Post on 27-Jun-2018
transcript
1
Thursday 16th April
19.00 – 20.00 Welcome drinks, Town House, Union Street Aberdeen
Friday 17th April
09.00 – 09.30 Registration, Elphinstone Hall
09.30 – 11.00 Panel Session 1, Various Locations – see detailed programme
11.00 – 11.30 Tea and Coffee; Elphinstone Hall
11.30 – 13.00 Panel Session 2, Various Locations – see detailed programme
13.00 – 14.00 Lunch, Elphinstone Hall
SLAS Committee Meeting; Linnklater Rooms
14.00 – 15.30 Panel Session 3, Various Locations – see detailed programme
15.30 – 16.00 Tea and Coffee, Elphinstone Hall
BLAR, 'Meet the Editors’ Session, Linkater Rooms
16.00 – 17.30 Panel Session 4, Various Locations – see detailed programme
17.30 – 18.30 Keynote Address, New King’s 6
19.30 for 20.00 Drinks Reception followed by Dinner and Ceilidh, Beach Ballroom
Saturday 18th April
09.30 – 11.00 SLAS AGM
11.00 – 11.30 Tea and Coffee, Elphinstone Hall
11.30 – 13.00 Panel Session 5, Various Locations – see detailed programme
13.00 – 14.00 Lunch, Elphinstone Hall
PILAS Lunch, Linklater Rooms
14.00 – 15.30 Panel Session 6, Various Locations – see detailed programme
15.30 – 16.00 Tea and Coffee, Elphinstone Hall
16.00 – 17.30 Panel Session 7, Various Locations – see detailed programme
17.30 Conference Close
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Panel Sessions One – Friday 09.30 – 11.00
ROOM: NEW KING’S FOURTEEN
TITLE: States and Social Change in Latin America Single Panel
CONVENOR: Maura Duffy – University of Manchester
Title and Author
In and Against the State? Social Policy and Grassroots Organisation in Venezuela Maura Duffy - University of Manchester
The category desplazado and creation of social boundaries Mateja Celestina – Coventry University
‘Orteguismo’ and state-society relations in Nicaragua Sarah Hunt – University of Manchester
State Response to Urban Violence in El Salvador Kirsten Howarth – Dalhousie University
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE GROUND FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: Politico-Territorial Autonomy and Resource Governance Single Panel
CONVENORS: Anna Laing and Francesca Minelli – University of Glasgow
Title and Author
Conflicts between biodiversity protection and sand mining: A case study in the coastal sand dunes of El Socorro, Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico. Natalia Rodriguez-Revelo - Universidad Autonoma de Baja
Autonomy and Collaboration in Communitarian Water and Sewage Provision: The relationship between municipalities and water cooperatives in the Cochabamba Conurbation. Francesca Minelli - University of Glasgow
The Diversification of the Matriz Extractivista and Social Conflict in Uruguay. The Case of Aratirí (Cerro Chato) Stefan Peters - Kassel University
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: 'Bring-a-baby' panel: Autonomies and Gender in Latin America Single Panel
CONVENOR: Maria Soledad Montañes – University of Stirling
Title and Author
Un ser capaz de empuñar la vida? Autonomy and Women during the 1910 Centenary in Argentina Iona Macintyre - University of Edinburgh
Militancy and mothering: The ultimate work-life balance? Rachael Nazarko - King's College
Mother Nature: Autonomy and Motherhood in Alicia Scherson’s ‘Turistas’ Maria Soledad Montañes – University of Stirling
3
ROOM: NEW KING’S TEN
TITLE: Autonomous urban planners? Thepolitics of space in developing sustainable urban futures Single Panel Only
CONVENOR: Christien Klaufus - CEDLA
Title and Author
Planning sustainable urban deathscapes Christien Klaufus – CEDLA
Bottom-up planning in the current debate Roberto Rocco - Delft University of Technology
Perceptions of planners on an electric escalator Letty Reimerink - Independent researcher
The Post-"Best Practice" City: Politics, Planning and Change in Bogotá, Colombia Erich Hellmer - University of Glasgow
Dwelling space and the challenge of independización in multi-family housing arrangements in Southern Lima Michaela Hordijk and Viviana d’Auria – University of Amsterdam and KU Leuven
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Panel Sessions Two – Friday 11.30 – 13.00
