WILLIAM H - History



WILLIAM H. BEEZLEY

CURRICULUM VITAE

CURRENT POSITIONS:

1998- University of Arizona, Professor of History

2018- editorial board of Transatlantic Cultures.  (Center for the l History of Contemporary Societies, University of Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, and the Center for Research and Documentation on the Americas, Sorbonne Nouvelle University - Paris 

2017- Distinguished Visiting Researcher, UNAM Institute for the study of North America

2007- Distinguido Profesor Visitante, El Colegio de Mexico

2013- Editor-in-Chief, Oxford Research Encyclopedia in Latin American history

2014- Member, Board of Directors, Americas Research Network (Mexico City-Smithsonian Institution)

EDUCATION:

Ph.D. 1969 University of Nebraska

M.A. 1966 University of Nebraska

B.A. 1964 Chico State College, Chico, CA (now California State University)

RECENT HONORS:

2017 Mexican government awarded the Ohtli Medal in recognition of distinguished service to Mexican history and culture.

2018 Research grant, Mexican National Commission on Human Rights

2018 University of Nebraska History Department committee of advisors

2017 Universidad Autónoma Nacional de México Visiting Scholar Fellowship for Spring 2018

2016 Distinguished Alumnus in the Humanities, California State University, Chico, 2016

2013 Michael C. Meyer Book Award for best book on Mexican history in the last five years, Rocky Mountain Conference on Latin American Studies, 2013, for A Companion to Mexican History and Culture.

2008 Aspinall Endowed Visiting Professor, Colorado Mesa University, Grand Junction, Co, 2008 Fulbright Senior Specialist, La Universidad Nacional y La Universidad de Los Andes, Bogotá

2002 College of Social and Behavioral Sciences Graduate Teaching Award, University of Arizona,

2000 The Oxford History of Mexico, edited with Michael C. Meyer chosen as the main selection and the editor’s choice of the History Book Club, June, 2000

RECENT PUBLICATIONS and INTERVIEWS

Online Publication:

Oxford Research Encyclopedia for Latin America (on going). Editor-in-chief

BOOKS:

Cultural Nationalism and Ethnic Music in Latin America (University of New Mexico Press) 2018

Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Mexican History and Culture, 3 vols. (2018)

Judas at the Jockey Club & Other Episodes of Porfirian Mexico. 3rd. ed. 2018

Problems in Modern Mexican History: Sources and Interpretations, with Monica Rankin (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017) and teacher’s manual

“Malbec Matters,” history of the variety on the website of “The Wines of Argentina.”

Mexico--the Essentials (Oxford University Press, 2015)

Oxford History of Mexico, edited with Michael C. Meyer (2nd edition, 2010; Chinese translation,

2013; second edition, 2015)

Mexico: The New Oxford World History Series (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011)

Latin American Popular Culture: An Introduction, with Linda Curcio-Nagy (Maidan, MD:

Rowman & Littlefield, 2nd ed; 2011)

The Companion to Mexican History and Culture (Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwells, 2011)

Mexico's Crucial Century, 1810-1910: An Introduction, with Colin MacLachlan (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2010)

Judas at the Jockey Club & Other Episodes of Porfirian Mexico. Spanish translation. (San Luis: Colegio de San Luis Potosí, 2010)

VIDEO INTERVEWS

“The Democratization of Contemporary Mexico” with Roderic Camp. Interviews with President Felipe Calderón, Mayor Cuauhtemoc Cárdenas, Ambassador Michel Basañez, NAFTA Representative Jaime Serra Puche, Senator Cecilia Soto González, and Senator Ernesto Ruffo. Interviews scheduled with Jorge Madrazo, former attorney general, diplomat, and human rights officer, former head of Mexico’s Human Rights Foundation (Sergio Aguayo), Roberto Zapata Mártinez, Mexican analyst on Security and Violence. (Other interviews scheduled) Videostreamed by Oxford University Press

“Women Embroider Their Personal, Political, and Human Rights.” A documentary on Mexican indigenous women’s use of embroidery to express their rights and demand security.” Interviewing underway, with additional interviews to follow this summer in Oaxaca and Puebla.

