News Advisory For Immediate Release News Contact: Jenni Bullington, UTD, (972) 883-4431, jennib@utdallas.edu UTD's Center for
U.S.-Mexico Studies to Offer Lecture Series, Seminar About Mexican Politics
and Culture The lecture series will begin this month and will include among its speakers Dr. Juan Hernández, founding director of the UTD center who currently is serving in the Cabinet of Mexican President Vincent Fox as director of the Office for Mexicans Living Abroad. Hernández will talk about Fox's migration agenda. Also scheduled to participate in the lecture series are Andrés Oppenheimer, chief correspondent for The Miami Herald, and Mexican journalist Elena Poniatowska. Oppenheimer, who was part of a team awarded the Pulitzer Prize for investigation of the Iran-Contra deal in 1987, will address Mexico's political crisis of 1994 and the challenges of liberalization. Poniatowska, who in 1979 became the first woman to win the Mexican national award for journalism, has lived in and written about Mexico for nearly four decades. The lectures series, which is free and open to the public, will take place on the UTD campus in Room 4.614 of the Jonsson Academic Center. Hernandez will give his lecture on Jan. 15, Oppenheimer on Feb. 19 and Poniatowska on March 19. Lectures are scheduled to begin at 2 p.m., last approximately 45 minutes and conclude with a question-and-answer session. The seminar-style course, which will be taught by Hernández and Dr. Rodolfo Hernández Guerrero, current director of the UTD center, eventually will be offered to universities in Mexico and will be an introductory analysis of the Mexican political system. It will explore the dynamics of the system and focus on the transformation of the system's structure from an historical and cultural perspective. The seminar will give special attention to issues related to the U.S.-Mexico relationship, including cultural values about nationalism, demography, religion and ethnicity. The UT TeleCampus is a central support Web site for online courses and degree programs within the U.T. System. It features a Web site similar in design to a traditional campus, including admissions links, digital libraries and learning resource links, and houses online "classrooms." "We are excited
to offer a lecture series and seminar about Mexican politics and culture,
particularly because it provides the opportunity to educate the community
and students about issues facing Mexico," said Rodolfo Hernández.
"Even more exciting, though, is the opportunity to offer the course
to other universities in the U.T. System, and, in the future, Mexican
universities. We hope this seminar will open the door for many future
collaborations." For additional information about the center or the lecture series, please visit the Web site at http://www.utdallas.edu/research/cusma/. About UTD The University of
Texas at Dallas, located at the convergence of Richardson, Plano and Dallas
in the heart of the complex of major multinational technology corporations
known as the Telecom Corridor ®, enrolls more than 7,000 undergraduate
and 5,000 graduate students. The school's freshman class traditionally
stands at the forefront of Texas state universities in terms of average
SAT scores. The university offers a broad assortment of bachelor's, master's
and doctoral degree programs. For additional information about UTD, please
visit the university's Web site at www.utdallas.edu. |