ROOM: NEW KING’S FOURTEEN
TITLE: The Cuban Revolution; the Embodiement of Autonomy Single Panel
CONVENOR: Mervyn Bain – University of Aberdeen
Title and Author
Cuban Medical Cooperation in Brazil John Kirk – Dalhousie University
Cuban-Russian Relations in 2015; asymmetric power in harmony? Mervyn Bain – University of Aberdeen
LGBT and Well-Being: The Normalization of Sexual Diversity in Contemporary Cuba Through a Health-based Approach Emily Kirk – University of Nottingham
Why does Cuba care so much about Ebola and other global health calamaties: Understanding the solidarity approach to Cuban medical outreach. Robert Huish – Dalhousie University
ROOM: NEW KING’S ONE
TITLE: Autonomy and the Good Life (Vivir Beien / Buen Vivir) in Latin America Single Panel
CONVENORS: Jonathan Alderman and Rosalyn Bold - University of St Andrews and University of Manchester
DISCUSSANT: Maggie Bolton, University of Aberdeen
Title and Author
Implementing the ideals of the Vivir Bien: A Callawaya tourism project Rosalyn Bold –University of Manchester
Indigenous Autonomy and Vivir Bien: Living Well through the ayllu Jonathan Alderman – University of St Andrews
Trabajo y Explotación Laboral Infantil en Poblaciones Indígenas de Bolivia Ruben Dario Chaymbi Mayta - Fundacion Desarrollo y Autogestion, Bolivia
ROOM: NEW KING’S SIX
TITLE: Spectres of Nationalism in the Twenty-First Century? Cultural Autonomy in Venezuela Single Panel
CONVENORS: Lisa Blackmore, Rebecca Jarman and Penélope Plaza - Universität Zürich, University of Cambridge and City University London
Title and Author
The spatialization of the power of oil: PDVSA as place entrepreneur in the regeneration of Sabana Grande Boulevard Penelope Plaza – City University
Phantom pavilions: El Helicoide and La Torre de David as contested microcosms of the nation-state Lisa Blackmore - Universität Zürich
Defining the limits of the nation: Indigenous organisations and the Bolivarian revolution Natalia Garcia Bonet – University of Kent
Political Landslides in Venezuela? Ideology, Childhood and Natural Disaster in Una tarde con campanas(2004) and El chico que miente (2011) Rebecca Jarman – University of Cambridge
When the Boat Comes In: Myth, Reification, and the Changing Face of Simón Bolívar in Venezuelan Politics and Culture Nicholas Roberts - Durham University
5
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE GROUND FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: Solidarity campaigns and Latin America Double Panel
CONVENOR: Grace Livingstone - University of Cambridge
Title and Author
Why did the Chile Solidarity Campaign have more success than the Argentine Solidarity Movement in Britain? Grace Livingstone – University of Cambridge
The Dutch solidarity movement in the path of Chile´s redemocratization Mariana Perry - Leiden University
Spatiality, Contentious Politics and Power - Lessons from a Mexican Peace Movement. Sebastian Scholl – Bamberg University
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE GROUND FLOOR EIGHT
TITLE: Ideas, Institutions and Elites: The Intellectual Origins of Capitalism in Latin America Double Panel
CONVENOR: David Pretel - Pompeu Fabra University
Title and Author
Cohesion, visibility and politics: The symbiotic relationship between neoliberalism and business classes in Argentina and Chile Tomás Undurraga – University of Cambridge
José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz in the Longue Durée: The Making of an Argentine Neoliberal Joseph A. Francis – Independent Scholar
Rural Capitalism in Twentieth-Century Latin America: Ruling-elite preferences and economic policy in Colombia Carlos Andrés Brando – Pompeu Fabra University
Technological Modernity and the Cuban Colonial Elite in the 19th Century David Pretel - Pompeu Fabra University
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR EIGHT
TITLE: Intersections: Autonomy, Creativity, the Political, and the Poetics of Resistance Double Panel
CONVENOR: David M Wood - Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Title and Author