“Talking with a Generation: Interviews with Scholars from the 1960s and 1970s” Rocky Mountain Council on Latin American Studies. Competed interviews with Jaime Rodríguez, John Hart, Barbara Tannenbaum, Susan Deeds, Ray Sadler, Charles Harris, Asunción Lavrin, Donna Guy, Lyman Johnson, and Mark Burkholder. (other planned) These will be available on the RMCLAS website.

Oxford University Press Blogs:

Confronting the internet flood of information and misinformation Oct. 2, 2017.

“Centennial of the Constitution of 1917” (Feb. 2, 2017)

FORTHCOMING BOOK PUBLICATIONS:

“Objects and Episodes of Latin American Cultures” (Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwells, 2017)

“Porgy & Bess in the Cold War” (University of Nebraska Press, 2018)

“Moments on the Malbec Trail: The Globalization of the Forgotten Grape” (in writing stage)

“In the Shadow of the Massacre of 1968” (in research and writing stage)

Forthcoming ARTICLES and BOOK CHAPTERS:

“La quema de Judas en Mexico como comentario político y social" en Intercultura (Bogotá,

Colombia);

“Music of Candelaria,” in Candelaria, the Fiesta of Tlacotalpan, Veracruz (Austin: University of Texas Press)

"Performance and Public Sphere: Itinerant Puppet Theatre in Nineteenth- century Mexico City"

The Public Sphere in Mexico, ed. by Gareth Jones (London: University of London Press, forthcoming)

Editor, SPECIAL JOURNAL ISSUES;

Guest Editor, Studies in Latin American Popular Culture 28 (2010). Special issue on

World’s Fairs & Women’s issues.

Guest Editor, The Americas 67, no. 3(Jan. 2011), special issue entitled: “Mexican

Puppets as Popular and Pedagogical Diversions,” with the essay “The Rosete

Aranda Puppets: A century and half of an Entertainment Enterprise,” with

Francisca Miranda

TELEVISION, TESTING AND LEGAL CONSULTANT:

On-camera guest and historical consultant on documentaries and Public Broadcasting programs

and news on television in the U.S., Mexico, Cuba, and Australia.

On-camera expert for 16 PBS episodes of “The Desert Speaks” and “In the Americas” programs about

Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, Dominican Republic, and Trinidad & Tobago and the Blue Ridge Country in the US .

On-Camera expert for two Mexican educational television series.

Documentary in progress, entitled “Escape to freedom: Runaway Slave Communities in Latin America”

Filming complete in Brazil and Colombia. Plans for additional filming in Mexico, Cuba,

and the Dominican Republic.

Princeton ETS (GRE) major field examination consultant

Expert witness on cases for litigation.

ADMINISTRATIVE and TEACHING POSITIONS:

1998- 2014 Director, Oaxaca (Mexico) Graduate Summer Institute in Modern Mexican History

2003- 2005 University of Arizona, Interim Director, Center for Latin American Studies

declined appointment as permanent director.

2000 Tulane University, Inaugural Richard E. Greenleaf Endowed Chair in Latin American Studies

1989-1998 Texas Christian University, Inaugural Neville G. Penrose Endowed Chair in Latin American History

1972-1991 North Carolina State University

1968-1972 State University of New York, Plattsburgh

VISITING PROFESSORSHIPS:

Sept. 2008 Fulbright Senior Specialist, La Universidad Nacional, Bogotá, Colombia

Oct. 2006 La Universidad de Colima,

Summer 1996 University of British Columbia, Vancouver,

Summer 1983 University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta

Spring 1982 University of Texas, Austin

Summer 1979 Guadalajara Summer School (Guadalajara, Mexico)

Fall 1975 University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Summer 1970 Instituto de Estudios Ibero-Americanos, Saltillo, Mexico

Summer 1968 University of Nebraska

CURRENT EDITORIAL BOARDS:

"Columela: Revista Iberoamericana de viticultura, agroindustria y ruralidad" (Santiago, Chile)

The Americas (Senior Editor)

Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research (University of Technology, Sydney, Australia)

Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos (UC-Santa Barbara)

International Journal of Sport History

Latin American Studies, Mexico portal. Cengage Learning, Inc.

