SPRING
2002 CALENDAR
OF EVENTS |
February | March | April | May
Professor
Maria Angelica Madeira and Professor Mariza Veloso
Graduate
Seminar: "Leituras Brasileiras: Pensamento Social e Literatura
no Brasil"
"Leituras
Brasileiras" is a graduate seminar offered by the Center for
Latin American Studies, the Department of Spanish and Portuguese,
and the Brazilian Consulate. The course will be taught by:
Maria Angelica Madeira, Professor of Literature and Sociology
and Mariza Veloso, Professor of Anthropology and Sociology
at the Universidade de Brasilia and the Instituto
Rio Branco.
Monday, Wednesday, and
Friday, February 4, 6, and 8,
11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. and 1:00-2:00
p.m.
CLAS Conference
Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Photo
of the event
Tulio
Halperin Donghi
"Trying
to Make Sense of Argentina"
Tulio
Halperin Donghi is an Emeritus Professor in the Department
of History at UC Berkeley. A distinguished scholar of Latin
America, Professor Halperin Donghi received the Award for Scholarly
Distinction from the American Historical Association in 1998
for excellence in teaching and research. Among his numerous
publications are Un conflicto nacional: moriscos y cristianos
viejos en Valencia, El Río de la Plata al comenzar el siglo
XIX, and Tradición política española e ideología revolucionaria
de Mayo
Thursday, February 7,
4:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference
Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Photos
of the event
Sebastião
Salgado
Avenali
Lecture
In
conjunction with his exhibit, "Migrations," at the UC
Berkeley and Pacific Film Archive, internationally-acclaimed
photographer Sebastiao Salgado will deliver this year's
Avenali Lecture. He will discuss the subject matter of
his photographs: the migration of peoples worldwide in
response to poverty, repression, and war. Following will
be a conversation with Orville Schell, Dean of the UC
Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.
The
Center for Latin American Studies is a cosponsor of "Migrations," on
view January 16 through March 24. Monday, February
11, 7:30 p.m.
Wheeler Auditorium
Analysis
and commentary for this event
Professor
Salvador Samayoa
"El Salvador: La reforma pactada"
Salvador
Samayoa is Professor of Philosophy at the Universidad Centroamericana
José Simeón Cañas (UCA) in El Salvador. In October 1979
he was named Minister of Education for the Junta Revolucionaria
de Gobierno; in January 1980 he joined a political-military
organization that previously had formed the Frente Farabundo
Martí para la Liberación Nacional (FMLN). He was President
of the Consejo Nacional de Seguridad Publica of El Salvador
and is part of the Comisión Nacional de Desarollo. Professor
Samayoa has written extensively for journals in his country.
(Presentation in Spanish)
Wednesday, February
13, 12:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Photos
of the event
Professor
José Carlos Chiaramonte
"Fundamentos
Jusnaturalistas de los Movimientos de la Independencia Iberoamericana"
José Carlos
Chiaramonte is an Emeritus Professor in the Department of
Philosophy at the Universidad de Buenos Aires. He is the director
of the Instituto de Historia Argentina y Americana at
the Universidad de Buenos Aires and a researcher for
the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas
(CONICET). Among his numerous scholarly publications are Nacionalismo
y liberalismo económicos en Argentina, 1860-1880, La
crítica illustrada de la realidad, and Formas de sociedad
y economía en Hispanoamérica.
(in Spanish)
Thursday, February 14,
12:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Analysis
and commentary for this event
Professor
Charles Bergquist
"The Left and the Paradoxes of Modern Colombian History"
Charles Bergquist is a
professor of history, specializing in labor and Latin America,
at the University of Washington. He has directed the University
of Washington Latin American Studies Program and held the Harry
Bridges Chair in Labor Studies. He is former Director of International
Studies at Duke University and has on several occasions taught
at the National University of Colombia in Bogota. He is author
of Coffee and Conflict in Colombia and Labor in Latin
America, and co-editor of Violence in Colombia, 1900-2000.