The Poetics of Resistance and Concepts of Autonomy Cornelia Gräbner - Lancaster University
Of Poets and Pirates: Martín Adán’s La casa de carton (1928) as a Model for Autonomy in a Post-Modern Age Maria Spitz - South Dakota State University
Navigating Dependence on National Identity in the Work of Flavia Company Natasha Tanna - University of Cambridge
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ROOM: NEW KING’S TEN
TITLE: Autonomy of the people: Discourse, hegemony and democracy in Latin American contemporary political processes Double Panel
CONVENORS: Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti and Emilia Ferraro - Newcastle University and University of St. Andrews
Title and Author
Post-neoliberal protest movement in Argentina and Brazil: Political discourse between new demands and old social imaginaries Juan Pablo Ferrero – University of Bath
The Case of the Missing Vanguard Clifton Ross - PM Press
Representations of the autonomous subaltern in the Zapatista discourse: Issues of Democracy and Identity Isabelle Gribomont - University of St Andrews
Paradoxical Responses to Corruption: The Role of Public Participation in Enacting Brazil's Anti-Corruption Laws Andreia Carmo - University of Oxford
ROOM: THE LINKLATER ROOMS
TITLE: Political Mobilisation and Race in Latin America - from Independence to Neo Liberalism Single Panel
CONVENOR: Elizabeth Cooper, British Library
CHAIR: Teresa Meade, Union College
Title and Author
Interpreting the other America: José Martí's racial diagnosis of the United States, 1882-1890 Oleski Miranda Navarro - University of Edinburgh
Remapping América: Maps, Map-making and the Invention of Jesuit New World Imaginaries, 1767-1810 Luis Ramos - New York University
From quilombo to favela and back: Rio's Urban Quilombo Sacopã and the Limits of Multiculturalism Desiree Poets - Aberystwyth University
Constructing A National Identity: Veiled Whiteness & The Racialization of Citizenship in 19th Century Honduras Jose Lara - Grand Valley State University
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Panel Sessions Three – Friday 14.00 – 15.30
ROOM: NEW KING’S FOURTEEN
TITLE: Latin American Football Cultures in Historical Perspectives Double Panel
CONVENORS: Matthew Brown, Brenda Elsey and David Wood - University of Bristol, Hofstra University and University of Sheffield
Title and Author
The Beautiful Game? Women and Football in South America David Wood - The University of Sheffield
The Origins of Football in Ecuador Matthew Brown - University of Bristol
Football, urban expansion and lifestyle in Sao Paulo, 1880-1920 Gloria Lanci - University of Bristol
ROOM: NEW KING’S ONE
TITLE: Autonomies as radical decentralisation? Lessons from Bolivia Double Panel
CONVENOR: Phillip Horn - University of Manchester
Title and Author
‘I Stole Children for the Community’: The role of obras in local political processes in the Bolivian Altiplano Rachel Godfrey Wood - Institute of Development Studies
Indigenous autonomy in the city? Lessons from La Paz's Southern Periphery Philipp Horn - University of Manchester
Indigenous autonomies (AIOC) in Bolivia: Developments and Shortcomings (2009-2014) Alexandra Tomaselli - European Academy
ROOM: NEW KING’S SIX
TITLE: Making Autonomy: Design, Material and Visual culture in Latin America Double Panel
CONVENOR: Patricia Lara-Betancourt and Livia Rezende - Royal College of Art/ Kingston University and Royal College of Art
Title and Author
Vernacular Design: A possibility for autonomy? Fernanda Cardoso - Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Doing, Making and Performing ‘Chicha': ‘Grafica Popular' and Vernacular Culture in Lima, Peru. Caroline Hodges - Bournemouth University
Making the process visible, the turn in design education in Uruguay María José Lopez Belatti - Escuela Universitaria Centro de Diseño
Paternalism and response. ALADI (Latin American Association of Industrial Design) as the image of an autonomous Latin America Juan Buitrago - Universidade de São Paulo
8
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE GROUND FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: Solidarity campaigns and Latin America Double Panel
