El Noticiero de IUPLR



The Electronic Monthly Newsletter for the IUPLR network of member centers,
associates, researchers and scholars.

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January 2003
Volume 7, No.5
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IUPLR Headquarter News
Center News
Opportunities for Your Students
Faculty Opportunities
Events, Conferences, Submissions, Other


INSIDE the January 2003 Noticiero de IUPLR:

  • The Smithsonian Institution is accepting applications and nominations for Director of the Smithsonian Center for Latino Initiatives
  • The University of New Mexico’s Southwest Hispanic Research Institute is issuing a call for applications for SHRI Director
  • The Hispanic Research Center at Arizona State University will launch the first of a series of annual events to be celebrated during Cinco de Mayo
  • NEA, the Dirksen Foundation, and Mexico-Norte announce various funding opportunities for faculty and students
  • Indiana University’s Department of History and Latino Studies Program seek a historian of the Mexican origin population in the United States, rank open
  • The University of California’s Institute for Mexico and the United States (UC MEXUS) announces its 2003-2004 funding opportunities
  • The California Policy Research Center recently issued a new report entitled, “California’s Latinos: Assets at Risk.”
  • The Mexico-North Research Network will hold its next annual members meeting on February 28 and March 1, 2003, in San Antonio, Texas

IUPLR HEADQUARTER NEWS

Happy New Year!!

This is the Noticiero's 7th year as an electronic informational outlet for the IUPLR network of scholars and member centers. Be sure to visit the IUPLR web site at: http://www.nd.edu/~iuplr. There, you can view past issues of the IUPLR Noticiero.

Please send your center updates, center events, faculty news, faculty opportunities, fellowship opportunities, and publication news to: vsaenz@prodigy.net.

 

CENTER NEWS

Smithsonian Center for Latino Initiatives, Smithsonian Institute

The Smithsonian Institution is accepting applications and nominations for Director of the Smithsonian Center for Latino Initiatives. The Smithsonian Center for Latino Initiatives was established to promote the inclusion of the Latino experience in appropriate Smithsonian programs and exhibitions. The Center’s purpose includes coordinating and providing linkages among Smithsonian Latino-related initiatives in the areas of research, exhibitions, and educational outreach, and providing a point of access for external Latino constituencies, including Latino organizations. The Director, SCLI, provides leadership in fulfilling the Center’s mission of fostering understanding and appreciation of the Latino foundations of American society and culture through the generation and diffusion of new knowledge based on the collections resources of the Smithsonian, its unique research environment, its tradition of public scholarship, and its diverse education and public programs, both in Washington, D.C. and throughout the nation. The Director reports to the Under Secretary for American Museums and National Programs (USAMNP). The incumbent also works closely with the Smithsonian Institution’s National Board for Latino Initiatives. Interested applicants should send a resume and cover letter to: Thomas Lawrence, Smithsonian Institution, 750 9th Street NW, Suite 6100, Washington DC 20560-0912. For more information, call (202-275-0944) or send an email to: lawrencet@hr.si.edu.

Southwest Hispanic Research Institute, University of New Mexico

The University of New Mexico’s Southwest Hispanic Research Institute is issuing a call for applications for SHRI Director. Interested applicants should be tenurable at the level of full (or associate) professor in one of the departments in UNM's College of Arts and Sciences and have a record of substantial success in generating grant funding from federal and private foundation sources in areas of research, service, and curriculum. The primary duties of SHRI Director include: administering all grants and contracts awarded to SHRI; supervising staff, staff projects, and activities; developing extramural funding from governmental and foundation sources; coordinating SHRI Working Paper Series; and collaborating with University departments, colleges and schools on co-sponsored projects, to list a few. Interested applicants should send a letter of intent including a description of the applicant's skills and a curriculum vita to: Felipe Gonzales, Professor, Sociology, Director, Southwest Hispanic Research Institute, University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-1166. For more information, please call (505) 277-4325.

