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To receive the Master of Arts degree in Latin American Studies with a concentration
in Sociology, a student must:
- Demonstrate foreign language competence in Spanish or Portuguese.
- Maintain a 3.0 grade point average in 40 units of course work (about ten
courses), to be completed as follows:
- Latin American Studies Basic Seminar Sequence: Like all other LAS MA students, those students in the cultural studies concentration must take 12 units in the three required graduate seminars (LATI 200, methodology seminar, and theory seminar).
- Sociology Concentration: 16 additional units must be taken in courses
offered by the Sociology department, as follows:
- One seminar in Classical Sociological Theory (4 units in SOC 201A
or SOC 201B);
- One seminar in Sociological Research Methods (4 units in any of the
following: SOC 203, SOC 204, SOC 205, SOC 206, SOC 207, SOC 227);
- One Core Sociological Field seminar (4 units in any of the following:
SOC 212, SOC 216, SOC 222, SOC 226, SOC 234, SOC 244, SOC 264, SOC 267);
- One Sociology course or seminar focused on Latin America (4 units in any
of the following: SOC 188D Latin American Society and Politics, SOC 189
Ethnicity and Indigenous Peoples in Latin America, SOC 258 Institutional
Change in the Contemporary World: Latin American Societies in a Comparative
Perspective).
- General Electives: The remaining 12 units must be taken in departments other than
the Department of Sociology as follows: one course from the Approved List of Courses
on Latin America (4 units), 4 units of Directed Reading (298) and 4 units of Independent
Research (299).
- Successfully complete a master's thesis, based on sociological research and focused on a topic
relevant to Latin American Studies.
All of the concentration specific units, and at least 50 percent of the General Elective units must
be taken at graduate level (200 level). Within a concentration, a maximum of two undergraduate level
courses (100 level) may be upgraded to graduate level 298 courses. To convert an undergraduate level
course (100 level) into a 298 graduate-level course, a student must attend all of the course meetings
and incorporate a component of additional, graduate-level research work, upon arrangement with the
faculty member teaching the course (a special form describing the supplementary work must be filled
by the student and approved by the instructor and CILAS' Academic Coordinator). In all such cases,
the supplementary work should, (a) increase the amount of reading to match the regular reading
expectations of a graduate seminar, (b) include additional meeting time with the professor for a
graduate-level discussion of the material, and (c) require the student to write a research paper
(which would generally be approximately 15-20 pages).
M.A. students who were previously enrolled as undergraduates at UCSD will not be allowed to
repeat courses for credit toward the concentration. In all cases there are alternatives, and
those students will be expected to take other classes to fulfill the requirements.
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