WORKING GROUPS ON LATIN AMERICA


CLAS is home to several active working groups, comprised of UC Berkeley faculty, staff, and students who gather regularly to discuss and debate topics of mutual interest that cross disciplinary lines. CLAS provides funds which may be used for photocopying materials, transcription and printing, costs related to meetings, or visiting speakers.

How to propose a new working group


Current Working Groups at CLAS

Latin American Literature and Film Group
Afro-Latino Working Group

Brazil: Politics and Culture
Colombia
Cuba
Latin American History

In the past, CLAS has supported working groups on a wide variety of topics.

Those groups have included:

Andean Project
Bolivia
Border Discourses, Labor and Education
Colonial Mesoamerica
Colonial Studies
Education in Latin America
Latin American Film
Police, Justice, and Public Security
Politics and Poetry
Religion in Latin America
Rural Mexico
Social Movements and Neoliberalism in Latin America
Spanish and Portuguese Writing Workshop
Thinking the Americas
Venezuela
Violence in Latin America


CURRENT WORKING GROUPS

Afro-Latino Working Group

CONFERENCE
"Global Movements, Local Identities:
Race, Space, and the African Diaspora in Latin America
"
March 6-7, 2008
Schedule · Call for Papers
· Conference Registration and Travel

The mission of the Afro-Latino Working Group is to advance
inter-disciplinary scholarship on race and the African Diaspora in Latin
America and the Spanish-speaking Caribbean . The literature on this topic
is limited, and the overwhelming majority of it focuses on Brazil.
Meetings include reading and discussing new research on the topic;
creating a community of graduate students and faculty researching
Afro-Latino issues; and providing the space for working group members as
well as faculty, both from Berkeley and elsewhere, to present their work.

More information-->

Contact:
Vielka Hoy (vielkahoy (at) calmail.berkeley.edu)
Tianna Paschel (tpaschel (at) calmail.berkeley.edu)

Brazil: Politics and Culture

The Brazil Politics and Culture Working Group serves as a nexus for graduate students and faculty at Berkeley who work on Brazil, are interested in the country, or happen to be Brazilian. Members represent a wide range of disciplines and departments, including History, Geography, Sociology, Political Science and Physics. The group meets twice a month at the Center for Latin American Studies, and features presentations from members on their work, invited guests and occasional films or music.

Brazil: Politics and Culture Working Group Website

Contact:
Benjamin Lessing (lessing (at) berkeley.edu)
Meg Stalcup (mstalcup (at) berkeley.edu)

Colombia

The Colombia Working Group connects Berkeley researchers who are currently
conducting or wish to conduct research in Colombia. For the past four years
the Group has organized a wide variety of campus lectures, film
presentations, and informal lunches with leading Colombian film directors,
politicians, and artists. The group meets regularly to encourage
scholarship in Colombia and facilitate both undergraduate and postgraduate
research throughout the country. Members of CWG also inform each other of
current news and debates in Colombia through its listserve.

Contact: Juan Sebastian Lleras (jslleras (at) berkeley.edu)

Cuba

The University of California, Berkeley, Cuba Working Group brings together faculty, staff and graduate students from across campus whose research or educational interests include a focus on Cuba.  Ranging from analyzing the Cuban health care system to its agricultural transformation, the group addresses many contemporary and historical issues from a variety of theoretical perspectives.   Its objective is (1) to provide a forum for sharing research findings by UCB researchers, (2) to facilitate collaborative research with Cuba scholars elsewhere.  UC Cuba Working Group is affiliated with the Multi-Campus Research Organization, UC-Cuba Academic Initiative.

Contact: Laura Enriquez (enriquez@berkeley.edu)

Latin American History

The Latin American History Working Group coordinates a colloquium for scholars to present their latest research in a variety of fields of interest especially, but not exclusively, to Latin American historians. The colloquium provides a means for the presenters to receive critical feedback on their works in progress in an informal and supportive atmosphere.  Presenters include scholars from within and beyond the Berkeley community.  The group meets once a month on Friday afternoons.

Contacts:
Chuck Witschorik cawitschorik (at) berkeley.edu
Melisa Galván mgalvan (at) berkeley.ed

Latin American Literature and Film Group

"The Latin American Literature & Film Working Group, sponsored by the Center for Latin American Studies, is an opportunity for graduate students and faculty to come together and discuss different approaches to researching an array of literary and media-studies topics. Narrations of daily life and history in Latin America can include fiction, non-fiction, written word, photography, film, video, theater, performance, speaking, song, illustration, prose, or poetry, and research on all forms of storytelling is welcome. With a core group of students in the Humanities and Social Sciences, scholars from other disciplines are encouraged to join our group. Undergraduates, visiting scholars, and drop-in guests are welcome.

