curriculum vitae | Research
| Teaching
Research
Interests
I am a political and cultural geographer
interested in international rural
development, gender, Latin America, and
immigration from Latin America to the United States.
My current research explores the politics of race, place
and belonging in Woodburn, Oregon--the state's largest city with a
majority Latino/a population. On-going research, based in
Mexico, examines changing gendered political identities and practices
in the wake of opposition party victories within an
indigenous community
located in the state of Michoacán.
Both research projects, in Oregon and
Michoacán, reflect my broad interest in the relationship
between democracy and globalization.
Other interests include:
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The impact of globalization on Latin American
societies—specifically in relation to indigenous peoples,
forest dependent communities, and state-society relations
broadly defined;
-
The relationship between social movements and
democratization throughout the hemisphere;
-
Development theory
and practice, focusing in particular on gender and questions
of citizenship, empowerment and leadership within development projects and
institutions.
-
The construction of
place and belonging on the part of immigrants marginalized in
terms of class, race and "illegality."
Teaching
Interests
Last updated:
07/27/07
Department of Geography, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR
97403-1251 |