The class traces the history of African American comedy and situates it specifically in relation to the civil rights struggles and the politics of African American Islam.
This religion course examines grassroots democratic coalitions and movements, and considers how they try to forge solidarity and build power across religious and racial divides.
The recent Oxford graduate, who discovered a monoclonal antibody that potentially prevents malaria, will use this fellowship to help support his final two years of medical school at the University of California, San Diego.
This music course considers some of the many intersections between music and gender during the European Middle Ages, with particular attention to the roles of women as performers, composers, patrons, and audiences.
The recent political science major and economics minor will use her award to study the relationship between local and international non-governmental organizations.
This political science class investigates the ways technological developments shape strategic interactions between states, as well as between states and non-state armed actors.
The Center for Peace and Global Citizenship will be supporting the work of 58 Bi-Co students this summer at internships both in-person and virtual, across the U.S. and around the world.