Elizabeth Hinton lecture

6275 Bunche Hall

"Urban Removal: Police, Prisons, and Domestic Policy After Civil Rights"

Atlantic History Speaker Series

6275 Bunche Hall

"The Lives (and Deaths) of Caged Birds: Wild Animals and their Transatlantic Circulation from the Americas to Spain During the Eighteenth Century." Martha Few, Dept. of History, University of Arizona

US Field Symposium

6275 Bunche Hall

A symposium featuring Peter Nabokov, James Brooks and Ross Frank, which will focus on Nabokov’s recent books, How the World Moves: the Odyssey of an American Indian Family, and The Origin Myth of Acoma Pueblo

Talk by Professor José Curto

6275 Bunche Hall

"Population movements in the South Atlantic - the case of Benguela and Rio de Janeiro, c. 1700-1850" José Curto is a Professor in the Department of History at York University.  His research Interests include Modern Africa, Social and Economic History. This events is co-sponsored by the Brazilian history seminar and the Atlantic history cluster.

History of Science Colloquium

5288 Bunche Hall

Jean Pierre Beaud  (CIRST, Université de Québec à Montréal) “What is a population? Reflections on two Statistical Descriptions of Canada”

Pamela Fuentes – “Madams, Pimps, and the End of Regulated Prostitution in Mexico City, 1940-1952”

6275 Bunche Hall

Pamela J. Fuentes is a postdoctoral fellow at El Colegio de Mexico. She received a PhD from York University (Toronto, Canada) in 2015, an MA in Mexican History from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (2008) and BA from the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa in Mexico City (2002). Her research focuses on modern Mexican history, with […]

Casey Lurtz – “From the Grounds Up: Community, Exchange, and the Building of a Coffee Economy in Southern Mexico, 1867-1920”

6275 Bunche Hall

Casey Marina Lurtz is an Academy Scholar at the Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies. She was previously the Harvard-Newcomen Fellow at the Harvard Business School, and spent a year as a predoctoral fellow at the UC San Diego Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies. She has articles forthcoming in the Hispanic American Historical Review and the Business History Review, […]

María Eugenia Vázquez Semadeni – “Concepts in Action: Sovereignty and Republican Political Culture in Post-Independent Mexico, 1821-1828”

6275 Bunche Hall

María Eugenia Vázquez Semadeni served as Tinker Visiting Professor at Stanford University in 2014. She received a PhD (2008) and an MA (2005) in History from El Colegio de Michoacán and a BA in Culture Science from the Universidad del Claustro de Sor Juana in Mexico City (2002). Her research focuses on the political culture, […]

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