Studies in Latin American Popular Culture

PUBLICATIONS:

I. Mexico and Latin America

Book Series Editor:

The Mexican Experience. Series Editor. University of Nebraska Press, since 2008

Latin American Silhouettes, Series Editor, since 1989; Rowman & Littlefield) with

Judy Ewell, College of William and Mary.

Jaguar Books: Topics in Latin American Affairs Series Editor, since 1991; Rowman &

Littlefield) with Colin MacLachlan, Tulane University.

Books and Articles:

Oxford History of Mexico, edited with Michael C. Meyer, new centennial edition (2010)

“America Isn't the Only Country Celebrating Its Revolution,” History News Network (July 5, 2010)

“Gabardine Suits and Guayabera Shirts: Some Comments on the Populist political styles of

Lázaro Cárdenas and Luis Echeverría” in Men of the People: Populism in Mexico under

Lazaro Cardenas and Luis Echeverria, edited by Amelia M. Kiddle and María L.O.

Muñoz (Tucsonforthc: University of Arizona Press, 2010)

“Edmundo O’Gorman, Daniel Cosío Villegas, and the Mexican History Profession: An Interview

with Josefina Vázquez,” The Americas (2010)

“La Independencia y Vale Coyote: La formación del Identidad Nacional” 20/10 (Dec. 2009): 68- 86.

Mexican National Identity: Memories, Innuendos, Popular Culture. (Tucson, University of Arizona Press, 2008)

Spanish translation, Colegio de San Luis Potosí, 2008)

“Arte en la calle. Los Títeres de la Compañía de Rosete Aranda y La imagen del Mexicano,” en La Mirada, mirada. Transculturalidad e imaginarios del México revoluionario, 1910-1945 (México: Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2008)

“Prefacio,” for Luis Edgardo Coronado Guel, La Alameda Potosina ante la llegada del ferrocarril. Espacio, poder e institucionalización de la ciudadanía moderna en San Luis

Potosí. San Luis Potosí; Secretaría de cultura, 2009.

Mexicans in Revolution: An Introduction, with Colin MacLachlan (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2009)

Governors and the Revolution, 1910-1952, ed. with Jurgen Buchenan ( Boulder: Rowman

& Littlefield, 2009)

“Cómo fue que El Negrito salvó a México de los franceses: las fuentes populares de la identidad nacional,” Historia Mexicana, no. 226 (Octubre–Diciembre, 2007), pp. 405-444.

“Reflections on the Historiography of Twentieth-Century Mexico,” History Compass: The Electronic Journal (currently making editorial changes).

with David L. Lorey, editors, Viva Mexico, Viva La Independencia: Celebrations of September 16 (Wilmington, DE: SR Books, 2001)

with Linda Curcio-Nagy, editors, Latin American Popular Culture: An Introduction (Wilmington, DE: SR Books, 2000)

with Michael C. Meyer, editors, The Oxford History of Mexico (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000

with Colin MacLachlan Latin America: the Peoples and their History (Fort Worth: Harcourt-Brace, Inc., 2000)

with Colin MacLachlan, El Gran Pueblo: A History of Greater Mexico, 1821-1992 (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc.,1994), 2 vols. and 1 vol. combined; second edition, 1998; third edition, 2003).

with Cheryl E. Martin and William E. French, eds. Rituals of Rule, Rituals of Resistance: Public Celebrations and Popular Culture in Mexico (Wilmington, DE: SR Books, 1994)

Judas at the Jockey Club & Other Episodes of Porfirian Mexico (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1987); paperback edition, 1989; 2nd edition, 2004).