Chicano Studies Research Center, UCLA

This month the CSRC begins a new series of Faculty Exchanges, informal presentations on research by faculty members and scholars associated with the Center. Alicia Gaspar de Alba will speak on the topic of the Maquiladora Murders on Monday, January 13, 2003 from 12:00 Noon to 1:00 PM. In subsequent months, exchanges will include Lisa Catanzarite, Jose Alamillo, Laura Gomez, Clara Chu, Vilma Ortiz, and Edward Telles.

Professors Vilma Ortiz and Eddie Telles's Mexican American Study Project has moved to the CSRC. Now in the data analysis phase, this project--which extends the Grebler, Moore, and Guzman research of the 1960s--will provide a definitive longitudinal study of the Mexican-origin population. More information about this project can be obtained on-line at http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/issr/masp/.

The CSRC will hold a three-session workshop with pizza for graduate students on how to write and publish a book review for the peer-reviewed Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies. Meetings will be Tuesday evenings, January 21, April 1, and May 13. The instructors will be Wendy Belcher, managing editor of Aztlán; Chon A. Noriega, professor of film studies and a long-time journal editor; and Alicia Gaspar de Alba, professor of Chicana/o studies and recently appointed co-editor.



Hispanic Research Center, Arizona State University

The Hispanic Research Center at Arizona State University will launch the first of a series of annual events to be celebrated during the Cinco de Mayo period in Scottsdale, Arizona, and quite possibly, through internet hook up in other places such as Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Austin, San Antonio, Houston, El Paso, Chicago, New York and Mexico City. The event is provisionally entitled: Latina/Latino Art: First International Auction and Conferences. Please plan to take part in these events in early May 2003. For more information, please send an e-mail to hrcartprojects@asu.edu, or to Gary D. Keller, Regents’ Professor, at gary.keller@asu.edu. He can also be reached at (480) 965-3990.


Cuban Research Institute, Florida International University

Building on the success of its previous conferences, the Cuban Research Institute continues the tradition of convening every 18 months all those persons committed to the study of the Cuban nation. The 5th CRI Conference on Cuban and Cuban-American Studies will be held on October 22-25, 2003, at the University Park Campus of Florida International University. They will consider all papers, but strongly encourage the submission of proposals for panels, especially on "the transnational nation". Deadline for submission of all paper and panel proposals is February 15, 2003. For further details on this or other CRI activities, please check their website at http://lacc.fiu.edu/cri.
For more information or to send your abstract, contact: Lisandro Pérez, Director (perezl@fiu.edu) or Uva de Aragón, Associate Director (aragonu@fiu.edu) at: Cuban Research Institute, Florida International University, DM 363, University Park, Miami, FL 33199, or be phone at (305) 348-1991.

The Julián Samora Research Institute, Michigan State University

Visit the Latino News section of the JSRI website. It is updated often and offers insightful articles to Latino news around the globe. The link is: http://jsri.msu.edu/cgi-bin/news/index.cgi.

Chicano Studies Research Program, University of Texas at El Paso

Thursday, January 9, 2003, 3:30-5:00pm
A lecture entitled: "Official Sources for Personal and Policy History: Border Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service circa 1903-1955," by Marian L. Smith, Historian, Immigration and Naturalization Service. This lecture will be held at the Undergraduate Learning Center (UGLC), Room 220 and it is sponsored by Paso al Norte Immigration Museum, Chicano Studies and the Center for Inter-American and Border Studies.

For more info on Center events, contact (915) 747-5462, or visit their website at http://www.utep.edu/chicano/events.htm.

 

OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOUR STUDENTS

The Institute for Latino Studies looks for a research support assistant. The assistant provides technical assistance to Institute for Latino Studies staff and members of the Inter-University Program for Latino Research (IUPLR), in the acquisition and management of the demographic and survey data archives, including the holdings for the Census Information Center Project. Bachelor's degree in social science or computer science is essential. Applications should be sent no later than January 31, 2003 to: Erin E. Smith Employment Specialist, University of Notre Dame, and Office of Human Resources, 100 Grace Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556. For more information, click on http://www.nd.edu/~latino/education/jobs_ils.html.