Moderated by Professor
Margaret Chowning, Department of History, UC Berkeley
Thursday,
February 14, 4:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Analysis
and commentary for this event
Art
Opening
Eros
Hoagland, "Colombia's
Silent War"
Photographs by Eros Hoagland February 4 - May 31,
2002
For gallery hours, please call us at (510) 642-2088
Join
us for the opening reception:
Thursday, February 28,
6:00-8:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Artist's
Statement and Gallery
Photo
of the event
Professor
Elizabeth Lira
"Observations on a Social Psychology of Reconciliation"
Elizabeth Lira is a Chilean
psychologist and professor at the Universidad Jesuita Alberto
Hurtado. Her current research focuses on Chilean reconciliation
and resistance of memory. She is a supervisor for PRAIS, a
public and mental health program for victims of domestic violence
and human rights violations during the 1973-1990 dictatorship.
Professor Lira has co-authored two books with San Diego State
University Professor Brian Loveman on political reconciliation,
and written a number of other books related to the collective
memory of victims of human rights abuses.
Monday,
March 4, 4:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Analysis
and Commentary for this event
Alfredo Molano
"Conversación Abierta sobre el Conflicto Colombiano"
Alfredo Molano is a Colombian
writer and journalist. He has dedicated much of his work to
issues of displacement, peasant social movements, and the colonization
of frontier lands. Mr. Molano has served as an advisor to the
World Bank in its Peace and Justice Project and is currently
a Visiting Scholar at Stanford University.
(in Spanish)
Thursday, March 7, 4:00
p.m.
CLAS Conference
Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Analysis
and photo of the event
Professor Denise Dresser
Graduate Seminar: "Mexico's Transition to Democracy:
Problems and Prospects"
In dramatic contrast with
previous decades, Mexico is changing at a very fast pace. As
a result of unprecedented transformations, Mexico has ceased
to be the "living museum" of Latin American politics, whose
institutions and practices were well known. Today, in contrast,
the study of Mexico is an exercise in uncertainty and unpredictability.
The objective of the seminar will be to explore the causes,
dynamics and consequences of the "transition." The course will
focus on three main areas: executive-legislative relations
and divided government, the transformation of Mexico's electoral
and party systems, and the impact of new actors in the country's
political geography (i.e., the media, NGO's, transnational
human rights networks).
Denise Dresser is Visiting
Fellow at the Pacific Council on International Policy at the
University of Southern California, on leave from her post as
professor of political science at the Instituto Tecnológico
Autónomo de México (ITAM).The author of numerous articles
and monographs on Mexican politics and U.S.-Mexico relations,
she writes a political column for the Mexico City newspaper Reforma and
the weekly Proceso, and frequently comments on Mexican
politics in the U.S. media. Dr. Dresser received her Ph.D.
from Princeton University.
Fridays in March (8th,
15th & 22nd), 1:00-4:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
LAS 298 1 unit, pass/no-pass grading option
This course has a limited enrollment.
To obtain a class entry
code, interested graduate students must submit a brief narrative
describing their interest and experience in the subject matter.
Please email this statement to tstojkov@uclink.berkeley.edu no
later than March 1, 2002.
Please note: application
deadline has been extended.
Amy
Ross
"From Pinochet to Milosevic: International Law and the Prosecution of the
Powerful"
NOTICE: Due
to unforeseeable circumstances, Professor Ross' talk was
cancelled. We hope to reschedule her presentation for some
time in the near future.
Amy Ross is Assistant Professor
of Geography at the University of Georgia. Prof. Ross received
a Ph. D. in Geography from the University of
California,
Berkeley.
She did a comparative study of truth commissions for her dissertation
entitled, The Body of the Truth: Truth Commissions in Guatemala
and South Africa. Professor Ross has conducted research
at the International Criminal Tribunal for the ex-Yugoslavia
for the past two years and has recently returned from observing
the first two weeks of the Milosevic trial in The Hague.
Tuesday,
March 12, 12:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Film
Presentation
La luna en el espejo / The Moon in the Mirror,
by Silvio Caiozzi (1990)
En
clave metafórica La luna en el espejo representa
el Chile de los tiempos de Pinochet. Viejo y enfermo, el protagonista
controla autoritariamente desde su cama los movimentos y las
actividades de su casa, y en particular de un hijo obediente
y sumiso que al mismo tiempo desea y teme la libertad.
