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Latin American and Caribbean Studies Program

The Program is designed to help students gain a critical understanding of Latin America, the Caribbean and its people throughout the Americas.

The LACS curriculum includes over 70 courses from disciplines both in the College and Williams School, including Anthropology, Art, Business, Economics, English, French, History, Politics Portuguese, Sociology, and Spanish. The interdisciplinary Program in Latin American and Caribbean Studies (LACS) allows students to explore the region’s histories, cultural practices, socioeconomic structures, and politics, with particular attention to the incremental transformations shaped by the encounter of Indigenous, African, Asian, and European peoples, and subsequent waves of migration from and to the region.

Students who complete the Minor can gain the background necessary for careers in journalism, law, teaching, bilingual education, social work, business, government and international organizations, as well as graduate work in Latin American Studies and related disciplines. Recent graduates have pursued careers in medicine, law, specialized non-profit organizations, business, science research, and urban planning, among others.

More than an area studies about a singular region, the LACS Program explores the Americas in the broader sense.  To understand today’s Western Hemisphere students must make interdisciplinary connections that transcend political borders.  From Canada to Chile and Bermuda to Brazil, our curriculum focuses on the unique experiences that define the Americas.

Jeffrey C. Barnett
Professor of Spanish

Program Info

  • Tucker Hall 313
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    Lexington, Virginia 24450

Seth Michelson

Program Head

Alex Williams

Administrative Assistant

Feature Stories


The Gilman Scholarship Program offers awards of up to $5,000 to U.S. undergraduate students who are Pell Grant recipients.

The Oct. 8 event is presented by Red Sky Performance and is part of the Lenfest Center’s Outreach & Engagement Series.

An authentic Indigenous dinner will accompany Laronde’s talk on Oct. 7 and is part of the Lenfest Center’s Outreach & Engagement Series.

Washington’s first indigenous State Poet Laureate will deliver a reading on Oct. 1 as part of the Lenfest Center’s Outreach & Engagement Series.

The public talk will take place in Kamen Gallery on Sept. 27 and is part of the Lenfest Center’s Outreach & Engagement Series.

Jay Margalus tackes his Design Thinking class for a site visit at the Virginia Innovation Accelerator.

The 2023-2024 academic year at W&L saw the proliferation of several new course offerings for students through a new faculty development initiative offered by the Office of Community-Based Learning (CBL).

Bosking has been awarded a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to teach English in Colombia.

The Chilean activist’s talk will be held Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.

Seth Michelson

The Spanish professor appears as a faculty expert in the film that debuted at the Virginia Film Festival last month.

Zoila Ponce de Leon

Zoila Ponce de León’s chapter is titled “Health Care and the Public-Private Mix in Mexico, Chile, and Peru” and appears in the Latin American section of the publication.

Marcos Perez

Marcos Perez is an assistant professor of sociology.

Delilah Montoya, Casta #2 from Contemporary Casta Portraiture: Nuestra Calidad; 2018; photograph and mixed media; 38 x 26 inches

The solo exhibition will run from April 24 to May 25 in Staniar Gallery inside Ƶ’s Lenfest Center for the Arts.