CONVENOR: Grace Livingstone – University of Cambridge
Title and Author
The role of solidarity movements in promoting health and well-being among exiles: The case of Chileans in the UK Jasmine Gideon – Birbeck London
Chile: the seed that triggered widespread interest in Latin America. Mike Gatehouse – Latin America Bureau
Transnational Solidarity in Opposition to the Pinochet Regime: Labour Internationalism in Liverpool and Beyond Marieke Riethof - University of Liverpool
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: Between the local and the global: Transnational experiences of Latin American Migrants Double Panel
CONVENORS: Jenny Rodriguez and Angelo Martins Jr –Newcastle University and Goldsmiths University, London
Title and Author
Beyond the state control, the manifold forms of the control regime: Undocumented migration along the transnational clandestine migratory corridor Ecuador-Mexico-U.S. Soledad Alvarez Velasco - King's College London
Translocal Belongings: Lived experiences and re-making identity of Colombian and Palestinian refugees in Latin America. Marcia A. Vera Espinoza - University of Sheffield
Bolivian migrants in Chile: Spaces and places of (non)citizenship Megan Ryburn - Queen Mary, University of London
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR EIGHT
TITLE: Intersections: Autonomy, Creativity, the Political, and the Poetics of Resistance Double Panel
CONVENOR: David M Wood - Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Title and Author
‘Mi ética es la estética’: Bíofilo Panclasta and ‘anarchist’ writing Joey Whitfield- University of Leeds
Autonomy, the state, appropriation and ‘committed’ audiovisual praxis David M Wood - Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
The cultural politics of artist-activist collectives in Buenos Aires, Argentina Elke Linders - Utrecht University
Representaciones de la violencia política en Canto a su amor desaparecido de Zurita
María José Barros, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile ROOM: NEW KING’S TEN
TITLE: Autonomy of the people: Discourse, hegemony and democracy in Latin American contemporary political processes Double Panel
CONVENOR: Juan Pablo Ferrero - University of Bath
Title and Author
Redefining autonomy in times of the Ayotzinapa drama: The role of community police forces in Guerrero, Mexico Merel de Buck - University of Utrecht
Hegemony vs Autonomy: What does South America tell us? Samuele Mazzolini - University of Essex
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Problems and Contradictions of Participatory Democracy: Lessons from Latin America Claudio Balderacchi
Panel Sessions Four – Friday 16.00 – 17.30
ROOM: NEW KING’S FOURTEEN
TITLE: Latin American Football Cultures in Historical Perspectives Double Panel
CONVENORS: Matthew Brown, Brenda Elsey and David Wood - University of Bristol, Hofstra University and University of Sheffield
Title and Author
Amazonia:' Women and Football in Chile Brenda Elsey - Hofstra University
Football Supporters’ Clubs in Latin America: Contemporary looks Bernardo Buarque - Fundação Getúlio Vargas
‘We don't know how to lose': Gender, Race, and Region in Brazilian World Cup and Miss Universe Press Coverage (1954-1962) Courtney J. Campbell - Institute of Historical Research, School of Advanced Study, University of London
ROOM: NEW KING’S ONE
TITLE: Autonomies as radical decentralisation? Lessons from Bolivia Double Panel
CONVENOR: Phillip Horn - University of Manchester
Title and Author
Autonomy in Opposition: Indigeneity, extraction and struggle Jessica Hope - University of Manchester
Constructing Autonomies in the Bolivian Lowlands: From Self-determination to What? Katinka Weber - University of Liverpool
‘We are already autonomous, but we claim for more autonomy’: The case of Raqaypampa Mauricio Hashizume - Centre for Social Studies / University of Coimbra
ROOM: NEW KING’S SIX
TITLE: Making Autonomy: Design, Material and Visual culture in Latin America Double Panel