The Moon in the Mirror metaphorically represents Chile
in the Pinochet years. Old and sick, the authoritarian protagonist
controls the movements and activities of his household, in particular
an obedient and submissive son that both desires and fears his
liberty.
(In Spanish, without subtitles)
Wednesday,
March 13, 6:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Professor Mary Roldan
"La Violencia in Historical Perspective: Implications for an Analysis of
the Contemporary Conflict in Colombia"
Mary Roldan is a professor
of Latin American history at Cornell University. An important
figure in the new generation of Colombian historians, Professor
Roldan has written on issues of violence, identity, historical
socio-cultural aspects of the drug trade, and political movement
in Colombia.
Thursday, March 14,
4:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Analysis
and photo of the event
La frontera / The Frontier, by Ricardo Larrain (1991)
Durante
los últimos años
de la dictadura de Pinochet, Ramiro Orellana es condenado al
exilio. La frontera es
un lugar devastador, donde se encontrará con personajes
singulares. La frontera fue muy premiado, recibiendo el
Oso de Plata en el Festival de Berlin en 1992 y Mejor Director
en el Festival de la Habana en 1992.
During the military dictatorship of Chile, Ramiro Orellana is
sentenced to internal exile. The Frontier is a desolate
land inhabited by the world's castaways. The Frontier won
many awards including the Silver Bear at Berlin in 1992 and Best
Director at the Havana Film Festival in 1992.
(In Spanish, without subtitles)
Wednesday,
March 20, 6:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Professor Aníbal Quijano
"Coloniality
of Power in the Modern World"
(First of a three-day series of lectures
on the coloniality of power)
Aníbal Quijano is a professor
of sociology at the Universidad de San Marcos in Lima
and at the State University of New York in Binghamton. Professor
Quijano helped to originally formulate dependency theory in
Latin America. His current research examines the "coloniality
of power" and its implications for the formation of the modern
world-system.
Co-sponsored
with the Department of Ethnic Studies, the Townsend Center
for the Humanities, and the Graduate Theological Union
Wednesday,
April 3, 4:00 p.m.
Analysis
and commentary on this event
Fernando ha vuelto / Fernando Has Returned, by Silvio Caiozzi
(1998)
Fernando ha vuelto del
laureado cineasta chileno Silvio Caiozzi documenta la historia
real de Agave
Díaz, viuda
de Fernando Olivares Mori, quien fue detenido y ejecutado a los
27 años de edad. Caiozzi documenta el sufrimiento
de Díaz al enterarse que entre los restos del patio 29
se encontraban aquellos de su esposo Fernando despues de 25 años
de desaparecido.
Fernando Has Returned by
the distinguished Chilean cinematographer, Silvio Caiozzi,
documents the true
story of Agave Díaz,
widow of Fernando Olivares Mori who was detained and executed
at the age of 27. Caiozzi documents Diaz's pain upon discovering
that her husband's remains were found after having "disappeared" 25
years ago.
(In Spanish, without subtitles)
Also:
Estadio Nacional / National Stadium, by Carmen Luz
Parot (2001)
Estadio nacional,
ganador del Premio Especial del Jurado en el Quinto Festival
de Cine Documental, "es un filme documental
sobre los sobrevivientes y como tal tiene esa carga de agradecimiento,
esperanza y buen humor de los que vieron la cara del horror y
han regresado a la vida," según Rodrigo González, crítico de
La Tercera.
National Stadium,
winner of the Juries Special Prize at the Fifth Festival of
Cinematic Documentary, "is a documentary
about the survivors and as such it is charged with the hope,
happiness, humor and thankfulness of those who saw the face of
horror and have had the good fortune to return to life," states
Rodrigo González, film critic for La Tercera.
(In Spanish, without subtitles)
Wednesday,
April 3, 6:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Professor Sergio Aguayo
Graduate Seminar: "Mexico's Transition to Democracy:
The Role of Human Rights and Security"
Sergio Aguayo is a leading
scholar and commentator on human rights in Mexico. He has been
actively involved in the promotion of democracy and human rights
through such organizations as Civic Alliance and the Mexican
Academy of Human Rights. Professor Aguayo teaches at El
Colegio de México's Center for International Relations.
