniversity Project on Latino Research, the Tomás Rivera Policy Institute and the Julian Samora Research Institute.[2]

Debate on the location of Latino Studies within institutions of higher education

The location of Latino Studies within institutions of higher education—in terms of disciplinary boundaries, but also with regard to the field’s perceived legitimacy as an academic discipline and field of scholarship—is contested.

Criticisms of Latino Studies and Ethnic Studies

While Latino Studies is sometimes encompassed under the umbrella of ethnic studies, it is important to note that the discipline’s course of development in different areas of the United States has been shaped by regional demographics, including the demographic composition of a college campus’ student body. In the case of Latino Studies, the American northeast and southwest have served as especially salient battlegrounds for these debates to unfold.

Staunch critics of ethnic studies programs include Ward Connerly, former University of California Regent, who was involved in the successful effort to ban affirmative action in California places of employment and higher education in 1996 with California Proposition 209. Connerly accused ethnic studies programs of being “divisive” and balkanizing.[13]

More recently, Latino Studies faced legal challenges in Arizona with House Bill 2120 which (echoing the Arizona ban on ethnic studies effectuated in Tucson public schools in 2011) sought to prohibit public universities in the state from activities and classes including those that “promote division, resentment or social justice toward a race, gender, religion, political affiliation, social class or other class of people”; “are designed primarily for students of a particular ethnic group”; or “advocate solidarity or isolation based on ethnicity, race, religion, gender or social class instead of the treatment of students as individuals.” [14] (On January 17, 2017 Arizona House Education Committee Chairman Paul Boyer denied a hearing, effectively killing the bill.[15])

Disciplinary positioning of Latino Studies

Among scholars and administrators in support of Latino Studies and other ethnic studies programs, opinions are divided on the positioning, status and definition of Latino Studies within institutions of higher education.[1] These debates arise from theoretical and epistemological inquiry but also from concerns surrounding funding and institutional support for university departments and academic programs.[1]

In the late 1990s, at the height of tensions between nationally-specific programs like Chicano

Studies and Puerto Rican Studies and nascent pan-Latino Studies programs, Ignacio Garcia (Professor of Western American Studies at Brigham Young University) advocated for the autonomous departmental status of Chicano Studies—posing the emergence of Latino Studies as a challenge to that ideal.[16] In his 1996 essay “Juncture in the Road: Chicano Studies since ‘El Plan de Santa Barbara”, Garcia argued:

Many centers find themselves challenged by non- Chicano Latino scholars who want to promote their scholarly interests. They argue that all Latino groups have a common experience with racism and poverty in American society. Also, programs which emphasize the inclusive Hispanic approach are more likely to gain research and support funds more easily. Because immigration has been a major area of study for Chicano Studies and because the immigrant groups are now more diverse among numerous Latino groups, there is an intellectual challenge to Chicano Studies to become inclusive or else to be seen as shallow and exclusionary.[16]

At the turn of the 21st century, scholars including Frances Aparicio (Professor of Spanish and Portuguese and Director of the Latina and Latino Studies Program at Northwestern University), Pedro Cabán (Professor and Chair of the Department of Latin American, Caribbean & U.S. Latino Studies at SUNY Albany), and Juan Flores (former Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis and Director of Latino Studies at New York University)—argued in support of an interdisciplinary Latino Studies field of scholarship with a transnational focus.

In his 1999 essay “New Concepts, New Contexts,” Juan Flores—an advocate for the freestanding autonomy of Latino Studies departments—described the potential “dilution” or “distortion” of the field when subsumed into umbrella departments.[17] Flores identified that at a time when many public universities were being consolidated, Latino Studies programs were blossoming at private universities across the country.[17] Nonetheless, recognizing political and pragmatic concerns, Flores recommended that departmental status should be evaluated on a “case-by-case” basis in order to best place the discipline according to the needs and demands of a particular institutional environment.[17]

Pedro Cabán considered the tensions and contradictions between Latino Studies as a discipline borne from student activism and institutional demands placed upon the discipline, writing:

If deployed uncritically, the Latino label can result in sanitizing a history of political activism and critical engagement that is the legacy of the struggles of the 1960s… if Latino Studies programs are to be successful and relevant to legions of students, they will need to retain the normative values that defined their transformative goals, and obtain the academic authority that traditional disciplines possess (hiring, promotion and tenure, curriculum development, discretion over budgets, etc.) [2]