The Dirksen Congressional Center invites applications for grants totaling $35,000 in 2003 to fund research on congressional leadership and the U.S. Congress. The competition is open to individuals with a serious interest in studying Congress. Political scientists, historians, biographers, scholars of public administration or American studies, and journalists are among those eligible. The Center encourages graduate students to apply and awards a significant portion of the funds for dissertation research. Undergraduate or pre-Ph.D. study, research teams of two or more individuals and organizations are not eligible. Applicants are responsible for showing the relationship between their work and the awards program guidelines. Applications are accepted at any time. All application materials must be postmarked on or before February 1, 2003. Awards will be announced in March 2003. Complete information about eligibility and application procedures may be found at The Center’s Web site: http://www.dirksencenter.org/grantcongresearchaward.htm. Frank Mackaman is the program officer, and he can be reach by e-mail at: fmackaman@dirksencenter.org.

Through fellowships to published creative writers and translators of exceptional talent in the areas of prose and poetry, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) seeks to advance its goal of encouraging and supporting artistic creativity and preserving America's diverse cultural heritage by expanding opportunities for artists to create and refine work. The program operates on a two-year cycle with fellowships in prose available one year and fellowships in poetry available the next. Grants are for $10,000 to $20,000. See the NEA Web site at http://www.nea.gov/guide/Lit04/Litindex.html for further details and for information on obtaining the complete application booklet. For additional RFPs in Arts and Culture, visit: http://fdncenter.org/pnd/rfp/cat_arts.jhtml.

Mexico-North is pleased to announce the 2003 competition for fellowships in its Program in US-Mexican Transnationalism. The fellowships are available to both graduate students and Ph.D. scholars. Eight fellowships will be awarded, four to US scholars who will conduct research at Mexican institutions that are members of the Mexico-North Research Network and four to Mexican scholars who will conduct research at US institutions that are members of Mexico-North. This fellowship program is made possible by support from the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the United States Department of State and the Dirección de Comunidades Mexicanas en el Exterior and the Dirección General para América del Norte of Mexico’s Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores. Research projects on any aspects of U.S-Mexican transnationalism will be considered, but the projects must focus on topics that have not been thoroughly explored and must contribute significantly to the advancement of scholarship on transnationalism. Application packets should be mailed by January 15, 2003 to: The Mexico-North Research Network, Transnationalism Fellowship Program, 318 W. Houston Street, Suite 220, San Antonio, TX 78205. All inquiries regarding the fellowship program should be directed to Ms. Greta de León, Director of Programs at (210) 229-1055. Further information on the Mexico-North Research Network is available at www.mexnor.org.

FACULTY OPPORTUNITIES

Indiana University’s Department of History and Latino Studies Program seek a historian of the Mexican origin population in the United States, rank open. This is a tenure-track or tenured position. The department is interested in historians of the Mexican-American experience in the United States as well as the process of migration, but will also be asked to teach Latino history survey courses. The tenure home will be in the History Department, but the successful applicant will participate actively in developing IU’s growing Latino Studies Program. The position is currently open until filled. Applicants should send a letter of application, c.v., sample of scholarly writing, and three letters of reference to Latino History Search Committee, Department of History, Indiana University, 1020 E. Kirkwood Ave., Bloomington, IN 47405. Additional information on the history department is available at http://www.indiana.edu/~histweb/

and additional information on the Latino Studies Program is available at http://www.indiana.edu/~latino/.

