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THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT DALLAS
P. O. Box 830688 Richardson, Texas 75083-0688
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News Advisory
For Immediate Release News Contact: Jenni Bullington, UTD, (972) 883-4431,
jennib@utdallas.edu
U.
T. Dallas' Center for U.S.-Mexico Studies Resumes
Popular Lecture Series on Sept. 24
RICHARDSON, Texas (Sept. 17,
2002) - Seeking to foster greater understanding between the United States
and Mexico, The Center for U.S.-Mexico Studies at The University of Texas
at Dallas (UTD) this month will resume its popular lecture series about
issues of interest to both countries.
For
the 2002-03 series, U.S.-Mexico scholars, including Gabriela Gudiño
Gual, Mario Melgar, José Pagán, David R. Beall, Victoria
Rodriguez and Ana Maria Salazar, will share their expertise on such topics
as Mexican indigenous values, Mexican foreign policy, U.S.-Mexico border
development, drug abuse, women in Mexican politics and U.S.-Mexico bi-national
security.
The
lectures, which are free and open to the public, will be held on the UTD
campus and conclude with a question-and-answer session. The 2002-03 schedule
is as follows:
- Gabriela Gudiño
Gual - Sept. 24 at 4 p.m., Student Union 2.514 (Regency Room #2)
- Indigenous Values in Mexico: The Case of Tzotzil Maya in Chiapas.
Gual currently serves as a tourist delegate in San Cristobal de Las
Casas. She earned a B.A. in English as a second language from Universidad
Autonoma de Chiapas, Campus III. She previously served as an English-Spanish
tourist guide specializing in the ethnography of the Mayan indigenous
groups of the Highlands of Chiapas.
- Mario Melgar
- Oct. 22, time and location to be determined - Mexico-U.S. Immigration,
Central Issue on the Agenda. A native of Mexico, Melgar holds
a Ph.D. in law from National Autonomous University of Mexico's (UNAM)
School of Law. He currently serves as director of the UNAM campus in
San Antonio, Texas, and also is a tenured professor there. Melgar has
published six books and written numerous articles for technical journals
about public administration, education and law.
- José
Pagán - Nov. 11, time, location TBD - U.S.-Mexico Border Development:
Bi-National Challenges and Perspectives. Pagán is a director
of research and associate professor of economics in the U.T. Pan American
College of Business Administration. He holds a Ph.D. in economics from
the University of New Mexico and was a 1999 Border Fulbright Scholar
at the Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León. Pagán
has written extensively about issues of importance to the U.S.-Mexico
border region, including immigration, employment, earnings, gender issues,
taxation and public finance.
- David R. Beall
- Feb. 18, 2003, time, location TBD - Inter-American Drug Abuse Control:
The Case of U.S.-Mexico. Beall is the executive secretary of
the Inter American Drug Abuse Control Commission (CICAD) of the Organization
of American States. Under his leadership, CICAD approved a plan of action
for the implementation of an anti-drug strategy that included the control
of the international movement of firearms, their parts and components
and ammunition introduction.
- Victoria Rodriguez
- March 4, 2003, time, location TBD - Women in Contemporary Mexican
Politics. Rodriguez is vice provost of the University of Texas
at Austin, where she also serves as a professor in the Lyndon B. Johnson
School of Public Affairs. She received her Ph.D. in political science
from the University of California, Berkeley, and has written two books
about women in Mexican politics, including Women's Participation
in Mexican Political Life (1998) and Women in Contemporary Mexican
Politics (2002).
- Ana Maria Salazar
- April 22, 2003, time, location TBD - National Security: The Challenge
for Democracy. Salazar is vice president of SynthesisDigital.com.mx,
a Web site dedicated to interviewing Mexican policymakers and politicians.
She also writes a weekly column about politics and foreign affairs for
major Mexican newspapers and teaches national security policy at the
Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de Mexico in Mexico City.
Salazar previously served as deputy assistant secretary of defense for
drug enforcement policy and support at the Pentagon, where she supported
the Department of Defense's counter drug programs in the United States
and other countries. Salazar received her J.D. from Harvard Law School
and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
For additional information
about the lecture series, please contact Gabriela Carrera at gaby@student.utdallas.edu
or (972) 883 6401, or visit the center's Web site at http://www.utdallas.edu/research/cusma/.
About the Center
for U.S.-Mexico Studies
The Center for U.S.-Mexico Studies was created in 1995 in response to
UTD's recognition of the richness of the Mexican-American past, as well
as the importance of Mexico to the United States. The center strives to
enhance the academic relationship between UTD and Mexico via international
education, research and public service programs. Goals of the center are
to provide curricula and exchange of faculty and students with Mexican
universities, to conduct research and present lectures on issues of interest
to both Mexico and the U.S. and to prepare individuals for leadership
on critical business, political, scientific, technological and cultural
issues of concern to both countries.
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 13,000
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.
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