This anthropology course, co-taught by this semester’s Friend in Residence, engages with issues, theories, and methodologies of nonviolent and violent struggles, peace negotiations, transitional justice, post-conflict reconstruction, and peacebuilding by looking at South Africa as a case study.
Haverford Headlines
At a time of conflict and divide, the College is working to bring students, faculty, and staff together to support one another and engage these important issues through peaceful and constructive dialogue.
The new plan aims to elevate the field of play, and not just for student-athletes.
This hands-on class explores Japanese book arts and a wide range of printmaking processes.
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A collection of creative work from 20 student artists was displayed in VCAM after an open-call search across campus.
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This interdisciplinary English course examines the visual politics of literatures of bondage, focusing on colonial Brazil/Amazon, the cross-temporal Indian Ocean World, and our contemporary moment of globalization.
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The Federation United Concert Series is a group committed to bringing an eclectic range of musical acts right to your doorstep.
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This semester’s iteration of Haverford’s long-standing tradition celebrating self-governance focused on resolutions addressing sustainability, environmental justice, and student agency.
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The Quaker South African politician and activist will be on campus all semester long, teaching a class and offering several public talks.
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This political science course explores power and security through the lens of gender.
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With two screenings and an exhibition planned for this semester, the ninth year of the Strange Truth series will examine themes of gender, justice, and historical memory across modern media.
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The talk was the latest in the yearlong Technology and Justice Series, sponsored by the President’s Initiative for Ethical Engagement and Leadership, which aims to help the Haverford community grapple with issues in the intersection of technology, equity, privacy, surveillance, sustainability, and more.
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This seminar encourages students to analyze primary sources and secondary works to explore how and why early Friends came to see both war and slavery as immoral.
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This course examines how anthropologists contribute to human rights in law and grassroots movements.
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Five recent graduates earned 2019–2020 Fulbright Student Awards.
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Head coach Bruce Berque ’88 led the University of Texas men’s tennis team to the program’s first national championship.
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This political science course integrates diverse disciplinary approaches—legal, political, sociological and anthropological—to explore the causes of migration, the dynamics of assimilation and incorporation of migrants in the U.S., and the process and impacts of deportation and (re)incorporation in Mexico and Central America.
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Boyce Upholt ’06 recounts a perilous trip atop a record-breaking flood—and an attempt to understand what we’ve done to America’s iconic river.
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