Insurgent Governor: Abraham Gonzalez and the Mexican Revolution in Chihuahua, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1973.

with David C. Bailey, Guide to Historical Sources and Archives of Coahuila, Mexico, East Lansing: Michigan State University, 1976. Latin American monograph no. 13.

with W. Dirk Raat, eds., Twentieth-Century Mexico (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1986; 2nd printing, 1989; 3rd printing, 1990; 4th printing, 1992).

with Judith Ewell, eds., The Human Tradition in Latin America: The Twentieth century (Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources, Inc., 1987); 2nd printing, 1989; 3rd printing, 1991.

with Judith Ewell, eds., The Human Tradition in Latin America: The Nineteenth Century (Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources, Inc., 1989)

with Judith Ewell, eds., The Human Tradition in Modern Latin America (Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources, Inc., 1997)

"Home Altars for Day of the Dead," in Dana Salvo, ed., Home Alters of Mexico (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico, 1997), pp. 91-122.

"Chihuahua in the Diaz Era," in William D. Raat, ed., Mexico: From Independence to Revolution, 1810-1910 (Fredonia: SUNY, 1974): 132-139. (Reissued by University of Nebraska Press,1982.) with Michael C. Meyer, "Research in the Military Revolution,1910-1920," in Research in Mexican History by Michael C. Meyer, and Richard E. Greenleaf. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1973. pp. 163-167.

"Madero: The `Unknown' President and His Political Failure to Organize Rural Mexico," in Essays on the Mexican Revolution edited by George Wolfskill and Douglas W. Richmond (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1979): 1-25.

"The Children of Gonzalez: Opportunities for Further Regional Study," in Thomas Benjamin and William McNellie, editors, Other Mexicos: Essays on Regional Mexican History, 1876-1911 (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1984): 275-299.

Numerous articles including the following as examples:

"Judas, Rabelais, and Abner Doubleday: Tradition vs. Modernity in Mexico," Proceedings of the Rocky Mountain Conference on Latin American Studies (Las Cruces, NM: New Mexico State University, 1984): 3-15.

"El Estilo Porfiriano: Deportes y Diversiones de fin de Siglo," Historia Mexicana 33, no. 130 (Oct. 1983): pp. 265-284.

"The Rise of Baseball in Mexico and the first Valenzuela," Studies in Latin American Popular Culture 4 (1985): pp. 1-14.

"Recent Mexican Political Humor," Journal of Latin American Lore 11, no. 2 (1985): pp. 195-223.

"Bicycles, Modernization, and Mexico," in Joseph L. Arbena, ed., Sport and Society in Latin America (New York: Greenwood Press, 1988), pp. 15-28.

"Sons and Daughters of the Cisco Kid: Images of Mexicans in American Popular Culture," Imagenes Reciprocas: La educacion en las relations Mexico-Estados Unidos de

America (Mexico City: Serie de Anuies-Profmex, 1991): pp. 277-287.

II. History and Folklore of American Sport:

The Wolfpack: Intercollegiate Athletics at North Carolina State University, Raleigh: University Graphics, 1977.

With Joseph P. Hobbs, "Nice Girls Don't Sweat: Women in American Sport," Journal of Popular Culture 16, no. 4 (Spring 1983): 42-53; reprinted in D. Stanley Eitzen, Sport in Contemporary Society: An Anthology, 2 ed. (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1984): 353-367.

"The 1961 Scandal at North Carolina State and the End of the Dixie Classic," Arena Review: The Institute for Sport and Social Analysis 7, no. 3 (November 1983): 33-52. reprinted in Donald Chu, Jeffrey O. Segrave, and Beverly J. Becker, eds., Sport and Higher Education (Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics Publishers, Inc., 1985): 81-100.

"Images of the Student Athlete in College Football," in Sandra Kereliuk, ed., The University's Role in The Development of Modern Sport: Past, Present and Future (Edmonton, Alberta: Proceedings of the FISU Conference-Universiade '83, 1983):447-461.

Consultant, U.S. News and World Report (Aug. 13, 1984) special issue on "Sports Crazy Americans," see p. 28.

“Scandal on the Hudson," Sports Heritage 1, no. 3 (May, 1987): pp. 42-52.

III. TEACHING ARTICLES

with Ronald D. Tallman and Thomas Henriksen, "History for the 70s: An Approach to Contemporary History," History Teacher 6, no. 1 (Nov. 1972): 6-16.