Contact: Meg Stalcup (mstalcup (at) berkeley (dot) edu)

PAST WORKING GROUPS AT CLAS

Andean Project

The Andean Project is a collaboration of the Venezuela and Bolivia Working Groups during the Fall semester of 2006. Our intention is to provide a forum for students, professors and academics to explore issue pertinent to Bolivia and Venezuela. We also hope to evaluate connections and distinctions in the emergence of popular movements and liberal governments that seek a new role for the state and a more egalitarian social order in South America. Components of our planned events will address development, resources, gender, “race” and class themes, in the context of the Andean region. The Project also hopes to raise awareness about Andean region on the U.C. Berkeley campus by hosting specialists to discuss current events with a perspective from South America. Our bi-weekly meetings will be led by group members who guide discussion based on readings selected in advance, films, or their own research. We have also invited government representatives and in-country scholars to give public talks on Venezuela, Bolivia and the region in general throughout the semester.

Bolivia

The goal of the Bolivia Working group is three-fold: to examine contemporary popular movements in Bolivia, their historical roots and to contextualize Bolivia in the emergence of a “new left” in South America; provide a forum for students and professors to share their current research on Bolivia; and coordinate efforts with the Venezuela Working Group, and through the Andean Project raise awareness of the region in the U.C. Berkeley community. Major research themes include: the election of Evo Morales and the role of the state; misperceptions and inaccuracies in the western press; changes to the roles of indigenous groups within the multi-ethnic society; natural resources and development: oil, gas, water, and coca; comparisons between Bolivia and other Latin American countries; antagonism with the United States and other relations with Bolivia and the Andean region; the emergence of new popular movements which reject the Washington Consensus and embrace the pursuit of new political and economic models.

Bolivia

The goal of the Bolivia Working group is three-fold: to examine contemporary popular movements in Bolivia, their historical roots and to contextualize Bolivia in the emergence of a “new left” in South America; provide a forum for students and professors to share their current research on Bolivia; and coordinate efforts with the Venezuela Working Group, and through the Andean Project raise awareness of the region in the U.C. Berkeley community. Major research themes include: the election of Evo Morales and the role of the state; misperceptions and inaccuracies in the western press; changes to the roles of indigenous groups within the multi-ethnic society; natural resources and development: oil, gas, water, and coca; comparisons between Bolivia and other Latin American countries; antagonism with the United States and other relations with Bolivia and the Andean region; the emergence of new popular movements which reject the Washington Consensus and embrace the pursuit of new political and economic models.

Border Discourse, Labor and Education

This working group brings together a variety of disciplinary themes and ideas including anthropology, education, economics, linguistics and sociology. The project examines emerging international and domestic perspectives of and about discursive practices of Mexicano communities in California. A central question for the working group includes understanding the implications of official immigration and language policies on local discursive practices and in particular, pedagogical efforts in California schools.

Colonial Mesoamerica

This group aims to provide an interdisciplinary framework for both faculty and graduate students at Berkeley to study the social and cultural impact of "negotiation" between autochtonous traditions in Mesoamerica and Hispano-Catholic cultural tenets on the forging of colonial society in the aftermath of the Spanish conquest. Major themes include: the reformulation of indigenous and Castas' cultural identity; the role of Church institutions such as the cofradías in the religious transformations within the newly-established early-colonial order, and the restructuring of the Indian and non-Indian domains under the Spanish colonial yoke.

Colonial Studies

The Colonial Studies Working Group provides space for interdisciplinary work on the colonial period in Latin America, from the 16th century through the postcolonial present day. Among the topics intrinsically related to colonial studies, topics of discusssion include race, Indian peoples, and gender studies. The working group also covers a range of Latin American countries: Peru, Bolivia, Mexico, Argentina and the Caribbean. Members of the working group include both faculty and students at Berkeley, with other faculty from nearby institutions involved as well.

Education in Latin America

The Education in Latin America working group will bring together scholars and students at Berkeley whose research and professional work deals with education in Latin America and the Caribbean. The group will meet regularly to discuss and present our research (or plans for research), and encourage scholarship on education in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Latin American Film

The Latin American Film Working Group serves as a forum for approaching the study of films from the region. The group will meet approximately every two weeks for a film screening and discussion. In the interest of creating as democratic and participatory a group as possible, members will decide by consensus the topics and themes to be addressed in meetings and, accordingly, the films to be shown. In addition to screenings, the group will co-sponsor film events on campus and work towards developing a diverse library of Latin American film to be housed at CLAS. Of course, students from any disciplinary background are welcome to attend and participate.

