Monday, June 01, 2009
¡Regresamos!
The SOLAS blog has been re-activated! Follow us here for news, current events, and happy hours!
If anyone has ideas for lecture topics or would like to invite someone in particular to speak, please let me know! Likewise, anyone who is traveling or doing research this summer is more than welcome to share their experiences with us in an informal brown bag setting.
¡Que los vacaciones vayan rey bien y nos vemos en septiembre!
Saludos,
patty
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Mexican Migrants in New York

Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Dr. Judith Adler Hellman, Professor of Political Science at York University in Toronto, will be presenting a talk entitled, “The ‘competitive advantage’ of Mexican migrants in New York: The labor market, the job market, and the Church.”
Dr. Hellman has written a number of books on Mexico including: The World of Mexican Migrants: The Rock and the Hard Place, Mexican Lives, and Mexico in Crisis. She is also the author of the controversial article, "Real and Virtual Chiapas: Magical Realism and the Left"
The presentation will be at 12:00 at the Latin American and Iberian Institute (801 Yale NE).
Refreshments will be provided
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Religous Conflict & Mixtec Idenity Formation in the 1970s
Wednesday, December 5, 2007Third year History Ph.D student, Kathleen McIntyre, will present the results of her field research, "Religious Conflict and Mixtec Identity Formation in the 1970s."
The presentation will be at 12:00 at the Latin American and Iberian Institute (801 Yale NE).
Refreshments will be provided
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST)
Come learn more about Brazil's Landless Workers’ MovementMovimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST) on Wednesday, November 28 @ 12:00 noon
The MST is the largest social movement in Latin America
with an estimated 1.5 million landless members organized
in 23 out of Brazil's 27 states. The MST uses a variety
of tactics including land occupations, marches, and
protests to carry out land reform in a country mired by
unjust land distribution. The talk will focus on how the
movement has survived and even prospered in the face of
government repression and organizational dilemmas. What kinds of factors have lead to their success and what does this mean for other social movements in around the world?
The speaker, Albert Palma, is a PhD student in UNM’s
Political Science Department focusing on Latin American
social movements and will present findings from recent
research in Brazil.
The talk will be at the Latin American & Iberian Institute, located at 801 Yale NE. Refreshments will be provided.
Thursday, November 08, 2007
The U.S. Holocaust in Central America

Through a Glass Darkly: The U.S. Holocaust in Central America.
Monday, November 19, 2007.
7:00 PM
Albuquerque Center For Peace and Justice
(202 Harvard SE)
Thomas Melville, born in 1929, was ordained as a Maryknoll priest and sent to Guatemala in 1957. There he founded co-operatives and worked on economic development and land distribution programs. Melville was exiled from Guatemala for his work in organizing peasants in opposition to the government. After leaving the order and marrying former Maryknoll sister Marjorie Bradford, he returned to the United States to advocate against U.S. government and business practices in Guatemala. The Melvilles participated in the burning of draft records with napalm in Catonsville Maryland in hopes of bringing attention to U.S. involvement in Guatemalan affairs. After serving his time for the Catonsville incident, Melville earned a PhD in cultural anthropology and has continued as a scholar and activist in Guatemalan affairs. He is the author of a number of books including Guatemala: Another Vietnam and Guatemala: The Politics of Land Ownership. The Melvilles currently reside in Mexico.
Indigenous Identity in Monimbó, Nicaragua
Aaron Sussman, who is pursuing Dual Masters Degrees in Latin American Studies and Community & Regional Planning, will present the results of his field research, "Indigenous Identity in Monimbó, Nicaragua as a Catalyst for Community Organizing."
The indigenous community of Monimbó, Masaya, Nicaragua is known for its fervent opposition to external influence. As an indigenous community whose essentialized characteristics have largely disappeared (language, dress), this rebellious and independent nature has been studied through the historical context of armed resistance during the Sandinista Revolution. This research seeks to understand how Monimboseño identity - a product of social, historical, and economic conditions – manifests itself today in the nature and objectives of local community organizing. It reveals that resistance to external forces persists and a real tension has emerged between
traditional institutions and modern development needs.
The presentation will be at 12:00 at the Latin American and Iberian Institute (801 Yale NE).
Refreshments will be provided
Monday, November 05, 2007
Grassroots Healthcare in Chiapas
Wednesday, November 7, 2007,Second year Latin American Studies M.A. student, Wendy Courtemanche, will present the results of her field research, "La otra salud: Envisioning grassroots healthcare in Chiapas."
The presentation will be at 12:00 at the Latin American and Iberian Institute (801 Yale NE).
Refreshments will be provided
Monday, October 29, 2007
Land & Water Managment and Repossession Struggles Among Hispanos in New Mexico

Wednesday, October 31, 2007,
The UNM Richard E. Greenleaf Visiting Scholar, Dana Levin Rojo, will present her work, "Strategies of Survival: Community Land and Water Management and Repossession Struggles among Hispanos in North Central New Mexico after Reies Lopez Tijerina, with Particular Emphasis on the Embudo-Trampas-Truchas area"
Dr. Levin Rojo received her doctorate from the London School of Economics and is Professor of History at the Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Atzcapotzalco, in Mexico City.
The presentation will be at 12:00 at the Latin American and Iberian Institute (801 Yale NE).
Refreshments will be provided