Reflecting upon Latino Studies programs existent in 1999, Aparicio warned that the ideal of interdisciplinarity is often unfulfilled, arguing that Latino Studies programs are often multidisciplinary aggregates of nationally-bounded scholarship: “Latino studies programs are constituted by a list of courses discrete in their national and disciplinary boundaries that add up to lo latino.” [1]

Theoretical influences

Early Chicano Studies and Puerto Rican Studies programs developed in a parallel fashion: both emerged from activist struggles, developed within nation-bound analytical frameworks and drew influences from economic liberation, antiracism, and critical consciousness theories.[2]

However, Pedro Cabán argues that the two schools of thought differed in one significant way: "Whereas the Chicano historiography and the emerging social science literature primarily explored the Chicano experience in the US, early Puerto Rican Studies was heavily invested in reinterpreting the economic history of Puerto Rico under US colonial domination." [2]

In the 1980s and 1990s, newly formed Latino Studies programs tended to emphasize interdisciplinarity and transnationalism.[2] A number of pre-existing programs were restructured, consolidated or renamed to encompass this broader scope. Scholars in the field have identified the 1990s as a turning point in the discipline’s history, as scholarship shifted away from “male-centered nationalistic discourse" and became increasingly influenced by intersectional identity formation theory, including feminist and queer theory.[2]

List of scholarly and academic journals

Major programs, departments and research institutes

The following is a working list of programs throughout the United States associated with “Latino Studies” in chronological order of establishment. In cases of name changes, the order reflects the date of establishment of the program’s first iteration. Programs with no date of establishment listed on their homepage are located at the end of the list.

Doctoral programs

Research institutes and consortiums

Also see: Programs and Departments in Chicana/o Studies

Notable scholars

Books

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Aparicio, Frances (1999). "Reading the 'Latino' in Latino studies: Toward Re-Imagining Our Academic Location". Discourse. 21 (3): 3–18 via JSTOR.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Cabán, Pedro (2003). "From Challenge to Absorption: The Changing Face of Latina and Latino Studies". Centro Journal. 15 (2): 126–145 via EBSCO.
  3. "Department Of Chicana(o) And Latina(o) Studies". California State University, Los Angeles. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
  4. Muñoz Jr., Carlos (1992). "The quest for paradigm: The Development of Chicano Studies and Intellectuals". Latinos and Education: A Critical Reader: 442–443.
  5. Muñoz Jr., Carlos (1989). Youth, Identity, and Power: The Chicano Movement. Verso.
  6. "Mission Statement". University of Texas College of Liberal Arts. Retrieved January 12, 2017.
  7. 1 2 3 Ruiz, Vicki; Sánchez Korrol, Virginia. "Student Movements (1960s and 1970s)". Latinas In The United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
  8. Lavin, David; Alba, Richard; Silberstein, Richard (1979). "Open Admissions and Equal Access: A Study of Ethnic Groups in the City University of New York". Harvard Educational Review. 49 (1): 53–92.
  9. Torres, Andrés; Velázquez, José Emiliano (1998). The Puerto Rican Movement: Voices from the Diaspora. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  10. "History". Centro de Estudos Puertorriqueños. City University of New York. Retrieved January 14, 2017.
  11. "Latino/A And Latin American Studies - College Of Liberal Arts And Sciences". Wayne State University. Retrieved January 10, 2017.
  12. "Latino Studies At Indiana University, Bloomington". Indiana University. Retrieved January 10, 2017.
  13. Bruni, Frank (1998-06-18). "California Regent's New Focus: Ethnic Studies". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-02-16.
  14. "HB2120 - 531R - I Ver". www.azleg.gov. Retrieved 2017-02-16.
  15. TEGNA. "Arizona bill blocking ethnic studies dies". KPNX. Retrieved 2017-02-16.
  16. 1 2 Garcia, Ignacio (1996). "Juncture in the Road: Chicano Studies since ‘El Plan de Santa Barbara.". In Maciel, David; Ortiz, Isidro. Chicanas/Chícanos at the Crossroads: Social, Economic, and Political Change. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
  17. 1 2 3 Flores, Juan (1997). "Latino Studies: New Contexts, New Concepts". Harvard Educational Review. 67 (2): 208–221.
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