CONVENOR: Patricia Lara-Betancourt and Livia Rezende - Royal College of Art/ Kingston University and Royal College of Art
Title and Author
Projecting the nation? Public Space Design in Sao Paulo and London during the mid-20th Century Susannah Hagan - Royal College of Art
A Brazilian Design out of a Foreign Vision: Educational Aims of Museums, Industrial and Graphic Design between Popular and Mass Culture Aline Coelho Sanches Corato - Universidade de São Paulo
Otherness became own. The origins of the modern design in Mexico Oscar Salinas Flores - Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
10
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: Between the local and the global: Transnational experiences of Latin American Migrants Double Panel
CONVENORS: Jenny Rodriguez and Angelo Martins Jr - Newcastle University and Goldsmiths University, London
Title and Author
Making a home: Materialising belongings, identities and memories in the experiences of exile and return Macarena Bonhomme – Goldsmiths, University of London
A música, os músicos e a comunidade brasileira em Lisboa-Portugal Amanda Fernandes Guerreiro - Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa
Brazilians in the UK: Recent Trends of a Migration Stream Julio Davies - King's College London
Navigating dynamics of displacement, exclusion and containment: Brazilian women's experiences of transnational mobility Angelo Martins Jr – Goldsmiths College
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR EIGHT
TITLE: Race, Ethnicity, Class and Gender: Intersections and Complexities of Categories of Discrimination and Inequality Single Panel
CONVENOR: Desiree Poets - Aberystwyth University
Title and Author
Beauty pageants at the intersection of indigeneity, gender and class in Quetzaltenango, Guatemala Elisabet Rasch - Wageningen University
Ageism in the context of oppression: Cultural assumptions, stereotypes and the marginalization of elders in today’s rapidly ageing world Gisela Castro - ESPM
Analyzing thinking as the origin of social inequality: Children, social class, schooling, and families in Chile. Pablo Torres - University of Cambridge
ROOM: NEW KING’S TEN
TITLE: Autonomy, Movement, and the Constraints of Identity: Defining Nation, Self and Other in Latin America Single Panel
CONVENOR: Marcia Stephenson - Purdue University
Title and Author
Intercultural Go-Betweens in the 19th-Century Bolivian Andes: A Case History of Autonomy and Interdependence Marcia Stephenson - Purdue University
Bertha Lutz' quest for authority and autonomy in the early 20th-century Brazilian scientific community Michelle Medeiros - Marquette University
Locating Home and Away: Traversing the Risks and Constraints of Nature, Nation, and Adventure at the Foot of the Argentine Andes Joy Logan - University of Hawai
The Institute of Volunteers. An autonomous Cuban movement within the Spanish Empire? Fernando J. Padilla Angulo - University of Bristol
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ROOM: THE LINKLATER ROOMS
TITLE: Tensions and conflicts derived from by the exercise of indigenous peoples' right to autonomy: Experiences from the
Andean region
Single Panel
CONVENOR: Amelia Alva-Arevalo - Ghent University
Title and Author
Andoas: an open wound in the Peruvian Amazon Amelia Alva-Arevalo - Ghent University
The introduction of Direct Democracy in Latin America: Brazil, Venezuela and Bolivia, three cases in three different decades. Pedro Capra - Centre for Research on Direct Democracy (c2d) University of Zurich
Afro - Brazilian heritage in the first decades of no more Brazilian slave system Agata Bloch - Polish Academy of Sciences
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Panel Sessions Five – Saturday 11.30 – 13.00
ROOM: NEW KING’S FOURTEEN
TITLE: Indigenous Autonomies and Adaptation in the Americas Single Panel
CONVENOR: Caroline Williams – University of Bristol
Title and Author
‘Jiguaní inmortal’: Autonomy, Sovereignty, and Indigeneity in an ‘Indian Town’ in Cuba, c. 1700-1800 Jason Yaremko - University of Winnipeg
Iyambae: Alienation, autonomy and the ethos of being ‘without an owner' among the Chiriguano-Guarani Agustin Diz - London School of Economics
