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The Islamic Studies Program takes as its focus
countries and regions throughout the world in which Muslims constitute either
the majority of the population or form a significant minority group. The
program provides a forum for the presentation and discussion of research on
Islam and Muslim peoples undertaken by members of the USC faculty, graduate
students, and visitors to the University. It is also committed to the
enhancement of undergraduate and graduate instruction relevant to the global
Muslim community.
Included among the faculty members affiliated with
the program are specialists in geographical areas ranging from North Africa to
Southeast Asia and others whose expertise lies in such diverse fields as Islamic
theology, Francophone literature in Muslim African countries, and political
geography and refugee studies. Chronologically, these interests span the period
from the rise of Islam in the 7th century CE to the present day.
The program will, in
the course of the 2006–2007 academic year, propose a set of courses suitable
for use as a cognate. As additional scholars with specializations that fall
under the Islamic Studies umbrella join the University faculty, it is our
intention to expand this base of courses into a minor in Islamic Studies. The
cognate and the minor will serve students in a variety of fields (including,
among others, political science, anthropology, geography, history, religious
studies, language and literature, and business) who wish to focus on some
portion of the Muslim world – sub-Saharan Africa, North Africa, the Middle East,
South Asia, or Southeast Asia – or on some thematic interest running through the
Muslim world. In addition to their disciplinary training, the cognate or minor
will enable such students to develop a richly textured and multidisciplinary
perspective on the particular aspect of the Muslim world of primary interest to
them.
In conjunction with the Walker Institute of
International and Area Studies, the program sponsors a series of lectures and
colloquia that each year brings to campus scholars in a variety of disciplines
related to Islam and Muslim peoples, as well as other cultural events that are
open to the University community and the public alike.
Many of the
faculty affiliated with the Islamic Studies Program welcome opportunities to
share their expertise on Islam and the Muslim world with civic organizations and
church or school groups interested in learning more about these topics. |