University of Havana, Cuba 11.2.15 The

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University of Havana, Cuba 11.2.15 The University of Havana, Cuba 11.2.15 The courses below list CUA equivalencies. To transfer: courses must have an equivalent, the equivalent must fulfill your specific requirements, and students must get a C- or better unless you are an engineering student. Engineering students must get a C or better. This list is subject to change. MTR- course is at the 300 level or above and can be used towards the major, elective or distribution as appropriate. DTR - course is at the 100 level or above and can be used towards distribution or electives. It cannot be used for major credit. LIT- can be used as literature credit and has no exact CUA equivalent. HUMM- can be used to fulfill humanities and has no exact CUA equivalent. AREA I/II- counts for those requirements, do not have an exact equivalent. SBHS- counts for social & behavioral science requirement, no exact equivalent. MNNS- counts for math & natural science no exact equivalent. NO CREDIT- Course will not transfer. Equivalent Equivalent Course Course Title = Subject Number Afro-Caribbean Studies = SPAN 150MTR (taught in Spanish) History of Philosophy = FREE 101TR Cultural History of Cuba = SPAN 150MTR (taught in Spanish) History of Latin America & = Caribbean (taught in SPAN 150MTR Spanish) Special Topics Jose Marti = SPAN 150MTR (taught in Spanish) Cuban US Relations Past & = SPAN 150MTR Present (taught in Spanish) = Spanish Language SPAN 150MTR History of Cuba = HIST 150MTR = No philosophy SPAN Philosophy and Society credit will be given 150MTR for this course = Cuban Historiography SPAN 150MTR = SPAN No philosophy 150MTR or Marxist-Leninist Phil & Soc credit will be given POL for this course 150MTR History of the Americas = HIST 229 or SPAN 150MTR University of Havana, Cuba 11.2.15 Contemporary Euro History = HIST 222 or SPAN 150MTR = No philosophy SPAN History of Philosophy credit will be given 150MTR for this course = Cuban Film (in Spanish) SPAN 150MTR .
Recommended publications
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    SLEEPING ON THE ASHES: SLUM CLEARANCE IN HAVANA IN AN AGE OF REVOLUTION, 1930-65 by Jesse Lewis Horst Bachelor of Arts, St. Olaf College, 2006 Master of Arts, University of Pittsburgh, 2012 Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of The Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh 2016 UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH DIETRICH SCHOOL OF ARTS & SCIENCES This dissertation was presented by Jesse Horst It was defended on July 28, 2016 and approved by Scott Morgenstern, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science Edward Muller, Professor, Department of History Lara Putnam, Professor and Chair, Department of History Co-Chair: George Reid Andrews, Distinguished Professor, Department of History Co-Chair: Alejandro de la Fuente, Robert Woods Bliss Professor of Latin American History and Economics, Department of History, Harvard University ii Copyright © by Jesse Horst 2016 iii SLEEPING ON THE ASHES: SLUM CLEARANCE IN HAVANA IN AN AGE OF REVOLUTION, 1930-65 Jesse Horst, M.A., PhD University of Pittsburgh, 2016 This dissertation examines the relationship between poor, informally housed communities and the state in Havana, Cuba, from 1930 to 1965, before and after the first socialist revolution in the Western Hemisphere. It challenges the notion of a “great divide” between Republic and Revolution by tracing contentious interactions between technocrats, politicians, and financial elites on one hand, and mobilized, mostly-Afro-descended tenants and shantytown residents on the other hand. The dynamics of housing inequality in Havana not only reflected existing socio- racial hierarchies but also produced and reconfigured them in ways that have not been systematically researched.
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