He will be in residence at UC Berkeley for the month of April.
In addition to giving a public lecture, he will be offering
a graduate seminar at the Center for Latin American Studies.
Thursdays in April (4th,
11th, 18th & 25th), 1:00-4:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
LAS 298 1 unit, pass/no-pass grading option
This course
has a limited enrollment.
To obtain a class entry
code, please submit a brief narrative describing your interest
in the seminar to tstojkov@uclink.berkeley.edu no
later than March 1, 2002.
Please note: application
deadline has been extended.
Professor Walter Mignolo
"Rethinking
the Colonial Model"
(Second of a three-day series of lectures
on the coloniality of power)
Walter Mignolo is a professor of cultural anthropology and romance
language at Duke University. His research focuses on semiotics
and the complicity between eurocentric forms of knowledge production
and global coloniality. His recent publications include The
Darker Side of the Renaissance and Local Histories/Global
Designs.
Co-sponsored by the Center for Latin American
Studies, the Department of Ethnic Studies, the Townsend Center
for the Humanities, and the Graduate Theological Union
Thursday, April 4, 6:00
p.m.
Geballe Room, 220 Stephens Hall
Photo
of the event
Professor Enrique Dussel
"Modernity, Coloniality, and Capitalism in the
World System"
(Third of a three-day series of lectures
on the coloniality of power)
Enrique Dussel is a professor of philosophy at the Universidad
Autonoma Metropolitana in Mexico. He is the founder of Liberation
Philosophy and Ethics of Liberation in Latin America. A world-recognized
philosopher and theologian, he has published more than fifty
books.
Co-sponsored
with the Department of Ethnic Studies, the Townsend Center
for the
Humanities, and the Graduate Theological Union.
Friday, April 5, 2:00
p.m.
3 Leconte Hall
Analysis
and photo of the event
Jeffrey
Hermanson
"Challenges for the Contemporary Mexican Labor
Movement"
Jeffrey Hermanson has been a union organizer for 25 years with
the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union and its successor
UNITE. He formerly was the director of organizing for the carpenters'
union, and is currently Field Representative with the American
Center for International Labor Solidarity in Mexico City.
Monday,
April 8, 9:00 a.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Enrique
Peñalosa
Former Mayor of Bogota
"Towards a More Socially and Environmentally Sustainable Third World
City"
Hailed as one of the most
progressive mayors in Latin America, Mr. Penalosa served as
Mayor of Bogota from 1998-2001. During his administration he
spearheaded large improvements to the city's infrastructure.
He is currently working on a book that proposes a new model
for the Third World city.
Analysis
and photo of the event
Background
paper
Mr. Penalosa's Biography
Pictures
of civic improvements in Bogota
Monday, April 8, 2002,
5:00 p.m.
Morrison Room, 101 Doe Library
El chacotero sentimental / The Sentimental Teaser,
by Gaspar Galaz (2000)
Cuando
un joven y excéntrico locutor de radio deja que
los radioescuchas llamen para contar sus historias de amor, el
show se convierte en un éxitoso santuario donde los más
profundos enredos pasionales son expuestos publicamente.
When
a young and eccentric radio announcer lets anonymous listeners
call in to tell their tales of love, the
show becomes a success
and a sanctuary where people's deepest passions and entangled
love affairs are publicly exposed.
(In Spanish, without subtitles)
Wednesday,
April 10, 6:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Panel
Discussion
"The
U.S. and Mexico: Neighbors in a New Era"
A discussion featuring:
Sergio Aguayo
A founding member of the
Mexican Academy of Human Rights, Professor Aguayo teaches in
the Center for International Relations at El Colegio
de México.
Denise Dresser
A columnist for Reforma and Proceso in Mexico
City, Professor Dresser teaches in the political science department
at Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM).
Antonio R. Villaraigosa
California Assembly Speaker Emeritus and a former Los Angeles mayoral candidate,
Mr. Villaraigosa is a distinguished fellow at the Southern California Studies
Center at the University of Southern California.
