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Slideshow

History

In the Beginning

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In 1975, as the academic phenomenon of Women's Studies spread rapidly across campuses, a group of faculty members brought their interests to light and began discussing the need for such a program of study at the University of Georgia.  As ideas for the program developed, initial courses were discussed and letters asking for advice and information were sent to other Women's Studies programs.

As the Assistant Vice President of Instruction at the University of Georgia in 1976, the Honorable Louise McBee assembled an advisory committee to develop an undergraduate certificate in Women’s Studies.  The advisory committee included Nelle Scholz, Jack Balswick, Maija Blaubergs, Emily Calhoun, Frank Fabris, Margaret Holt, Sharon Price, Ginny Rustin, Vicki Thomas, Sue Zimmerman, Karen Calhoun, Jean Friedman, Charles Darby, and Shanna Richman.

New Program Planned

1976 headline new Major in Women's Studies approvedA story ran in the University of Georgia Community News on April 12, 1976 reporting that a new program in Women's Studies was being developed.  The article specified that the "first courses should be offered in either summer or fall quarters."  However, the certificate program was not to be passed by the Arts and Sciences Curriculum Committee until April 20, 1977.

Program is Created

In 1977 the Women’s Studies Program at UGA was created with Dr. Maija Blaubergs as the coordinator.  Maija Blaubergs, however, was denied promotion and tenure in 1978, and she subsequently sued the University for sex discrimination, citing her role in the Women's Studies Program as the reason her promotion and tenure were denied.  The University settled this case out of court.

The next coordinator was Deborah Herman, who left the University in the early 80s.  The Program operated successfully from 1977 until 1983.  During those years the Women's Studies Program had an administrative structure, including the coordinator, a secretary, and a steering committee.  The Program operated on a budget allocated by the Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs.  It offered 14 courses, a certificate program, and a lecture and colloquia series.  Many, including Jean Friedman, Judith Preissle and Linda Grant, held the program together for years until it was turned over to Arts & Sciences as an interdisciplinary studies certificate.  The certificate program stayed on the books at this time, but was considered on hold until someone could direct the program on a full-time basis.

Women's Studies at UGABy 1987, a faculty committee met regularly to develop the groundwork for a revitilization of the program.  As a result, Heather Kleiner was made acting coordinator of the program for ten hours a week, in addition to her job as an advisor in the College of Arts and Sciences.  In 1988 five women submitted a proposal to then president Charles Knapp to revitalize the Women’s Studies Program.  It was approved, and Dr. Patricia Del Rey was named director and Heather Kleiner became her associate director.  This new Program reported to Vice President for Academic Affairs, Bill Prokasy, and found a home for many years on the second floor of the library.  By May 1988 the Program had seven candidates for the certificate.

In March 1989 the WS prefix for courses in the Program was sought and obtained from the University Curriculum Committee.  Only one full year after the Program was reinstated, 15 undergraduate students were enrolled in the certificate program.

We are inspired by the group of affiliates who stepped forward to develop and teach the first courses before the program had any core faculty.  By giving generously their time and energy they built and strengthened the program.

Women's Studies the beginningIn 1990, the first three core faculty members with joint appointments in Women’s Studies were hired, including Miranda Pollard, Josephine Beoku-Betts, and Cindy Jenefsky. The next year, Patricia Bell-Scott was recruited.  And later, more core faculty were hired.

The 20-hour minor was offered Fall 1991 and the graduate certificate was implemented in early 1992.  The first two graduate certificates were conferred Winter 1992 to Elizabeth Tisdell, who returned to UGA in March 2012 to present our Women’s History Month keynote address, and Trish Shewokis. Joy Beasley became the first undergraduate student to complete a minor in Spring 1993.

In 1993, the Women's Studies Program mourned the tragic loss of Andrea Carson Coley, a beloved certificate student in the program. With an endowment generously donated by her family, Andrew and Kathy Coley, a lecture series was created to bring to UGA’s campus scholars doing cutting-edge research in the area of LGBT Studies. The Andrea Carson Coley Lecture Series, which began in April 1995, is the first lecture series in the United States to focus on LGBT Studies.

Major is Approved in Women's Studies

Women's Studies Major ApprovedThe Women’s Studies Program steadily continued to grow in numbers of courses, faculty, and students throughout the 1990s.  By the Summer of 2000, 116 undergraduate certificates, 10 minors, 4 Interdisciplinary Studies major degrees, and 51 graduate certificates had been conferred.  The A.B. degree in Women’s Studies was approved in 2000.

With the retirement of Dr. Patricia Del Rey in 2001, Dr. Patricia Miller took over the position of director.

On May 11, 2002, the first students graduated with an A.B. degree in Women’s Studies.  Those students were Margaret Mitchell, Kathryn Rhodes, Lotus Seeley, Suzanne Scoggins, and Lindsay Brown. 

In Spring 2004, the Women’s Studies Program gained Institute status and was renamed The Institute for Women’s Studies (IWS). Dr. Doris Kadish was the interim director after Patricia Miller moved on in 2005. Dr. Chris Cuomo was named director in 2006 and held the position until 2009. 

After discovering asbestos, black mold, and various rodents in the Women’s Studies office in the Benson Building, the IWS was moved to offices in Gilbert Hall on North Campus in Spring 2009. Later that year, the Benson Building was demolished.

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Women's Studies Today

Dr. Juanita Johnson-Bailey was named director in 2010 and lead the Institute for over 12 years, stepping down in 2022. Dr. Patricia Richards was appointed the next director and took office in August 2022. IWS currently has 9 core faculty members with some holding joint appointments and over 80 affiliate faculty contributing to our courses and programming.

The Institute for Women’s Studies continues to host a weekly colloquia series each semester, Women’s History Month each March, the annual Andrea Carson Coley Lecture in LGBT studies, and the biennial Women and Girls in Georgia Conference.  In November 2016, the Institute for Women's Studies dedicated the Patricia Del Rey Seminar Room and the Heather S. Kleiner Conference in their Gilbert Hall home to honor the founding director and associate director.  

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The Centennial Professorship in Women's Studies

To celebrate the 100th anniversary of co-education at the University of Georgia in 2018, the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences proposed to establish The Centennial Professorship in Women's Studies. The $250,000 Professorship, funded in part by an anonymous donor, recognizes and supports an outstanding faculty member whose work focuses on interdisciplinary issues of gender and women's history.

Undergraduate Certificate

In 2021, the Institute for Women's Studies proposed an undergraduate certificate in LGBTQ Studies and it passed University Council in April 2021, with the first students enrolling in the certificate in Fall 2021.

Since 2002, over 300 students have graduated with an A.B. degree in Women's Studies, over 300 students have completed the minor in Women's Studies, and over 10,000 students have taken courses in Women's Studies. In 2022, we offered nearly 70 classes undergraduate and graduate courses, serving over 1300 students this year.

Institute for Women's Studies
Photo Credit: Jamie Tyberg

Support UGA Women's Studies

The Institute of Women's Studies appreciates your financial support. Your gift is important to us and helps support critical opportunities for students and faculty alike, including lectures, travel support, and any number of educational events that augment the classroom experience.

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