Metadata
Title
2026-2027 Course Catalog
Category
graduate
UUID
6f90764fbb58424286bb0f4c7132e678
Source URL
https://catalog.illinois.edu/graduate/las/latin-american-studies-ma/
Parent URL
https://catalog.illinois.edu/graduate/
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T13:46:09+00:00
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2026-2027 Course Catalog

Source: https://catalog.illinois.edu/graduate/las/latin-american-studies-ma/ Parent: https://catalog.illinois.edu/graduate/

for the degree of Master of Science in Latin American Studies


Including classroom and online courses in Quechua, the most spoken native language in the American continent.

Specializations in Latin American and Caribbean Studies are administered by the director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.

Candidates for the master's degree who elect a specialization in Latin American and Caribbean Studies must complete 8 graduate hours from the courses prescribed by the center. Doctoral candidates who elect a specialization in this area must complete 16 graduate hours for one specialization or 8 graduate hours for a split specialization. Courses must be taken in at least two departments; a list of courses fulfilling the specialization is available from the center. A specialization in agricultural economics and foreign areas studies (in this case, Latin American and Caribbean Studies) is also available. A high level of proficiency in one or more languages of the region (Spanish, Portuguese, and Amerindian Indian languages) is required. For course information, requirements, and methods used to establish the level of proficiency, contact the center's academic programs coordinator.

Students in technical and professional colleges and schools of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign who seek knowledge of the Latin American and Caribbean region and languages are invited to consult with the director of the center or with their adviser in order to develop programs suited to their individual needs. Such a program may often be adopted as a specialization under existing regulations if the student so desires. These courses are of particular value to students who intend to undertake technical or professional work in the Latin American and Caribbean area for government, private business, publishing, or religious organizations.


Language Instruction

The Center offers 3 levels of Quechua, the most spoken language in the American continent, with approximately 13 million of speakers in 6 countries. The Center also offers Quechua online courses, free access to the publication Correo de Linguistica Andina, and free exercises on Quechua.

Other languages in the university that fulfill the M.A. requirements are Spanish and Portuguese, both offered at the School Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics.

Faculty Research Interests

More than 100 faculty throughout the university are currently affiliated with the Center. The Center's faculty devote all or a portion of their teaching and research to Latin American subjects, from agriculture to politics, culture and linguistics. Their expertise spans every important discipline and sub-region of Latin America and the Caribbean, with particular strength in the Andean countries, the Caribbean, lowland South America, Mexico, and Brazil.

See a complete list of our affiliated faculty and their research and teaching interests.

Facilities and Resources

Latin American Library Collection (LALC)

The Center assist the Latin American Collection at the University Library in purchasing teaching and research materials to develop a strong collection that supports teaching and research in those programs sponsored and coordinated by the Center as well as interdisciplinary courses with Latin American subject matter offered by other departments.

The LACL collection ranks among the six largest in the country and is the largest collection in the Midwest region in purchasing teaching and research materials to develop a strong collection that supports teaching and research in those programs sponsored and coordinated by the Center as well as interdisciplinary courses with Latin American subject matter offered by other departments.  It is located in the third floor of the main Illinois library in room 324 and while the Library itself does not house a circulating collection, our knowledgeable staff is available to help locate relevant materials, answer reference questions, and assist you in developing effective searching strategies.

The Latin American and Caribbean Library collection includes:

List-serv

The Center administers a listserv with more than 500 subscribers. Weekly mass messages "CALCS/Lemann Institute this Week" contain information on activities in campus related to Latin America and the Caribbean region (conferences, workshops, movies), new courses and job positions as well as future conferences in other Universities. To subscribe contact: Angelina Cotler.

CLACS Brownbags

Every Thursday at Noon in Room 101 International Studies Building (910 S. Fifth Street in Champaign) CLACS presents a lecture offered by a faculty, graduate student or outside faculty on topics relevant to the region. These are open and free brownbag lectures. For complete list of presentations during the semester visit our website on the events section.

Opportunities and Events

The Center keeps updated a complete list of jobs, grants, conferences, and fellowships in the U.S. and abroad for graduate students and faculty. Check it at Outreach Program.

One of the goals of our mission is to increase knowledge and awareness of Latin America and the Caribbean in the educational community and the general public by promoting language and area studies in their broadest sense. Outreach at CLACS is a service-oriented program funded through a Title VI Federal Area Studies grant. It is designed to increase public knowledge about Latin America and the Caribbean and Latin American and Caribbean peoples and cultures. All our services are free!

Services include:

See our website for more information.

Links to local museums, units and clubs that offer Latin American and Caribbean services as well as external links to institutions abroad and in the U.S. are posted.

Financial Aid

The Center is a recipient of Federal Government Title VI Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowships for Graduate Studies in any discipline that includes a specialization in Latin American Studies and an intensive program of language instruction. Academic year language courses and summer fellowships for intensive language courses abroad or in the United States are available. Information on how to apply, requirements and datelines are posted.

