Luis Almagro shares his vision for “more rights for more people” in the Americas during a visit to the USC Dornsife School of International Relations.
USC Dornsife News
Overseas research opportunities, like the one in which then-undergraduate Max Novak unearthed a B.C.-era sword, help USC Dornsife’s classics department expand its reach.
USC Dornsife history majors travel to the capital of the United Kingdom to examine gender construction in the 18th and 19th centuries.
USC Dornsife’s Maymester in Louisiana introduces a new, holistic approach to studying the humanities: Bookpacking.
"Shortfall" by Alice Echols peels away the layers of a hidden family history, in the process exposing a new form of financial corruption in 20th-century America.
The director of the Early Modern Studies Institute explores how the introduction of alcohol to Native Americans by European colonists helped shape the history of North America.
In The Conversation, Richard Flory of sociology and a colleague explain how ‘Independent Network Charismatic’ Christianity is changing the religious landscape in America – and its politics.
The “genius grant” honors the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and professor of English, American studies and ethnicity and comparative literature, whose groundbreaking work has enabled Americans and others to view the Vietnam War from more balanced perspectives.
This Maymester, students traveled to Salvador and São Paulo to learn about the cultures of Brazil and Portuguese-speaking Africa.
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