Aymara Struggles for Schooling and Autonomy in Bolivia, 1920s-1940s. Brooke Larson - Stony Brook University
The Power of the Plume: Guarani Autonomy and Literacy during the Crises of the Mid-Eighteenth Century, Paraguay Barbara Ganson - Florida Atlantic University
ROOM: NEW KING’S ONE
TITLE: Latin America without borders: Regional cooperation in comparative perspective Double Panel
CONVENOR: Hilary Francis - Institute of Latin American Studies
Title and Author
* The pulp mill conflict and its implications for regional cooperation in the Southern Cone Karen Siegel - University of Glasgow
* ‘Lifting the veil of ignorance’? Cuban teachers in revolutionary Nicaragua Hilary Francis - Institute of Latin American Studies
* Building the Patria Grande: Breaking Down the Borders to Social Guarantees under the “Right to Migration” Paradigm Simca Theresa Simpson - London School of Economics and Political Science
* Knocking down the borders at the local level Mariano Alvarez - Leiden University
ROOM: NEW KING’S SIX
TITLE: ‘Buen vivir’ as policy and practice in Latin America Double Panel
CONVENOR: Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti - Durham University
Title and Author
Bienestar Social Rural: Improving Rural Physical and Social Well-Being in 1950s Mexico Stephanie Opperman - Georgia College
Progreso, Inclusion Social, Extraction, and Well-being in Peru: A Comparative Approach to Everyday Indigenous Experience Lexy Seedhouse and Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti - Newcastle University and Durham University
Buen Vivir and the appropriation of political rhetoric: The multiple uses of Buen Vivir in strategic differentiations Daniela Bressa Florentin - University of Bath
13
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE GROUND FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: Culture, Politics and Identity Single Panel
CONVENOR: Andor Skotnes – The Sage Colleges
Title and Author
Increase and autonomy of the participation of working classes in art exhibitions in Brazil Lígia Dabul - Universidade Federal Fluminense
Carmen Berenguer’s Bobby Sands desfallece en el muro (1983): Writing oppression Bárbara Fernández - University of Edinburgh
Andrés Bello, Francisco Bilbao and the Place of Reason in Latin America Monica González - Universidad de Talca
Diagnoses on the nation: The Brazilian Cultural History in the 1930's André Joanilho – UEL
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE GROUND FLOOR EIGHT
TITLE: The Political Ecology of Extraction: Negotiating livelihoods and landscapes across Latin America (Territory,
Livelihood and Conflict)
Double Panel
CONVENOR: Jessica Hope – Manchester University
Title and Author
Mapping the Multivocality of the Opposition to Metallic Mining in El Salvador Ainhoa Montoya - Institute of Latin American Studies, University of London
Agroindustry and the perspectives for peasant autonomy on Peru's coast Andrew Jobling - Sheffield Hallam University
Is it all about the water? Exploring conflicts between indigenous communities and the mining industry in the Atacama Desert Katy Jenkins and Hugo Romero Toledo - Northumbria University and Centro de Estudios de Conflicto y Cohesión Social
Ecuador and the architecture and culture of Extractivism Alejandra Espinosa - University of Amsterdam
14
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR EIGHT
TITLE: Neoliberal Governance and Responses Single Panel
CONVENOR: Mervyn Bain – University of Aberdeen
Title and Author
Regionalism and Extractivism: Challenging Neoliberalism in Latin America Kristin Ciupa - Queen Mary University of London
The sweatshops and labour conditions of Latin American immigrants in São Paulo's clothing production chain Joana Contino - Pontifícia Universidade Católica
Management strategies in Argentine printing workers’ co-operatives Paola Raffaelli - University of Roehampton
The Brazilian landless movement assistance in the return of Brazilian emigrants from Paraguay Marcos Estrada - University of Warwick
ROOM: NEW KING’S TEN