The South Texas Center for Rural Public Health (STCRPH) in McAllen, Texas, is a satellite campus of the Texas A&M University System Health Science Center and the School of Rural Public Health. This year, an Assistant Dean and one faculty member are being recruited and will be housed in a new building designed to accommodate up to ten faculty members. Candidates for the Assistant Dean position should have a doctorate in public health or in a closely related field. They should have demonstrated accomplishments and experience in teaching and scholarly activities such as research, grantsmanship, and peer-reviewed publications that will allow appointment as Associate or Full Professor with tenure. Experience in academic administration and border health experience are desirable. Bilingual applicants are preferred. In addition to an Assistant Dean, the School is recruiting a faculty member to join the growing faculty research team at STCRPH. We are particularly interested in recruiting a faculty member in epidemiology, biostatistics, health economics, or community organization and development. Qualified applicants in other areas of social and behavioral health or in environmental health are also encouraged to apply. Experience with border health issues and Spanish speaking are desirable. The faculty position may be tenure or non-tenure track depending upon the qualifications of the applicant. Interested individuals should submit a cover letter, curriculum vitae, and the names, addresses, and telephone number of three references to: Dr. Kenneth McLeroy, Chair, Search Committee for the Assistant Dean, School of Rural Public Health, 3000 Briarcrest Drive, Suite 310, Bryan, Texas 77802. For additional information you may contact Dr. McLeroy at (979) 845-2387 or kmcleroy@srph.tamushsc.edu. Review of applicants will begin December 15, 2002, and continue until the position is filled.

The Chicana/o Studies Program at the University of Wisconsin at Madison invites applications for a tenure-track Assistant Professor, beginning August 2003. Applications are invited from qualified persons with expertise in Chicana/o and Latina/o Studies and a specialization in a variety of areas, including but not restricted to Sociology, Communication Arts, Social Work, or Psychology. Areas of particular interest are open, including demography, immigration, transnational labor, social movements; film and television studies, the role of communication media in forming ideas about social identity; border culture; cognitive psychology, educational equity and diversity; social constructions of gender, race, ethnicity, sexuality, class, and nation; social work services to communities of color, child welfare, macro practice, and health and mental health among Chicano families. This position includes professorial duties in the Chicana/o Studies Program and a tenure-granting department. Application deadline is January 15, 2003, or until position is filled. Interested applicants should send letter of application, CV, sample publications, and three letters of recommendation to: Professor Rubén Medina, Director, Chicana/o Studies Program, University of Wisconsin, 313 Ingraham Hall, 1151 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI 53706.

The University of California’s Institute for Mexico and the United States (UC MEXUS) announces its 2003-2004 funding opportunities. UC MEXUS was established in 1980 to identify, focus, and augment the resources of the campuses of the University of California as they relate to research, education, creative activity, and public service concerning Mexico and people of Mexican origin. Funding is available for projects conducted by UC researchers or research teams in the following areas: Mexico-Related Studies; Latino Studies; United States-Mexican Relations; Critical U.S.-Mexico Issues; Latino and Mexican Topics in the Arts; Collaborative Research Projects with Investigators at Mexican Institutions. The detailed information and application instructions for all 2003-2004 UC MEXUS funding opportunities may be accessed on the UC MEXUS program Web Pages at http://www.ucmexus.ucr.edu/funding/index.htm. Projects in Latino Studies may qualify for additional funding through UC MEXUS UCCLR funds. Please refer to the web site for more details. For more information, contact Andrea Kaus, Ph.D., Program Officer, UC MEXUS Universitywide Headquarters, 3324 Olmsted Hall, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521. She can also be reached at (909) 787-3586 or by e-mail at: andrea.kaus@ucr.edu.

The Department of Education at the University of California, Los Angeles announces an open rank, tenure-track faculty position in higher education, specializing in one of the following areas: equity and access, student learning and development, and higher education policy. Special consideration will be given to those candidates who possess the ability to train graduate students in quantitative methodologies. The Department is particularly interested in and values candidates who have experience working with students from diverse backgrounds and a demonstrated commitment to improving access to and the conditions in higher education for underrepresented students. The candidate will be affiliated with the Division of Higher Education and Organizational Change (HEOC) in the Department of Education. Send application letter describing your research and teaching interests, along with curriculum vitae, sample publications, and three references to: Daniel G. Solorzano, Chair, Department of Education, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1521. The screening of applications will begin on January 15, 2003 and continue until the position is filled. For more information, contact Professor Patricia McDonough, Chair of the Search Committee, at
heocsearch@gseis.ucla.edu.

