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Item Reading the City as (Social) Movement: El Alto, Bolivia – October 2003(Latin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2005-06-30) Arbona, Juan ManuelItem Mexico City: The Sewer and the Metro(Latin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2005-06-30) Biron, Rebecca E.Item Communities and Crime in Mexico City(Latin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2005-06-30) Piccato, PabloItem Parque del Este Caracas: Between a Critical Naturalism and a Critical Formalism(Latin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2005-06-30) Berrizbeitia, AnitaItem Artistic Dis/Placement in Colonial Maracaibo(Latin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2005-06-30) Domínguez, MónicaCultic images and miracle-making icons, in particular, worked as pivotal points around which Spanish American communities fashioned their local identities and civic pride. Explorations of the several placements and displacements of artistic images within colonial Maracaibo reveal the ways in which they related to the social and political life of the city. By tracing the shifting physical and social life of Maracaibo’s artistic images, the article captures the contesting identities that defined this prosperous colonial settlement.Item Border of Words/Border of Images: Tijuana and Los Algodones(Latin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2005-06-30) Ramírez Pimienta, Juan CarlosItem "They See Us as Black Americans": Puerto Rican Migrants and the Politics of Citizenship in Depression-era New York City(Latin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2005-06-30) Thomas, LorrinThis talk is based on a section of the book I’m writing, Juan Q. Citizen: Puerto Rican Migrants and the Politics of Citizenship in NYC, 1917-1970. The larger project takes the abstract question of citizenship, a preoccupation of political and policy history in the last decade, and turns it into a real analytical problem for social history: What did this central category of political status mean in everyday life, especially when that status was as complex and embattled as it was for Puerto Ricans--who seemed to remain, even as migrants in the metropole, colonial citizens?Item On "Gabo y Fidel: Paisaje de una amistad" by A. Esteban and S. Panichelli(Latin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2006-06-30) Schmidt-Cruz, CynthiaItem On "The Struggle for Indigenous Rights in Latin America" by N. G. Postero and L. Zamosc(Latin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2005-06-30) Schwartz, Norman