Overview
The Social Justice Graduate Certificate offers individuals concerned with social equity, inclusiveness, and diversity an educational opportunity and a micro-credential in the area of Social Justice studies. With exponential growth concern and activism around national and global injustices, a rising generation of post-graduates wants to understand better the effects of destructive public discourse, social and political division and conflict, and just citizenship in history, practice, and theory. The Social Justice Graduate Certificate provides graduate students across CU Denver and beyond the University access to world-class CU Denver faculty whose teaching, research, and public engagement utilize ethics and social justice values in the interest of creating a better society. Students pursuing the Social Justice Graduate Certificate must successfully complete 4 thematically related, social justice-oriented graduate courses (12 credit hours), selected in consultation with an advisor. Through coursework, they gain critical, analytic, and ethical reasoning skills and knowledge to address social inequities, enhance career development, and effect change for social good. As a graduate interdisciplinary studies certificate, coursework may derive from a range of departments and programs at CU Denver. Courses can hang together thematically or disciplinarily according to a student’s interest in Social Justice (see sample courses below).
Target Audience
The primary target audience is Humanities and Social Sciences graduate students across CLAS who seek personal enrichment, career advancement, or added value to their primary master’s or PhD degrees. Equally important, however, are graduate students in non-CLAS, CU Denver schools and colleges, and non-CU Denver post-baccalaureates who seek understanding and familiarity with theories and practices of social justice. The Social Justice Graduate Certificate will benefit those in vocations law, advocacy organizations, educators in K-12, and non-profits, among others.
Advisor
Professor Margaret L. Woodhull, Interdisciplinary Studies Director
Courses in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences:
ANTH 6041 Human Genetics: Legal, Ethical and Social Issues
	COMM 5040 Communication, Prisons, and Social Justice
	COMM 6400 Communication, Globalization and Social Justice
	ENGL/HIST/WGST 5306: Survey of Feminist Thought
	ENGL/PHIL/WGST 5308: Contemporary Feminist Thought
	ETST/RLST 5030 Race, Religion, and Belonging
	ETST 5165 Cultural Diversity in the Workforce
	ETST/WGST 5305 Women of Color Feminisms
	HBSC 6320 Human Genetics: Legal, Ethical and Social Issues
	HIST 5308 Crime, Policing, and Justice in American History
	HIST 5343 Women & Gender in US History
	HIST 5414 Mexico and the US: People and Politics on the Border
	HIST 5415 Social Revolutions in Latin America
	HUMN 5242 Bioethics
	HUMN 5720 Sexuality, Gender, and Visual Representations
	HUMN 5770 Imperialism, Post-colonialism, and Visual Discourse
	PHIL 5200 Social and Political Philosophy
	PHIL 5242 Bioethics
	PHIL 5450 Punishment and Social Justice
	PHIL 5500 Feminist Philosophy
	PSCI 5011 GIS in Political Science
	PSCI 5145 Indigenous Politics
	PSCI 5217 Human Rights in Theory and Practice
	PSCI 5245 Gender, Globalization and Development
	PSCI 5265 Social Justice And Globalization
	PSCI 5276 Conflicts and Rights in International Law
	PSCI 5477 The U.S. Constitution: Law and Politics
	PSCI 5548 Labor Law and Collective Bargaining
	PSCI 5550 Labor, Trade Unions and the Global Economy
	PSCI 5555 International Women's Resistance
	PSCI 5808 Strategies of Peacebuilding
	PSCI 5837 Contemporary Issues in Civil Liberties
	SSCI 5325 First Amendment: Theory and Context
	SSCI 5540 Law, Diversity and Community in United States History
	SJUS 5050 Special Topics: Social Justice
	SOCY 5590 Crime, Justice, and the City
	SOCY 5020 - Race, Culture and Immigration
	SOCY 5050 Health Disparities
	SOCY 5110 Sociology of Health Care
	SOCY 5270 Sociall Meanings of Reproduction
	SOCY 5440 Poverty and Social Inequality
	SOCY 5460 Hate Groups and Group Violence
	SOCY 5590 Crime, Justice, and the City
	SOCY 5740 Courts & Society
	SOCY 5750 Criminology
	SSCI 5242 Bioethics
	WGST 5248 Gender, Globalization and Development
	WGST 5343 Women & Gender in US History
	WGST 5500 Feminist Philosophy
	WGST 5555 International Women's Resistance
Non-CLAS Courses:
ARCH 6258/ LDAR 6637 Social Justice in Planning
	CLDE 5040 Social Justice Liberation: A Rehearsal for the Revolution
	CLDE 5170 Race, Class and Culture in Public Schools
	CLDE 7220 Legal And Policy Foundations For Latin@ Students
	CLDE 7320 (Re)Claiming Dominant Narratives: History, Education, & Activism in Latinx
	COUN 5500 Diversity, Inclusion, Social Justice in Higher Education
	CRJU 5005 Law & Society
	CRJU 5552 Criminal Justice Ethics
	CRJU 5553 Women, Crime, and Justice
	CRJU 5572 Race, Crime, and Justice
	CRJU 5710 Environmental Crime and Justice
	ECED 5091 Educators as Social Change Agents
	EDFN 5000 Food Justice in City & Schools
	EDFN 5010 Social Foundations and Cultural Diversity in Urban Education
	EDFN 7410 Power and Privilege: The Social Construction of Difference
	EDUC 5652 Leadership for Equity/Social Justice
	HDFR 5010 Family and Cultural Diversity
	HDFR 5260 Family Systems Social Justice
	HDFR 7260 Family Diversity and Social Justice
	ISMG 6880 Intrusion Detection and Incident Response
	MGMT 6420 Ethics: A Formula for Success
	MSRA 5545 Music Editing in Visual Media
	PUAD 5120 Nonprofits and Public Policy
	PUAD 5410 Administrative Law
	URPL 6410 Social Justice in Planning
For more information contact:
	Margaret Woodhull, Director, Interdisciplinary Studies: margaret.woodhull@ucdenver.edu or
	E-mail: masterhs@ucdenver.edu
	Website: http://clas.ucdenver.edu/mhmss
	Office: Student Commons Building, 3203
	Phone: 303-315-3565
	 