TITLE: Why the PRI Returned to Power in Mexico? Single Panel
CONVENOR: Peter Watt – Sheffield University
Title and Author
Media reform in Mexico. Continuity or change? Jose Antonio Brambila - University of Sheffield
Peña Nieto and the return of authoritarian politics John Ackerman - Sciences Po
"Explaining the failure of the Anticorruption Reform in Mexico" Irma Eréndira Sandoval Ballesteros - National Autonomous University of Mexico
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Panel Sessions Six – Saturday 14.00 – 15.30
ROOM: NEW KING’S FOURTEEN
TITLE: Indigenous cultures in Latin America: Ethnohistorical and linguistic approaches Double Panel
CONVENORS: Sabine Dedenbach-Salazar and Katja Hannss - Stirling University and University of Cologne
Title and Author
Why state the obvious? Tense-aspect marking and its connection to information structure in Garifuna Steffen Haurholm-Larsen - Bern University
Word formation in Kallawaya: Compounding and incorporation Katja Hannss - Universitaet Koeln
Spanish elements in Yurakaré against the background of language contact theory Rik van Gijn - University of Cologne
ROOM: NEW KING’S ONE
TITLE: Latin America without borders: Regional cooperation in comparative perspective Double Panel
CONVENOR: Hilary Francis - Institute of Latin American Studies
Title and Author
* The Mystery of Peru's ‘Casas ALBA’: Venezuelan ‘Social Power’ Projection or Bottom-Up Social Regionalisation? Asa Cusack - Institute of Latin American Studies, University of London
* Comparative analysis of limits and possibilities under ALBA and UNASUR Emine Tahsin - Istanbul university
* ALBA: Towards Regional Autonomy through Integration Kristin Ciupa - Queen Mary University of London
ROOM: NEW KING’S SIX
TITLE: Buen vivir’ as policy and practice in Latin America Double Panel
CONVENORS: Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti and Emilia Ferraro - Newcastle University and University of St. Andrews
Title and Author
Buen vivir y saberes ancestrales Emilia Ferraro - University of St. Andrews
Lekil Kuxlejal (Buen Vivir) as Cultural Capital in Chiapas, Mexico Susanna Rostas - Cambridge University
El buen vivir y el proyecto politico de la CONAIE Leon Zamosc - University of California, San Diego
* Indicates paper that has changed order since the abstract booklet has been published.
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ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE GROUND FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: The Latin American involvement in South-South development cooperation Single Panel
CONVENOR: Danilo Marcondes – University of Cambridge
Title and Author
The role of a donor in an emerging power's foreign policy: Brazilian solidarity diplomacy Monika Sawicka - Jagiellonian University
El papel de México en el sistema de cooperación internacional. Una perspectiva desde sus acciones de Cooperación Sur-Sur en América Latina. Analilia Huitron - Complutense University of Madrid (UCM)
Brazil’s South South Cooperation with Africa; a win win Relationship ? The case of biofuel production in Mozambique Gabrielle W.Cusson - Université de Liège
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE GROUND FLOOR EIGHT
TITLE: The Political Ecology of Extraction: Negotiating livelihoods and landscapes across Latin America (Environmental
Policy versus Extraction) Double Panel
CONVENOR: Jessica Hope - University of Manchester
Title and Author
Extraction, Conservation & Indigeneity: The case of the Isiboro Secure Indigenous Territory and National Park (TIPNIS), Bolivia Jessica Hope - University of Manchester
Environmental perspectives on a scenario of open pit mining in a Natural Protected Area. The case of El Arco, Baja California. Naum Lugo - Universidad Autónoma de Baja California
Agribusiness and forest conservation in Brazil: An analysis of recent institutional changes Flavia Donadelli - London School of Economics and Political Science
Transnational mining projects in Wirikuta Sacred Natural site: Mobilizing global heritage in search for conservation Oscar Felipe Reyna Jimenez - Wageningen University