"Hacienda, the Game of Life" (A Simulation Game for Classroom Use) Southeastern Conference on Latin American Studies, 12 (March 1976): 44-54.

"Colonial Latin America," and "Latin America from Independence to the Present," in John F. Bratzel and Leslie B. Rout, Jr., eds., Latin American History: Selected Reading Lists and Course Outlines from American Colleges and Universities (New York: Markus Wiener Publishing, Inc., 1986): pp. 30, 44-45.

"History of American Sport," in Douglas A. Noverr and Lawrence E. Ziewacz, eds., Sport History: Selected Readings Lists and Course Outlines from American Colleges and Universities (New York: Markus Weiner Publishing, Inc., 1987): 101-104.

"Humanities Without Humor," in Interpreting the Humanities, vol. II

(Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, 1986): pp. 157-158.

HONORS:

Distinguished Alumnus in the Humanities, California State University, Chico, 2016

Michael C. Meyer Book Award for best book on Mexican history in the last five years, Rocky

Mountain Conference on Latin American Studies, 2013, for A Companion to Mexican

History and Culture.

Named an Affiliate UNESCO-University and World Heritage Centre, 2009

Aspinall Endowed Visiting Professor, Mesa State College, Grand Junction, Co, spring, 2008

Fulbright Senior Specialist, La Universidad Nacional y La Universidad de Los Andes, Bogotá,

Colombia to teach seminar sessions on cultural history methodology. Aug.-Sept. 2008

Seminar (12 hours), CIESAS-Occidente, Guadalajara, Mexico, Cultural history methodology and historiography. 2008 21 master’s and Ph.D. students.

Named to Fulbright Senior Specialists Roster for consultations in Latin America, 2007

The Oxford History of Mexico, edited with Michael C. Meyer chosen as the main selection and

the editor’s choice of the History Book Club, June, 2000

Judas at the Jockey Club. Chosen as selection of the History Book Club. July, 1987.

Theo Crevanna Award For Distinguished Service in the Promotion of the Binational

Latin American Studies, presented by RMCLAS, 2007

Graduate Teaching Award, University of Arizona, Honorable Mention winner, 2004,

2003

Certificate of Recognition as a Graduate Mentor, University of Arizona, Graduate and

Profession Student Association, 2003

College of Social and Behavioral Sciences Graduate Teaching Award, University of

Arizona, 2002

Edwin Lieuwen Memorial Prize for Excellence in the Teaching of Latin American

Studies, presented by the Rocky Mountain Conference on Latin American Studies, 2001

Outstanding Teacher Award, North Carolina State University, 1977, 1981. Nominated

for this award every year, 1976-1988

Distinguished Research and Creative Activity Award in the Social Sciences, TCU, 1997

Nason Award for Distinguished Service to the Rocky Mountain Council on Latin

American Studies, Santa Fe, NM, 1996

Norman F. Furniss Lectures in History, Colorado State University, February 28-29, 1999

Hilliard Distinguished Professor of the Humanities for 1994. University of Nevada, Reno.

First Charles Cumberland & David Bailey Memorial Lecturer, Michigan State University, East Lansing, September 9, 1993.

Charles & Willoughby Nason Memorial Lecturer, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM, February 16, 1990

Walter Prescott Webb Lecturer, University of Texas-Arlington, 1978.

GRANTS AND FELLOWSHIPS:

Indigenous Women Embroider their political, civil, and human rights (video interviews)

Americas Research Network (2017)

Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center, “Documentary Interviews with former Mexican

Presidents,” with Roderic Camp (2015)

AHSS-UA, "Yaqui Personal Histories, 1900-1930: Preservation,

Transcription, Translation and Analysis." With Heidi Harley, Linguistics.

Fulbright Senior Lecturer, Colombia 2008

U.S. State Department Grant through the Guadalajara Consulate to lecture in Coloma,

2006

State of Arizona TRIF Grant to investigate EMexico, 2004-2005

William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Grant, 2002-2003

William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Grant, 2000-2002.

