Community Justice Minor
Description. The Community Justice minor uses interdisciplinary analyses through Africana Studies to expose students to different ways of thinking about and enacting alternative justice strategies, community-based economic development, and community wellness. Community justice refers to resident involvement in and citizen-police partnerships in justice decision-making, oversight, and restorative justice; as well as the development of legal, economic, social, educational and health alternatives at the local level that complement and/or transform traditional public safety strategies to establish meaningful justice, peace, stability, and community wellbeing. Students will explore theories, strategies, and practices that address racial and economic inequity and place community well-being at the center, to strengthen the capacity of families, friends, neighborhood groups, civic and community organizations, and local institutions to resolve conflict and create solutions. Through community-based projects and experiential learning, students will engage in real-life application of community-based approaches to justice, and inclusionary community practices to prepare for careers in justice, community and non-profit organizations; and for graduate school.
Learning Outcomes. Students will:
- Students will investigate relationships between a variety of community-based approaches to justice, community initiated and based development, school reform initiatives, preventive health and mental health initiatives, youth development strategies, and innovations in public safety and criminal justice practices that establish meaningful justice, peace and community well-being.
- Students will explain the core ideas, key concepts, theories and methodologies, of community wellness and Community Justice, especially as they relate to justice challenges such as racial and economic inequity, and solutions such as community asset building, community policing, and restorative justice.
- Students will acquire and hone their critical thinking skills as applied to problem solving around justice themes within communities and among people of color, using the interdisciplinary tools and methodologies of Africana Studies.
- Students will examine how an individual’s place in society affects their experiences, values, or choices, and recognize how societal conditions such as access, involvement, and equity as well as their own biases, values and interpersonal styles limit justice and effect people in diverse communities.
- Students will demonstrate an understanding of themselves and how to operate as members of groups and communities, and of their own agency as community organizers, social justice advocates, and policy analysts.
- Students will evaluate evidence and arguments critically and analytically, and produce well-reasoned, high level written and oral arguments using evidence to support conclusions.
Credits required. 18
Minor coordinator. Professor Charlotte Walker-Said, Spring (212.237.8758, cwalker-said@jjay.cuny.edu), Department of Africana Studies
Minor advisor. Ms. Rulisa Galloway-Perry, Academic Advising Director and Senior Co-Curricular Administrator, Deputy Minor Coordinator Department of Africana Studies (212.237.8701, rgalloway@jjay.cuny.edu)
Requirements. A maximum of two courses can overlap with a student’s major, other minors or programs.
Additional Information. Students may NOT minor in both Africana Studies and Community Justice. Students majoring in Human Services and Community Justice may use up to two courses to satisfy both the HSCJ Major and the CJ Minor (AFR 145 and AFR 227). No other courses/electives may overlap, please see the Minor coordinator or advisor for course planning.
Students who enrolled for the first time at the College or selected this minor in September 2020 or thereafter must complete the minor in the form presented here. Students who enrolled prior to that date may choose the form shown here or the earlier version of the minor. A copy of the earlier version can be found in the 2019-20 Undergraduate Bulletin.
Part One. Required Courses
Select one. (Students are strongly encouraged to choose AFR 145 in this area)
AFR 145 | Introduction to Community Justice in Human Systems | 3 |
| OR | |
AFR 121 | Africana Communities in U.S. | 3 |
| OR | |
AFR 140 | Introduction to Africana Studies | 3 |
Required
AFR 227 | Community-based Approaches to Justice | 3 |
AFR 315 | Community-based Justice in the Africana World | 3 |
Total Credit Hours: 9
Part Two. Electives
Choose three, at least one course must be in Africana Studies (AFR) and one course must be at the 300-level or above.
AFR 215 | Police and Urban Communities | 3 |
AFR 229 | Restoring Justice: Making Peace and Resolving Conflict | 3 |
AFR 237 | Institutional Racism | 3 |
AFR 243 | Africana Youth and Social Justice Struggles | 3 |
AFR 250 | Political Economy of Racism | 3 |
AFR 255 | Community Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship | 3 |
AFR 317 | Environmental Racism | 3 |
AFR 319 | Self, Identity & Justice: Global Perspectives | 3 |
AFR 320 | Perspectives on Justice in the Africana World | 3 |
AFR 377 | Field Education in Community Organizing and Practice | 3 |
| OR | |
AFR 378 | Field Education in Community Organizing and Practice II | 3 |
AFR 347/PSY 347 | Psychology of Oppression | 3 |
AFR 377 | Field Education in Community Organizing and Practice | 3 |
AFR 410 | Independent Study | 3 |
ANT 208 | Urban Anthropology | 3 |
ANT 230 | Culture and Crime | 3 |
ANT 347 | Structural Violence & Social Suffering | 3 |
CJBA 365 | Change and Innovation in Criminal Justice | 3 |
CRJ 236/SOC 236 | Victimology | 3 |
ECO 170 | Crime, Class, Capitalism: The Economics of Justice | 3 |
ECO 260 | Environmental Economics, Regulation and Policy | 3 |
ECO 270 | Urban Economics | |
EJS 277 | Introduction to Experiential Learning: Environmental Justice | 3 |
GEN 140 | Gender, Activism & Social Change | 3 |
LLS 241 | Latinx Populations and the City | 3 |
LLS 261/HIS 261 | Revolution and Social Change in Contemporary Latin America | 3 |
LLS 265/HIS 265 | Class, Race and Family in Latin American History | 3 |
LLS 321 | Latinx Community Fieldwork | 4 |
LLS 322 | Latinx Struggles for Civil Rights & Social Justice | 3 |
LLS 325 | Latinx Experience of Criminal Justice | 3 |
POL 210 | Comparative Urban Political Systems | 3 |
POL 320 | International Human Rights | 3 |
POL 405 | Seminar in New York City Politics | 3 |
PSC 202 | Police and Diversity | 3 |
PSC 245 | Community Policing | 3 |
SOC 206 | The Sociology of Conflict and Dispute Resolution | 3 |
SOC 215 | Women and Social Control in the U.S. | 3 |
SOC 222 | Crime, Media and Public Opinion | 3 |
SOC 251 | Sociology of Human Rights | 3 |
SOC 364 | Food Justice | 3 |
Total Credit Hours: 9
Total Credit Hours: 18