The Center offers Tinker Summer Fellowship Research Grants for graduate students in any department wishing to do research during the summer in Latin America, the Caribbean and the Iberian Peninsula. Both these programs depend on outside funding and thus cannot be guaranteed in any given year. Information on how to apply, requirements and datelines are posted.

for the degree of Master of Science in Latin American Studies


Specializations in Latin American and Caribbean Studies are administered by the director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.

Candidates for the master's degree who elect a specialization in Latin American and Caribbean Studies must complete 8 graduate hours from the courses prescribed by the center. Doctoral candidates who elect a specialization in this area must complete 16 graduate hours for one specialization or 8 graduate hours for a split specialization. Courses must be taken in at least two departments; a list of courses fulfilling the specialization is available from the center. A specialization in agricultural economics and foreign areas studies (in this case, Latin American and Caribbean Studies) is also available. A high level of proficiency in one or more languages of the region (Spanish, Portuguese, and Amerindian Indian languages) is required. For course information, requirements, and methods used to establish the level of proficiency, contact the center's academic programs coordinator.

Students in technical and professional colleges and schools of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign who seek knowledge of the Latin American and Caribbean region and languages are invited to consult with the director of the center or with their adviser in order to develop programs suited to their individual needs. Such a program may often be adopted as a specialization under existing regulations if the student so desires. These courses are of particular value to students who intend to undertake technical or professional work in the Latin American and Caribbean area for government, private business, publishing, or religious organizations.

For additional details and requirements refer to the department's graduate program and the Graduate College Handbook.

Course List

 | Code | Title | Hours |

| --- | --- | --- | | Core interdisciplinary seminar (LAST 550 or different if indicated) | | 4 | | Graduate hours in 400-500 level courses in theory or research methods appropriate to the student's objectives and primary discipline | | 4-8 | | Area Courses that focus on Latin America or the Caribbean, of which at least 8 graduate hours must be taken in one (primary) discipline | | 20-24 | | Language Requirement: Demonstration that a communicative competence in Spanish, Portuguese, or other language indigenous to the area (excluding English) equivalent to six semesters' (undergraduate) work has been achieved. | | | | LAST 599 | Thesis Research (min/max applied toward degree) | 8 | | Total Hours | | 40 |

Other Requirements

Grad Other Degree Requirements

Requirement Description
Other requirements may overlap
A thesis is required.
Minimum 500-level Hours Required Overall: 12
Minimum GPA: 3.25

for the degree of Master of Science in Latin American Studies


  1. Advanced Proficiency in a Latin American Language (Spanish, Portuguese, Indigenous) - This will be assessed through completion of appropriate level course work and through OPI or equivalent testing.
  2. Diverse Perspectives
  3. Students will partake in interdisciplinary inquiry that engages multiple disciplinary lenses and theoretical frameworks.
  4. Students should be able to apply these frameworks to multiple contexts (spatial, temporal, cultural etc.) within Latin American Studies.
  5. Critical and Applied Learning
  6. Students should be able to critically and reasonably evaluate and apply their knowledge to current debates within Latin American Studies.
  7. Students will be able to apply interdisciplinary learning across multiple contexts, integrating knowledge and practice.
  8. Interdisciplinary Research
  9. Students should be able to apply their knowledge to the design and implementation of a long-term independent research project that uses both primary and secondary sources and articulates with current debates within Latin American Studies.
  10. They should be able to effectively communicate the results of that research in written form by producing a MA thesis.
  11. Effective Communication
  12. Students should be able to identify research problems, approach these problems with appropriate methodologies and effectively communicate the results.  They should be able to apply their knowledge to real-world situations.
  13. Students should be able to effectively communicate in written and oral form their knowledge of Latin American culture and language to a broad non-specialist audience.

Graduate Degree Programs in Latin American & Caribbean Studies

The Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies administers a program of language and area courses leading to an interdisciplinary Master of Arts degree. The master's program facilitates studies in the languages, cultures, and affairs of the region for three constituencies of students: those seeking to match area expertise with professional training; those proceeding to disciplinary-based doctoral work; and those for whom the degree would stand on its own. The center also administers graduate specializations in Latin American and Caribbean Studies with various departments. The center is a Title VI National Resource Center. The center houses the Lemann Institute for Brazilian Studies.

for the degree of Master of Science in Latin American Studies


Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies

Acting Center Director: Andrew Orta\ Associate Director & Academic Programs Coordinator: Angelina Cotler\ Director of Graduate Studies: Anna Escobar\ Latin American and Caribbean Studies website\ Latin American and Caribbean Studies faculty\ 201 International Studies Building, 910 South Fifth Street, Champaign, IL 61820\ (217) 333-4971\ clacs@illinois.edu

College of Liberal Arts & Sciences

College of Liberal Arts & Sciences website

Admissions

Graduate College Admissions & Requirements