William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Grant, 1998-2000

Mellon Grant, Center for Latin American Studies, Tulane University, for research in Tulane Collections, Spring, 1998William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Grant, 1997-1998

Faculty Research Grant, TCU, Summer, 1996

Texas Endowment for the Humanities, Fall, 1992

Faculty Research Grant, TCU, Summer, 1990.

Mellon Grant, Center for Latin American Studies, Tulane University, for research in Tulane Collections, Spring, 1987.

Woodrow Wilson Institute on Interpreting the Humanities. Hobart and William Smith Colleges, June, 1986.

Fulbright Commission Fellow. South American Seminar. Summer, 1985.

Mellon Grant, Center for Latin American Studies, Tulane University, for research in the Tulane collections, Spring, 1985.

National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute. Seminar on Cross-Cultural Analysis of Humor, University of California, Berkeley, 1984.

American Philosophical Society, Summer Grant-in-aid, 1983.

Junior Fellow, the Folger Library, Washington, D.C., Spring 1979.

National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute for College Teachers. Seminar on Folklore, Indiana University, Summer, 1978.

U.S. Department of Education, American Faculty and Staff Study Abroad Summer Grant for Research in Ecuador (administered by Shaw University), Summer 1977.

Mini-grant for Teaching Innovation, North Carolina State University, to develop 6 videotapes on Mexican History, Spring, 1977.

National Endowment for the Humanities, Summer Research Grant, 1975.

Faculty Research and Development Grant, North Carolina State University, Summer 1973.

Fellow, Summer Training Institute of Humanistic Computation, University of Kansas, sponsored by the American Council of Learned Societies, Summer 1972.

American Philosophical Society, Summer Grant-in-aid, 1972.

State University of New York, Faculty Research Grant, 1971.

New York Center for International Programs, Summer Grant, 1969.

University of Nebraska Travel Grant, Summer 1967

N.D.E.A. Title IV Fellow, 1964-1968.

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PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES and INVITED LECTURES:

Through the Rocky Mountain Council on Latin American Studies, I participated in the development of an Outreach program for k-12 teachers throughout the region. This program offered workshops and curriculum materials. These workshops ran from 1987 to 1995.

I have given over a hundred-fifty invited lectures and seminars at universities in the US, Canada, Latin America, Australia, England (Oxford, Cambridge, and Warwick), Italy (University of Torino) and France (Toulouse Université). These include Yale, Johns Hopkins, Princeton, Tulane, University of California campuses at Berkeley, Los Angeles, Davis, Irving, Santa Barbara, and San Diego, Stanford, Washington, Illinois, Michigan State, Nebraska, Colorado, Texas, Pomona, McGill, Toronto, York, Calgary, British Columbia, LaTrobe, and New South Wales, among others.

In Latin America, I have given lectures or seminars in Mexico at La Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, El Colegio de México, La Universidad Autónoma Metropólitana--Iztapalapa, El Instituto Mora, Mexico City; La Universidad IberoAmericana, Mexico City; La Universidad de Colima; Instituto Tecnologico de Monterrey--Guadalajara; El Colegio de Saltillo, El Colegio de San Luis, La Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí, Universidad de Las Americas, and the Colegio de Sonora; In Guatemala at Universidad de San Carlos. In Peru: la Pontifiana Universidad Catolica del Peru;, El centro de documentacion de mujeres," In Chile,; Universidad Católica, Santiago, and Universidad de Talca. In Colombia, at la Universidad Nacional, Universidad de Los Andes, and La Universidad Javeriana; in Argentina, at la Universidad de Buenos Aires, and in Brazil, at la Universidade de Campinas.

Most recently I have given invited lectures at the US Naval Academy, Whitman College,, UC-Berkeley, the Colegio de Mexico, Colegio de San Luis, and Johns Hopkins University, and the Library of Congress. I presented a series of lectures at the University of Wyoming and I gave seminars or lectures in Mexico City, Guadalajara, Havana, and Toulouse.

I have supported the profession by evaluating grants for Fulbright, the American Philosophical Society, National Humanities Center, and other US foundations as well German and Mexican foundation. I have also evaluated and written letters for more than 50 individuals being considered for promotion and tenure at US and Canadian universities.

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