Profile
of Antonio Villaraigosa (Berkeley Magazine, 1999)
Sergio Aguayo: Democracy
in Mexico (from Journal of American History, 1999)
Denise Dresser: Mexico:
From PRI Predominance to Divided Democracy (paper presented at the Center
for Latin American Studies, November 2001)
Friday,
April 12, 4:00 p.m.
Room
160, Kroeber Hall Analysis
and photos from the event
Art
Opening
Sylvia and Stephen Sharnoff, "Lichens of Baja California: The
Fringe of the Sonoran Desert"
Photographs by Sylvia and
Stephen Sharnoff For gallery hours, please
call us at (510) 642-2088
Join
us for the opening reception:
Monday, April 15, 6:00-8:00
p.m.
CLAS Second Floor, 2334 Bowditch Street
Gallery
and Description of the Exhibit
Photos
from the Art Opening
Prof.
Marcela Hernández
Romo
"Productive Restructuring and Business Culture
in Mexico"
Starting with the crisis of 1982 and the new transition of the
global economy, businesses implemented a productive global restructuring.
Mexico took part in this process although in a different form.
In Mexico, restructuring has been uneven and heterogeneous. On
the decision of elaborating business strategies for modernization,
not only have structural pressures (such as the market) come
into play but also other factors have intervened such as cultural
aspects that entail a system of meaning and the relationship
of power that is restructured (reinterpreted) in a hierarchical
manner by employers generating different lines of action. The
identification of these cultural codes, like labor ethics, solidarity,
distrust, national wealth among others permit a broader understanding
of business practices within a social, cultural, religious and
economic context specific to Mexico.
Professor
Hernández
Romo is the coordinator of the master's program in Industrial
Sociology and Labor at the Universidad Autonoma de Aguascalientes,
Mexico. She is a currently a visiting scholar at the Center for
Latin American Studies at UC Berkeley.
(presentation
in Spanish) Wednesday,
April 17, 4:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Photo
of the event
Professor Sergio Aguayo
"Mexico at the Crossroads: An Evaluation
of the Fox Administration"
A professor
at El Colegio de México's Center for International
Relations, Sergio Aguayo is a leading expert and commentator
on human rights in Mexico. Aguayo has been actively involved
in the promotion of democracy and human rights through organizations
such as Civic Alliance and the Mexican Academy of Human Rights.
Thursday,
April 18, 5:30 p.m.
Parlor, Women's Faculty Club
Analysis
and photo of the event
Prof. Ramon Grosfoguel
"Coloniality of Power, Caribbean Migration, Global Cities
and Radical Statehood for Puerto Rico"
A
Conversation in the Caribbean Studies Group.
The
Caribbean Studies Group is an interdisciplinary organization
of students committed to providing a forum for
the study of the Caribbean as a "space," and to creating
a cohesive and coherent community of scholars with interest
in the Caribbean. For more information, contact caribbean@socrates.berkeley.edu.
Friday, April 19, 4:00
p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Photos
and summary of the event
Daniel
Kovalik
"Colombia, Human Rights, and U.S. Courts"
Daniel
Kovalik is Assistant General Counsel of the United Steelworkers
of America and one of the chief counsels
for the plaintiffs in
the Alien Tort Claims Act ("ATCA") cases against Coca-Cola
and Drummond Coal. He spoke about these cases and the attempt
to confront human rights abuses in Colombia through litigation
in the U.S. courts.
Read
about Mr.
Kovalik's participation in the ATCA case vs. Coca-Cola
Thursday,
April 25, 12:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Analysis
and photos of
the event
Professor Marco Palacios
"Knowledge Is Power: The Case of Colombian Economists"
Marco Palacios is a professor
in the Latin American history department at El Colegio
de México and the former Chancellor of the Universidad
Nacional. He has published extensively on issues of violence,
economic history, and populist movement. Professor Palacio
is author of the classic account of Colombian history, Coffee
in Colombia.
