Conference on Inequality in Latin America

Charles Edward Klimicek (cek2@columbia.edu)
Fri, 25 Feb 1994 14:28:12 -0500 (EST)

--1915861060-328315886-762204692:#15483
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII

Dear Latinamericanists

Enclosed you will find the program for a conference (open to public) to be
held at Columbia University, March 3-5.

For more information please call
Institute of Latin American and Iberian Studies
Columbia University
212-854-4643

Hope to see you here!

--1915861060-328315886-762204692:#15483
Content-Type: APPLICATION/octet-stream; name=prog
Content-Transfer-Encoding: QUOTED-PRINTABLE
Content-ID: <Pine.3.05.9402251432.B15483@merhaba.cc.columbia.edu>
Content-Description:

The Politics of Inequality
Conference March 3-5, 1994

Dag Hammarskjold Lounge
International Affairs Building
420 West 118th Street, 6th Floor
Columbia University
New York, NY

Thursday, March 3

Opening Remarks by the Institute of Latin American and Iberian=20
Studies and the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America

2-4 p.m. Panel 1. Economic Restructuring and Labor Organizations

Panelists:
M. Victoria Murillo, Harvard University, The Argentine Labor=20
Movement and the Effect of Recent Economic Reforms=20

Javier Melgoza and Enrique de la Garza Toledo, UAM, Poli'tica labor=20
neoliberal, modernizacio'n productiva y estrategias sindicales: la=20
experiencia mexicana=20

Scott Martin, Columbia University, The Inevitability of Labor=20
Movement Decline? Some Evidence from the Mexican and Brazilian Auto Industr=
ies=20

Anthony Pereira, New School for Social Research, The Crisis of =20
Developmentalism and the Rural Labor Movement in Northeast Brazil=20

Commentators:
=09Alvaro Di'az, SUR Profesionales, Chile
=09Robert Kaufman, Rutgers University

4-6 p.m. Panel 2. State Reform and the Popular Sector: New Patterns=20
of Interest Representation?

Panelists:

Jorge Papadopoulos, University of Pittsburgh &Fernando Filgueira, =20
Northwestern University, Uruguay=D5s Crossroads: Long Crisis and=20
Vetoed Alternatives=20

Kerianne Piester, Columbia University, Targetting the Poor: The=20
Impacts of Social Policy Reform on State-Society Relations in=20
Mexico=20

Monique Segarra, Columbia University, Redefining the=20
Public/Private Mix: The Social Investment Fund in Ecuador=20

Ana Mari'a Bejarano, Universidad de los Andes, Bogot=87, Alcances y=20
li'mites de la reforma del estado en un contexto de crisis: El caso=20
colombiano=20

Commentators:=20
=09James Malloy, University of Pittsburgh
=09Joan Nelson, Overseas Development Council

6:15 p.m. Wine and Cheese Reception, followed by Dinner in the=20
President's Room, Faculty House

Friday, March 4
10 a.m.-noon Panel 3. Reinventing Local Politics

Panelists:
William Nylen, Stetson University, PT Governance in Rural=20
Brazil=20

Pedro Jacobi, CEDEC, Sao Paulo, Reaches and Limits of Progressive=20
Urban Governments in Brazil=20

Margarita Lo'pez-Maya, Universidad Central de Venezuela, Causa=20
Radical gana la alcaldi'a de Caracas=20

Peter Winn, Tufts University, The Frente Amplio Administration of=20
Montevideo=20

Commentators:
=09Charles Reilly, Inter-American Foundation
=09Jonathan Fox, M.I.T.

2-4 p.m. Panel 4. Collective Responses to Violence
Panelists:
Jo Marie Burt, Columbia University, Quien habla es terrorista:=20
Violence and the Urban Poor of Lima
=20
Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, Nucleo de Estudos da Violencia, Sao Paulo, =20
Popular Responses to State Sponsored Violence in Brazil=20

Deborah Yashar, Harvard University, Guatemala: Political=20
Liberalization, Violence and Popular Participation=20

Miguel Carter, Columbia University, Making It Happen: Churches and=20
Peasants in the Construction of Civil Society in Rural Paraguay=20

Commentators:
=09Kay Warren, Princeton University
=09Deborah Levenson, Columbia University

4-6 p.m. Panel 5. Gender, Ethnicity and Anti-Politics: New Bases of=20
Collective Action

Panelists:
Melina Selverston, Columbia University, The Politics of Identity=20
Reconstruction: The Indigenous Movement and the State in Ecuador=20

Amy Lind, Politicizing Gender and Redefining Politics: The Role of=20
Neighborhood Women's Organizations in Challenging Dominant=20
Conceptions of Gender, Politics, and Development in Ecuador=20

Julia Paley, Harvard University, Rebuilding Urban Popular=20
Movements in Chile: Local History Workshops in Santiago's=20
Shantytowns=20

Aldo Panfichi, New School for Social Research, The Authoritarian=20
Alternative: Anti-Politics Among the Urban Poor in Lima, Peru=20
Commentators:
=09Margaret Crahan, University of Pittsburgh
=09Susan Eckstein, Boston University
=09Saturday, March 5

10 a.m.-noon Panel 6. Movements and Parties: Competitors or Allies?
Panelists:

Kathleen Bruhn, Stanford University, The Seven-Month Itch? The PRD=20
and Popular Movements in Mexico=20

Philip Oxhorn, McGill University, Popular Social Movements and=20
Political Parties: The Challenge of Articulation=20

Maxwell Cameron, Carleton University, Political Parties and the=20
Informal Sector in Peru=20
Jose' Luis Coraggio, FLACSO-Quito, Comunicacio'n y representacio'n=20
popular: El caso de la revolucio'n sandinista=20

Commentators:
=09Carlos Vilas, UNAM
=09Katherine Roberts-Hite, Columbia University

1:00-3:00 p.m. Panel 7. International Forces: Influencing Popular=20
Struggles

Panelists:
Cesare Taviani, Associazione Studi America Latina, La cooperaci=97n=20
europea y el surgimiento de nuevas formas de representaci=97n popular=20
en America Latina=20

Mari'aa Lorena Cook, Cornell University, Economic Liberalization and=20
Transnational Politics: NAFTA and Popular Sector Activism in Mexico=20

Laura MacDonald, Carleton University, Globalizing Social Movements:=20
Responses to NAFTA in Canada and Mexico=20

Joao Paulo Candia Veiga, DESEP/CUT, Brazil, The Role of Unions in a=20
Transnational World: the Case of the CUT in Mersosul Intergration=20

Commentator:
=09Douglas Chalmers, Columbia University

3:00-5:00 p.m. Panel 8. Beyond the Crisis: Latin America's Future

Panelists:

Ian Roxborough, SUNY-Stony Brook, What Future for Social=20
Democracy in Latin America?=20

Eric Hershberg, Social Science Research Council, Market-based=20
Reform and Civil Society Representation: The Cases of Chile and=20
Spain=20

Peter Kingstone, University of California-Berkeley, Social=20
Democracy in the Era of Neoliberalism=20

Kenneth Roberts, University of New Mexico, Rethinking Economic=20
Alternatives: Left Parties and the Articulation of Popular Demands=20
in Chile and Peru=20

Commentators:
=09Cynthia Sanborn, Ford Foundation
=09Maria do Carmo Campello de Souza, Universidad de Sao Paulo

5:15 Concluding Remarks: Jorge Castan~eda, Universidad Auto'noma de=20
Me'xico

--1915861060-328315886-762204692:#15483--