Current Working Groups
Berkeley Latin American and Caribbean History
Pensamento Racial Brasileiro Working Group
The Brazilian Racial Thought Working Group aims to support graduate students across academic disciplines at UC Berkeley, as well as scholars at other institutions, theorizing the racial formation of Brazil in relation to the Americas. The working group will support scholars and students across academic disciplines to build expertise on the literature on race relations in Brazil, with a particular emphasis on the work of Afro-Brazilian feminist scholars such as Beatriz Nascimento, Denise Ferreira da Silva, Lélia Gonzalez, Sueli Carneiro, and Leda Maria Martins. Alongside written theory, the working group also studies Brazilian cultural productions that theorize race and processes of race-making in Brazil. The working group meets biweekly at CLACS and is open to new members.
Contacts: Maria Victoria Ribeiro Ruy, Ethnic Studies Ph.D. program, mavi.ruy@berkeley.edu; Luiza Bastos Lages, Ethnic Studies Ph.D. program, luiza_lages@berkeley.edu
Socionatures Working Group
Through an interdisciplinary approach, the proposed event series interrogates how people from different positionalities in Latin America address pressing environmental issues. Over three installments throughout the academic year, we will invite scholars who, in their forms of researching, writing, and engaged scholarship, are studying struggles for territorial and water rights, dignified livelihoods, food sovereignty, and environmental knowledge. Our event series will emphasize how approaching these pressing environmental problems involves an articulation of humans and more-than humans.
Contact: Jesús Alejandro García A., ESPM Ph.D. program, alejo_garcia@berkeley.edu
Past Working Groups
In the past, CLACS has supported working groups on a wide variety of topics, ranging from the Afro-Latino diaspora to Globalization in Literacy and Language Development to Social Movements and Neoliberalism in Latin America.
2023-24 Working Groups
Language Revitalization Working Group
The Language Revitalization Working Group critically examines theories, methodologies, and applications of language revitalization in a variety of world contexts. It provides a centralized venue for interdisciplinary researchers and practitioners of language revitalization to share, present, discuss, and improve their language revitalization efforts.
Socionatures Working Group
Through an interdisciplinary approach, the proposed event series interrogates how people from different positionalities in Latin America address pressing environmental issues. Over three installments throughout the academic year, we will invite scholars who, in their forms of researching, writing, and engaged scholarship, are studying struggles for territorial and water rights, dignified livelihoods, food sovereignty, and environmental knowledge. Our event series will emphasize how approaching these pressing environmental problems involves an articulation of humans and more-than humans.
2022-23 Working Groups
Language Revitalization Working Group
The Language Revitalization Working Group critically examines theories, methodologies, and applications of language revitalization in a variety of world contexts. It provides a centralized venue for interdisciplinary researchers and practitioners of language revitalization to share, present, discuss, and improve their language revitalization efforts.
Latinx in Public Policy Working Group
2021-22 Working Groups
Andean Studies Working Group
The Andean Studies: Language and Culture working group provides a space for students, faculty, and community members interested in the multifaceted Andes region and its cultures, particularly through the study of Quechua/Kichwa, the most widely spoken native language in the Americas.
Language Revitalization Working Group
The Language Revitalization Working Group (LRWG) focuses on discussing theories, methodologies, and applications of language revitalization (LR) in a variety of world contexts, including a special focus this year on Latin America. Our principal goal for the LRWG is to provide a centralized venue for conversation and collaboration between the interdisciplinary researchers and practitioners of language revitalization at UC Berkeley. In LRWG we discuss, critically examine, and build upon activities related to the promotion of indigenous, endangered, minority, and non-dominant languages through linguistic work, language classes, language camps, pedagogical materials, curricula, and strategies for community building. Some of the meetings are devoted to discussing papers on theories and methods of endangered language revitalization, while others feature presentations by people within and outside UC Berkeley who are currently engaged in LR activities. LRWG provides a space to share experiences and practices, benefitting the development of these LR projects.
Latin American Cities Working Group
The Latin American Cities Working Group provides a collaborative forum for people within and outside UC Berkeley to present research on urbanization, urban life, and urban policy in Latin America. The “urban” condition in Latin America is complex and varied, calling for an engagement with different research approaches and interdisciplinary perspectives. Through workshops, invited presentations, and writing groups, we aim to create a space in which these multiple perspectives can come together to advance scholarship on the historical and contemporary dynamics of Latin American cities. Beyond providing a space for graduate students and faculty from UC Berkeley to present and discuss their papers, we will also focus on inviting researchers based on Latin American institutions to present their recent work. Hence, expanding our connection to Latin American scholarship.
