Social Sciences Division
Associate Professor
Faculty
Environmental Studies Department
Kenneth S Norris Center for Natural History
Dolores Huerta Research Center for the Americas
Merrill College Academic Building
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Winter '24: Mondays 9:15-11:15 by Zoom; (Please Email to Request Signup Link)
Merrill/Crown Faculty Services
My research and teaching focus on the topics of hemispheric mobilities, social movements, Latin American hip hop, and inter-American relations. My first book was titled Argentina in the Global Middle East (Stanford University Press, June 2020), and you can find a companion ArcGIS StoryMap for this project here. This book reflects my broader interests in transregional connections as seen through the lens of South-South alliances, solidarities, mobilities and exchanges.
I am currently working on a new book project, provisionally titled American Venom: Animals, Science, & Hemispheric Relations. This project proposes venomous animals (snakes, spiders, scorpions) as a natural fulcrum for for investigating the movement of capital, bodies, and forms of knowledge in the Americas over the course of the past century.
Prior to joining LALS, I was an assistant professor of history at Western Carolina University, and a postdoctoral fellow at North Carolina State University. I received my PhD in History from the University of California, Davis in 2015, and my BA in Latin American Studies from Wellesley College in 2006.
Mobilities; modern Latin American history; Argentina; Central America; global south networks; spatial history; inter-American relations; public health; natural history.
Co-Author with Rwany Sibaja. “Digital Approaches to Research & Pedagogy in Latin American Studies.” The Latin Americanist, 62, no.1 (2018).