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: Cultural politics in Latin America and critical theory today: Historical displacements, new approaches Double Panel
CONVENOR: Tomas Peters - Birkbeck, University of London
Title and Author
Reflections on discourses of Latin American culture and hybridization Ignacio Rivera - Goldsmiths, University of London
Leopoldo Zea and the Latin-American Thinking Christine Esterbauer - University of Vienna
Lugar de emergencia y trayectoria del pensamiento Cultura para el Desarrollo en América Latina (1970-2010). María Paulina Soto Labbé - Instituto de Estudios Avanzados Universidad de Santiago de Chile
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ROOM: NEW KING’S TEN
TITLE: Philosophy and Political Engagement in Latin America Single Panel
CONVENOR: Trevor Stack – University of Aberdeen
Title and Author
Camilo Torres - Che Guevara of the Catholics? Eitan Ginzberg - Kibbutzim College of Education
Zapata reloaded: a Žižekian approach to contemporary Mexico Ramon I. Centeno - University of Sheffield
Transnational Associational Life and Political Mobilizationof Latin Americans in Southern Europe: What Role for Sending State Policies? Ana Margheritis - University of Southampton
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Panel Sessions Seven – Saturday 16.00 – 17.30
ROOM: NEW KING’S FOURTEEN
TITLE: Indigenous cultures in Latin America: ethnohistorical and linguistic approaches Double Panel
CONVENOR: Sabine Dedenbach-Salazar - Stirling University
Title and Author
Colonial Andean confessionaries as linguistic and ethnohistorical sources
Sabine Dedenbach-Salazar - Stirling University
From sesmeiro Luiz de Miranda to descendant of « the Portugueses »or how to (re)constitute a sociology of the historical occupation of the lower-Amazon Ricardo Theophilo Folhes - Universidade Federal do Para
Ethnohistory's History Mark Thurner - University of London
ROOM: NEW KING’S ONE
TITLE: Media pluralism, autonomy and journalistic practices: rethinking the media role in Latin America Single Panel
CONVENOR: Carla Moscoso – University of Cambridge
Title and Author
Subnational Media Systems in New Democracies. The Case of Local Media Systems in Mexican Provinces Jose Antonio Brambila - The University of Sheffield
Legitimizing Legalization or Restricting Reform? The Media's Role in Uruguay's Drug Policy Reform Process Jonas von Hoffmann - University of Oxford
Real time news and the financialization of economic reporting in Brazil: an ethnography of Valor Economico’s newsroom Tomas Undurraga - University of Cambridge
Media concentration and political democratisation: Shaping human rights debate in Chile and Argentina post dictatorship Carla Moscoso - University of Cambridge
ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR SEVEN
TITLE: Cultural politics in Latin America and critical theory today: historical displacements, new approaches Double Panel
CONVENOR: Felipe Lago – Goldsmiths College, London
Title and Author
Cultural Policy Guidelines in Peru: The end of one hundred years of solitude of cultural politics? Adriana Arista-Zerga - University of Nottingham
Cultural policies in a political conflict context: the case of Mapuche Lavkenche communities, Arauco Province, Chile. Nikolas Stüdemann - Wageningen University
Cultural politics and cultural criticism in Chile post-Dictatorship Tomas Peters - Birkbeck, University of London
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ROOM: KING’S COLLEGE FIRST FLOOR EIGHT
TITLE: Resources, Rights and Political Ecology in Latin America Single Panel
CONVENOR: Maggie Bolton – University of Aberdeen
Title and Author
Sugarcane Ethanol: The Hen of the Golden Eggs? Agribusiness and the State in Brazil Leandro Vergara-Camus - SOAS, University of London
Livelihoods and landscape in Tejo River basin, Brazil: global economies, national policies and local dwelling Roberto Rezende - University of Campinas
"¿Tendrá término un día tu carrera / Tumultuosa y fiera?": The Rise and Fall of Los Saltos del Guairá Richard Niland - University of Strathclyde