African American Studies
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign originated
in 1969 as the academic branch of the Faculty Student Commission
on Afro-American Life and Culture. In 1970, the Faculty Student
Commission was dissolved and replaced by the Afro-American
Studies Commission, which included three branches: academic,
cultural, and service, that reported directly to the Vice
Chancellor. During the 1974-75 academic year, the Afro-American
Academic Program was transferred to the College of Liberal
Arts and Sciences where it received the title Afro-American Studies and Research Program, and later, African American Studies and Research Program (AASRP). Now, nearly forty years later, a movement has grown into a department. In June 2008, AASRP became the Department of African American Studies.
Our teaching and research focus primarily on the
experiences of people of African descent in the United States,
and to a lesser degree, in the rest of the hemisphere. The
program integrates courses and research from the social sciences
and humanities in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
with other academic areas throughout the university such
as fine arts, education, journalism, and law. Fourteen core faculty members
and more than thirty faculty affiliates from throughout the
University participate in the department's activities.
We have offered an Interdisciplinary Minor in African American
Studies since Fall 1988. Twenty years later, in June 2008, the Illinois Board of Higher Education approved a proposal giving the Department of African American Studies the right to grant Bachelor of Arts degrees. Students will begin enrolling in the major in Fall 2008.
|
|
 |

"What is possible for me
is
possible for you."
- Frederick Douglass
|