Police, Justice and Public Security

Police lethality and corruption, ineffective judicial systems, and the widespread rise of violent crime are some of the most palpably important problems facing Latin America today. Researchers on Latin America are increasingly recognizing both the centrality of public security (and its absence) to issues of democratization, economic development, and politics; as well as the crucial role that judicial and police institutions play in providing (or failing to provide) public security.  This working group, in addition to sponsoring a series of monthly meetings and presentations, will sponsor a seminar on Police, Justice and Public Security in the 2006/2007 school year.

Politics and Poetry

Politics and Poetry seeks to rethink the effect of market-driven programs on culture, and then focus on ways in which so-called "high culture" offers challenges to neoliberal regimes, posing questions in an otherwise 'tame' environment of consensus, lacking in conflict or debate. Focusing on poetry as a generic form that generally evades the market, the group asks what poetry can do in a historical moment often characterized by a global sheen of sameness and nondifferentiation of values.

Religion in Latin America

The Religion in Latin America working group provides a setting for faculty and students to discuss religion in the Americas across disciplines.  The working group addresses issues of religious history and change in all Latin American countries, as well as transnational religious movements related to Latin America (including Latinos/Latinas in the United States). Topics may range from pre-Columbian religions to the role of religion in current Latin American politics, and readings will represent the various disciplinary approaches to the study of religion.

The working group meets biweekly to discuss shared readings.  The group will also provide a space for working group members, as well as other invited guest lecturers, to present their research to a critical audience. The group’s ultimate goals are to create a space where the academic study of religion can be discussed openly and critically, and to foster a collaborative environment where research resources can be shared.

Rural Mexico

The Rural Mexico Working Group works to give students opportunities to analyze the transformation of rural Mexico in recent years. Areas of special concentration include the ongoing violence in Chiapas and the continuing influence of the Zapatista rebellion. Roundtable sessions include students, faculty and representatives of non-governmental organizations in ongoing discussions aimed at constructing a new theoretical framework for understanding the effects of globalization on rural areas.

Social Movements and Neoliberalism in Latin America

A variety of social and political movements have developed in response to neoliberal policies in Latin America. This working group will analyze the different political and collective action strategies employed by workers and indigenous groups. It will also examine how the new agenda being put forth by the various social movements is affecting institutions and political life in Latin America. The goal of the working group is to compare ongoing research to create a broader framework through which these movements can be understood.

Spanish and Portuguese Writing Group

This group has several equally important objectives: to discuss the craft of critical writing; to create a regular, supportive and interrogating arena for the discussion of graduate student research; and to bring to the group the wisdom and technical advice of accomplished writers in Spanish and Portuguese.

Thinking the Americas

The Working Group on the Americas deals with research that considers the Americas as a cultural and geopolitical entity from an interdisciplinary perspective, and also in considering the impact of Latino culture in the United States. While primarily focused on the humanities, participants have been drawn from such varied fields as architecture, public health and urban planning.

Venezuela

The Venezuela Working Group provides a space for students and faculty interested in a closer examination of the rapidly changing political and social situation of Venezuela.   Focusing on the impacts and implications of the self-proclaimed Bolivarian Revolution of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, the VWG meets bi-weekly for discussion and sponsers speakers, film screenings, and readings.  The group hopes to stimulate increased scholarship on Venezuela and provide support for researchers working on Venezuela.

Violence and the Americas

This is a long-term working group on phenomena classified under the rubric of violence, through an exploration of conceptual tools and fieldwork data (mostly our own) from North, South and Central America. Our immediate aim is to produce papers and dissertation chapters related to the working group theme. In order to do this, we seek to problematize violence, examining the conditions of possibility for something to be identified as violence, and then how it is understood and used as term in the particular. Some of our questions are: How is violence conceptually deployed by academics, policy makers and the media? What truth discourses circulate? How do they change in time? Why do they take a given form over another at specific historical junctures? How is violence related to power? In our approach to these questions, readings have included Arendt, Bourdieu, and Foucault, along with recent scholarship in anthropology and sociology, and our own current writings.


Working Group Proposals

Proposals for new working groups or renewed support should include the following information:

  • One-page description of the project (can be the same as last year, please just include any changes)
  • A one page description of the activities you have carried out in the past year (For renewal requests only)
  • Activities planned for 2008-2009;
  • Names and background information on any returning members/new members already identified (department, research interests, expected graduation date)
  • The name of a faculty advisor.
  • Amount of funding requested and the categories of expense. Please note that the maximum support will be $500 and that food/refreshments may make up no more than $150 of your proposed budget.
  • Contact information for the group leader (email and telephone) and participants (email)

Please send completed applications to:
Sara Lamson at slamson (at) berkeley.edu
Center for Latin American Studies
University of California, Berkeley
2334 Bowditch St.
Berkeley CA 94720

Research and Resources

 
© 2006, The Regents of the University of California, Last Updated - September 15, 2008