SEÑALES
DE MARCO PALACIOS ANTE LA FRONTERA COLOMBO-VENEZOLANA, an
interview in Spanish with Professor Palacios from Verbigracia
Thursday, April 25,
4:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Photos
of the event
Dr.
Carmina Brittain
"Transnational Messages: Experiences of Mexican
Immigrant Children in American Public Schools"
Dr. Brittain is a Visiting
Lecturer at the Graduate School of Education at UC Berkeley.
Her research interests include immigrant children's adaptation
in American schools, socio-cultural studies in education, and
urban education. She is the author of Transnational Messages:
Experiences of Chinese and Mexican Immigrants in American Schools.
Monday, April 29, 12:00
p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Photo
of the event
THE
CENTER FOR LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES, with the Brazilian Ministry
of Culture, is proud to present a celebration of
 |
|
Mário
de Andrade
|
THE INAUGURATION OF
THE MÁRIO DE ANDRADE CHAIR IN BRAZILIAN CULTURE
With a lecture by
Benedito Nunes, Professor
Emeritus of Philosophy, Universidade Federal do Pará
"Poesia e filosofia" (Lecture
in Portuguese)
Professor Nunes is one of Latin America's most eminent philosophers and literary
critics. He has published more than ten books about subjects ranging from narrative
theory and modernist poetry to the interface between philosophy and literature.
His publications include O dorso do tigre and O tempo na narrativa.
And a Selection of Brazilian
Music, including the songs of Heitor Villa Lobos,
performed by Ricardo Peixoto and Claudia Villela
An analysis
in Portuguese of Professor Nunes' book, Crivo de
Papel (from Caderno de Sábado, 1998)
Tuesday,
April 30, 2002, 4:00 p.m.
Seaborg Room, Faculty Club
Photos
of the event
Carlos F. Chamorro
"Media and Power in Central America"
What happened to the media after the end of the civil war in
Nicaragua and El Salvador? How has the media developed in other
Central American countries? These questions are examined in a
new documentary by Carlos Chamorro, who will also be on hand
for a discussion of these issues after the film has been shown.
Journalist Carlos F. Chamorro
is currently editor of Confidencial, a Nicaraguan weekly,
and is the host and director of Esta Semana, a weekly
Sunday night television magazine. From 1980 to 1994, he was
the editor-in-chief of the Sandanista newspaper La Barricada.
Interview
with Mr. Chamorro (from the Langara Journalism Review,
1999)
The
website for Confidencial,
Mr. Chamorro' weekly newsmagazine (in Spanish)
(film in Spanish, with
English subtitles)
Co-sponsored with the Graduate
School of Journalism
Wednesday,
May 8, 2002, 7:00 p.m.
Room 105, North Gate Hall (map)
Analysis
of the event
Professor Jeffrey Lesser
"Negotiating National Identity: Immigrants, Minorities
and the Struggle for Ethnicity in Brazil"
Jeffrey Lesser
is Professor of History and Director of the Latin American
and Caribbean Studies Program at Emory University. He
is currently the Fulbright Professor of History at the Universidade
de São Paulo, Brazil.
Websites constructed in Prof. Lesser's classes,
reflecting his research:
Nikkei
Identity in Oizumi, Japan
The
Mexican Immigrant Community in Atlanta
Co-sponsored with the
UC Berkeley Center for Japanese Studies
Thursday,
May 9, 2002, 4:00 p.m.
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
Photos
of the event
Professor Guillermo
O'Donnell
"Some Thoughts on New Democracies and the
Rule of Law"
Guillermo O'Donnell is
the Helen Kellog Professor of Government and International
Studies at the University of Notre Dame. He has served as Academic
Director of the Kellogg Institute for International Studies
and President of the International Political Science Association.
Among his numerous publications are, Modernization and Bureaucratic-Authoritarianism, A
Democracia no Brasil, and Transitions from Authoritarian
Rule.
Paper
on Horizontal Accountability by Professor O'Donnell (from
the website of the Kellogg Institute of International Studies)
(Co-sponsored with Center
for the Study of Law and Society)
Friday, May 10, 2002,
12:10 p.m.
Center for the Study of Law and Society, 2240 Piedmont Ave (map)
Analysis
and photos of the event
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