There is an urgent and growing need - in the UK and globally - to understand and address complex challenges surrounding race, gender, power dynamics, and justice. Public debates about identity, inequality and social belonging are central to political discourse, institutional policy-making and everyday social life. From discussions about gender recognition, structural racism or sexism, digital and AI‑related biases that reproduce historical inequalities to disputes over migration and surveillance questions of diverse identities and justice shape some of the most significant issues of our time.
The course examines the foundations of these debates through an interdisciplinary lens, providing students with conceptual tools to explore experiences of power, marginalisation, oppression, and resistance in contemporary society by looking at how these are shaped by the categories of gender, sex and race, and related forms of social identity. Students will engage with foundational and cutting‑edge work in gender theory, philosophy, critical race theory, intersectionality, and social justice studies.
This course is part of the Oxford University Summer School for Adults (OUSSA) programme.