April 28, 2022
Posted by: Monique Thormann
Vanessa Freije, assistant professor of International Studies and Latin American and Caribbean Studies, was awarded an honorable mention by the Latin American Studies Association, 2022 Mexico Section prize, for the best book
April 14, 2022
Posted by: Monique Thormann
Jackson School Assistant Professor of International Studies Vanessa Freije has been selected for a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend for her new book project, “Technology, Violence, and the Struggle for
January 5, 2022
Posted by: Monique Thormann
In this Q&A, we speak with Caitlin Quirk, a senior majoring in international studies who was recently selected as the 2022 recipient of the Donald C. and Margery S. Hellmann Scholarship
November 29, 2021
Posted by: Monique Thormann
In an article titled, “Statues: Relics representing past and present colonialism and white supremacy,” Associate Professor Christoph Giebel is quoted from his Op-Ed in May 2021, published by the Northwest Asian
November 1, 2021
Posted by: Monique Thormann
In November, check out some examples below of Jackson School international offerings, from events on hot global topics and more. Follow this link for an ongoing list of Jackson School events during
October 19, 2021
Posted by: Monique Thormann
Jackson School Assistant Professor of International Studies Vanessa Freije has been awarded the American Historical Association’s (AHA) Eugenia M. Palmegiano Prize for the most outstanding book published in English on any aspect of the history of
July 19, 2021
Posted by: Monique Thormann
In her article, “Manuel Buendía: To Kill a Journalist,” Jackson School Assistant Professor Vanessa Freije analyzes the 1984 assassination of Mexico’s most famous journalist, Manuel Buendía, and connects it to
June 7, 2021
Posted by: Monique Thormann
In her article titled “The Hard Work of Fraud. Winning Elections and Losing Legitimacy in Chihuahua” Jackson School Assistant Professor Vanessa Freije analyzes Mexico’s upcoming elections. A Spanish version of the article
May 18, 2021
Posted by: Monique Thormann
Jackson School doctoral student Kelsey Gilman and Chair of Latin American & Caribbean Studies Tony Lucero have co-authored an article titled “Speaking for Nature and Natives? Understanding Indigenous and Environmental Politics in Abiayala”
February 22, 2021
Posted by: Monique Thormann
Watch our conversations in Changing Global Connections: New Formations of Identity, Place and Region, a four-part lecture series on how today’s changing geopolitics is creating new configurations across regions and in