The University of South Florida is seeking an experienced leader with a distinguished academic and administrative record to direct the University's interdisciplinary Latin American, Caribbean, (LAC) and Latino Studies program. The primary responsibilities of the Director will include administration of academic programs, support of faculty scholarship and teaching, recruitment and retention of LAC faculty, writing and administering grants, promoting Latin American and Caribbean studies across campus, creating and sustaining productive relationships/exchanges with institutions in the region, and cultivating beneficial relations with the local community. Candidates should submit a letter of application that includes two copies of professional accomplishments and goals, a c.v., and the names of three references. Applications must be received by January 3, 2003 and should be submitted to: Noel Smith, Chair, c/o Laura Pierce, Latin American and Caribbean Studies Director Search, CPR 107, University of South Florida, 4202 E. Fowler Avenue, Tampa, Florida 32620. For more information, visit their website at: http://web.usf.edu/~lacs/.



EVENTS, CONFERENCES, SUBMISSIONS, OTHER

The California Policy Research Center, housed within the University of California Office of the President, will soon issue a new report entitled, “California’s Latinos: Assets at Risk.” Edited by David López , Professor of Sociology at UCLA, and Andrés Jiménez, Director of the CPRC, the publication was a commissioned special volume by the Latino Policy Initiative within the CPRC to address a wide range of public-policy issues relevant to the state's Latino population. The report covers demographics, education, economic participation, health care, criminal justice, housing, and civic participation. This project will provide a framework to help policymakers understand and address California's dramatic demographic changes and their significance to state policy issues at the beginning of a new century. Working chapter titles include: “Latinos in California: Growth and Diversity,” by Belinda Reyes; “Rising Tides and Sinking Boats: The Economic Challenge for California’s Latinos,” by Manuel Pastor; “K-12 Public Education: Bedrock or Barrier?,” by Eugene García, and several others. For more information on this publication from the CPRC, please visit their website at: http://www.ucop.edu/cprc/publist.html.

The Mexico-North Research Network will hold its next annual members meeting on February 28 and March 1, 2003, in San Antonio, Texas. Mexico-North’s 2002 activities and current status will be presented by members of its board of directors and evaluated by representatives of its member institutions. These representatives will then establish priorities for Mexico-North’s 2003 programming activities. Interested participants should respond to Ms. Greta De León (Director of Programs, Mexico-North Research Network) at: gretadeleon@att.net. Ms. De León can also be reached by phone at 210-229-1055, by fax at 210-229-9667, and by regular mail at: Mexico-North Research Network, 318 W. Houston Street, Suite 220, San Antonio, TX 78205.

The 5th CRI Conference on Cuban and Cuban-American Studies will be held on October 22-25, 2003, at the University Park Campus of Florida International University. Deadline for submission of all paper and panel proposals is February 15, 2003. For further details on this or other CRI activities, please check their website at http://lacc.fiu.edu/cri. For more information or to send your abstract, contact: Lisandro Pérez, Director (perezl@fiu.edu) or Uva de Aragón, Associate Director (aragonu@fiu.edu) at: Cuban Research Institute, Florida International University, DM 363, University Park, Miami, FL 33199, or be phone at (305) 348-1991.

The Mauricio Gastón Institute for Latino Community Development and Public Policy, at the University of Massachusetts Boston, is seeking submissions for an edited volume about the growing presence of Latinos in New England. The 2000 Census revealed that the New England region is home to almost one million Hispanics. Between 1990 and 2000, the population increased by 54% reaching 875,225. The Institute is interested in addressing the trends and issues defining this important community. This project will encompass the six states of the New England region, focusing on areas of Latino concentration. They encourage studies based on the 2000 Census and other current data sources, especially studies that present a comparative analysis over time (i.e., 1990-2000 trends). Also to be considered are qualitative studies using ethnographic methods, institutional analyses and other approaches. The manuscript length should be about 30 double-spaced pages (at 250 words per page, about 7,500 words). Deadline for submissions is May 15, 2003. Send inquiries via e-mail to: Andres.Torres@umb.edu. Mail your manuscript to: Andrés Torres, Director, Mauricio Gastón Institute, University of Massachusetts Boston, 100 Morrissey Blvd., Boston MA 02125-3393.

 

IUPLR E-mail Update compiled by:
Victor Saenz
vsaenz@prodigy.net

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