Washington Center

Winter Quarter 2025

Polarizer-in-Chief: Presidential Leadership in the 21st Century

Day and Time: 
Tuesdays, 6:30pm - 9:30pm
Quarter Dates: 
January 7 - March 11, 2025
Semester Dates: 
January 7 - April 15, 2025
Campus: 
UCDC
Description: 

Many Americans can name several presidents and even have opinions on “good” versus “bad” presidents. But what do presidents actually do, what resources and limitations do they have in their ability to act, and how do we measure their performance and our expectations for their leadership? With a divided Congress and record polarization, what can we expect during the next year and a half of a Biden/Harris administration? This course will put the modern presidency in historical and theoretical context, drawing on a variety of readings and approaches to determine which framework best explains presidential (in)action. At its core, this class is about the question of executive power in democratic government and how we understand what we see happening just down the street from the UC Washington Center. In addition to studying and reflecting on the theme of presidential power, we will also consider the limits to this power and how presidents achieve their goals. Ultimately, we aim to understand the work of the presidency and some of the different perspectives by which we might analyze or assess presidents and their administrations. 

About the Instructor:

I am a Ph.D. of American government and politics with specializations in the American presidency, public policy, and polarization. My research focuses on presidential governance via executive orders and how political factors influence the ability of presidents to issue their most significant orders. I have taught UCDC’s presidency seminar since Fall 2017. While earning my degree at the University of Maryland, I taught classes about public policy and Congress to students who had internships related to those fields in a format similar to the UCDC program. Outside of the classroom, I work at Community Change & Community Change Action, non-profit organizations focused on building a movement led by everyday people to create change in their communities and across the country. As the Electoral Data Manager, I work with many different teams and partner organizations to identify target audiences and track the work we are doing in communities affected by injustice.

Requirement for ALL semester students:

The four weeks from March 24 to April 18 will be spent in a special topics module taught by Dr. Jimmy Ellis (or designated instructor) on Wednesdays from 6:30 to 9:30p.m. This module will account for 15% of the seminar final course grade.

Your selected seminar will begin the week of January 6 and your seminar instructor will officially be your instructor of record for the term, responsible for computing and submitting final course grades at the end of the term.

**NO additional registration required.

Course ID: 
UCDC191C01W25

The Black Experience in Washington DC

Day and Time: 
Thursdays, 6:30pm - 9:30pm
Quarter Dates: 
January 9 - March 13, 2025
Semester Dates: 
January 9 - April 17, 2025
Campus: 
UCDC
Description: 

Washington, D.C. and Maryland have long been home to pioneering and revolutionary African Americans like Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Mary McLeod Bethune, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Marvin Gaye, Ta-Nehisi Coates, among a host of others. Since the seventeenth century, African Americans have made an indelible mark on the region from cultivating Maryland’s cash crop—tobacco— to designing and constructing much of the National Mall, staffing integral federal agencies, and creating a rich cultural backdrop through music, food, dance, and art. This course will examine the social and cultural history of African Americans in Washington, D.C. and Maryland, while grappling with the politics of race, class, and place. Drawing on a range of historical, cultural, and political texts, throughout the quarter we will explore themes like slavery and abolition, race and housing, migration, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Black electoral politics, race and public memory, community building, and social justice. With significant attention paid to space and place, each week we will delve into the community-making efforts of different historically Black neighborhoods from across the region—Hillcrest, Deanwood, U Street/Shaw, Anacostia, Prince George’s County, Maryland’s Eastern Shore—while contending with contemporary issues like gentrification, displacement, divestment, and climate change.

About the Instructor:

Dr. Jeanelle K. Hope is an accomplished public historian and scholar specializing in African American Studies, with extensive teaching experience across K-12 and higher education. Currently serving as the Director and Associate Professor of African American Studies at Prairie View A&M University, Dr. Hope’s research focuses on Afro-Asian solidarity, Black political thought, and the role of art and cultural production in post-WWII social movements. Her forthcoming book, The Black Antifascist Tradition: Fighting Fascism from Anti-Lynching to Abolition, will be released in 2024 through Haymarket Books.
 
With a passion for experiential learning, Dr. Hope has led immersive academic experiences, such as civil rights movement tours across the South and curated art-focused events for students. Transitioning to Washington, D.C., to pursue public history work as a curator with the Smithsonian, Dr. Hope brings her expertise in community engagement, cultural preservation, and teaching to UCDC. She aims to develop courses that leverage the wealth of historical and cultural resources in the nation’s capital, fostering a dynamic and inclusive learning environment.
 

Requirement for ALL semester students: 

 
The four weeks from March 24 to April 18 will be spent in a special topics module taught by Dr. Jimmy Ellis (or designated instructor) on Wednesdays from 6:30 to 9:30p.m. This module will account for 15% of the seminar final course grade.
 
Your selected seminar will begin the week of January 6 and your seminar instructor will officially be your instructor of record for the term, responsible for computing and submitting final course grades at the end of the term.
 
**NO additional registration required."

 

Course ID: 
UCDC191M02W25

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