African and African Diaspora Studies


  • Q&A with Celina de Sá

    Celina de Sá, an assistant professor of anthropology and an affiliated faculty member in African and African Diaspora Studies and the Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies at UT Austin, is one of the College of Liberal Arts’ newer faculty members. Her research focuses on performance and race through grassroots social networks in…

    Q&A with Celina de Sá

  • The Value of Community Engaged Scholarship

    An educational anthropologist by training, Kevin Foster’s career path has taken him many places outside of the halls of the academy.

    The Value of Community Engaged Scholarship

  • 2021 Carnegie Fellow to Study Long-Term Consequences of Epidemics

    Kevin Thomas is one of 26 new fellows in the nation to receive $200,000 to fund significant research and writing in the social sciences and humanities.

    2021 Carnegie Fellow to Study Long-Term Consequences of Epidemics

  • Want to Learn More About Race in America? Read this.

    Authors from UT Austin’s College of Liberal Arts describe their books and what they hope readers will learn.

    Want to Learn More About Race in America? Read this.

  • What is Juneteenth?

    Although Juneteenth commemorates the end of slavery in the United States, the date the holiday observes, June 19, 1865, came more than two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation, when Texas finally received word that slavery had ended.

    What is Juneteenth?

  • Riveted: LaToya Ruby Frazier Exhibition Challenges Representational and Environmental Racism

    LaToya Ruby Frazier, Huxtables, Mom and Me, 2009, from The Notion of Family. Courtesy of the artist and Michel Rein, Paris/Brussels Award-winning artist LaToya Ruby Frazier’s exhibition, “Riveted,” will be on view from Nov. 7 through Dec. 6 at the Visual Arts Center at UT Austin. Frazier’s work documents the effects of economic and environmental…

    Riveted: LaToya Ruby Frazier Exhibition Challenges Representational and Environmental Racism

  • Imagining a More Equitable World for Africa’s Gay Community

    In most African countries, being gay means living in constant fear. For example, an anti-homosexuality bill recently signed by Uganda President Yoweri Museveni calls for 14 years in prison for first time offenders and life in prison for repeat offenders. Even those who don’t report gay friends and loved ones are considered to be breaking…

    Imagining a More Equitable World for Africa’s Gay Community

  • Help Wanted

    Policy report shows minimum wage lifts women out of poverty, boosts consumer spending In his State of the Union address, President Barack Obama made a bold claim: “Tonight, let’s declare that in the wealthiest nation on Earth, no one who works full-time should have to live in poverty, and raise the federal minimum wage to…

    Help Wanted

  • A Major Step Forward

    New department focuses on African experience A brand new academic department will focus on the experiences of African Americans, indigenous Africans and people of African descent around the world and, ultimately, will be the only Black Studies department in the South or Southwest that offers Ph.D.s. The Department of African and African Diaspora Studies was…

    A Major Step Forward