Latin American and Caribbean Socionatures Working Group
The Latin American and Caribbean Socionatures Working Group is an interdisciplinary community focused on exploring the histories, dynamics, and conflicts surrounding the co-constitution of nature-society relations across the region and its fluid boundaries. The group is composed principally of doctoral students who share an interest in scholarly work on nature, politics, and society and welcomes a wide array of methodological approaches from the humanities and social sciences. The space promotes knowledge exchanges, and mutual learning through an annual public seminar and our monthly workshop where we discuss original manuscripts from group members and other guests from campus and elsewhere in the Bay Area, the US, and LAC. The topics include, but are not limited to, the politics of nature in cities and rural areas, environmental justice struggles, the social and political dimensions of biological science, new materialisms, multispecies approaches, the climate crisis, among others.
2020-21 Working Groups
Amanecer Working Group
The Amanecer working group is an undergraduate and graduate student organization that publishes in a Spanish and Portuguese journal dedicated to the study of language, literature, and cultures with a section for creative writing. We will provide a safe place for students to explore different creative techniques and outlets, and gain experience in proofreading, editing, and publishing. We will be researching topics related to Latin America, such as the process of dubbing and subbing foreign-language content into Spanish, the pronunciations of varying Spanish phonemes, and different grammatical structures and motifs in literary works. We welcome all research ideas! This working group aims to encourage curiosity and research, and we welcome everyone!
Andean Studies Working Group
The Andean Studies: Language and Culture working group provides a space for students, faculty, and community members interested in the multifaceted Andes region and its cultures, particularly through the study of Quechua/Kichwa, the most widely spoken native language in the Americas.
Blackness in Latin America and the Caribbean (BLAC)
The Blackness in Latin America and the Caribbean (BLAC) working group envisages an interdisciplinary close reading of the Afro-diasporic experience across the region and its interpretive manifestations in the humanities and social sciences. While open to all graduate students, this group is comprised principally of doctoral students in the qualifying or thesis/dissertation-writing stage who are working through a distinct set of questions including but not limited to everyday cultural production, identity, performance, ecology, policy, inequality, and state violence, followed by an even vaster array of methodological approaches.
Guatemala Scholar-Activists Working Group
The Guatemala Scholar-Activists Working Group aims to bring together scholar-activists and community organizers in the US and Guatemala to raise awareness about the social and political context of Guatemala and to take actionable steps that promote global justice and equity. Leveraging the collective expertise of UC Berkeley researchers, community-based organizations working on the ground in Guatemala, and international solidarity organizations, the group aims to pay particular attention to the role of US international policy and economic policy, and how these policies come to bear in the lives of marginalized communities in Guatemala. These issues will be studied in global and local perspective in an effort to determine how such policies might be improved and how communities struggling with violations of their rights might be supported. Issues of focus will include: Indigenous rights; rights to land, water, and natural resources; and gender equity; migration; mining injustice; climate change and health disparities. The group is open to anyone and everyone who is interested in activist work in Guatemala, and especially aims to bring together various generations of scholars and activists, including undergraduate and graduate students, as well as UC Berkeley faculty and staff.
Language Revitalization Working Group
The Language Revitalization Working Group (LRWG) focuses on discussing theories, methodologies, and applications of language revitalization (LR) in a variety of world contexts, including a special focus this year on Latin America. Our principal goal for the LRWG is to provide a centralized venue for conversation and collaboration between the interdisciplinary researchers and practitioners of language revitalization at UC Berkeley. In LRWG we discuss, critically examine, and build upon activities related to the promotion of indigenous, endangered, minority, and non-dominant languages through linguistic work, language classes, language camps, pedagogical materials, curricula, and strategies for community building. Some of the meetings are devoted to discussing papers on theories and methods of endangered language revitalization, while others feature presentations by people within and outside UC Berkeley who are currently engaged in LR activities. LRWG provides a space to share experiences and practices, benefitting the development of these LR projects.
Latin American Politics Working Group
The Latin American Politics Working Group (LAPWG) provides graduate students, faculty, and other invited speakers an interdisciplinary forum to present research on issues related to Latin American politics, broadly construed. Currently, our focus revolves around two central themes: urban politics and public security. The first category focuses on the provision of public goods, infrastructure, and governance in Latin American cities while the second focuses on drug trafficking violence and post-conflict control/state capacity. On occasion, we invite both academic and non-academic speakers such as graduate students and professors as well as politicians, bureaucrats, and other civic organization leaders who have real world experience in the region. On the whole, this working group strives to advance serious scholarship related to the politics of Latin America.