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The Center for U.S. - Mexico Studies cordially invites you to its Lecture Series 2003 - 2004. The
Center for U.S. - Mexico Studies, seeking to foster greater understanding between
our two nations, is pleased to host lectures on issues of interest to both Mexico
and the U.S. Previous lectures have included such issues as the implementation
of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), analysis of domestic politics
and foreign policy, issues in science and technology, transborder population,
and cultural development in both countries. The Center has hosted Carlos Fuentes,
Ezequiel Padilla, Andrés Oppenheimer, Elena Poniatowska, Ana María
Salazar, among others, under the frame of this series. Ana Cervantes, Peter M.
Ward, Habib Chamoun-Nicolás, Alfonso Oñate, and Mónica Verea
are scheduled in this academic year. The University of Texas at Dallas (UTD) students,
faculty, and staff and those interested in U.S. - Mexico affairs from The University
of Texas System (UT) and from the metropolitan area of Dallas - Fort Worth will
benefit from the different perspectives presented by these scholars, regarding
Mexican classical music, Texas-Mexico affairs, US-Mexico management relations,
North America labor affairs, and US-Mexico migration after September 11. We
look forward to seeing you in this series.
Soloist
and collaborative artist of a Mexican father and a Nebraska mother, Ana Cervantes
gives evidence in every performance of her special ability to serve as an interlocutor
between cultures. Graduate of Bard College, Cervantes counts Joan Tower and Theodore
Lettvin as her most significant teachers. She has served on the adjunct music
faculty of Princeton University, on the artist faculty at Rider University's Westminster
Conservatory and the Fine Arts faculty of The Peddie School in New Jersey, USA.
In 1999, Cervantes was given the prestigious Fulbright-García Robles award,
so that she could go to México to develop repertoire of Mexican contemporary
music for subsequent performance in the United States. In June of 2002, Cervantes
was awarded an Individual Artist grant from the Bossak-Heilbrun Charitable Foundation
(USA) in order to further develop repertoire from the US and México, to
be performed in both countries.
Peter
M. Ward earned his Ph.D. in geography from the University of Liverpool in 1976.
He held senior teaching positions at University College London, The University
of Cambridge, and The University of Texas at Austin where he holds the CB Smith
Sr. Centennial Chair in US-Mexico Relations and is professor in the Department
of Sociology and in the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs.
Over
the past 20 years Dr. Chamoun- Nicolas has been doing business development activities
in several sectors; industrial, commercial, institutional, for sales and marketing
of services and products. He has provided professional services to leader companies
such as ICA Fluor Daniel, Brown and Root, and Elf Aquitaine, among others in mainly
the U.S., Mexico and France. Labor
Relations after NAFTA, Alfonso Oñate
Alfonso
Oñate was appointed jointly by the Minister of Labor of Canada, the Secretary
of Labor and Social Welfare of Mexico and the Secretary of Labor of the United
States, as the Executive Director of the Secretariat of the Commission for Labor
Cooperation (the NAFTA Labor Commission). As
the Executive Director of the Secretariat of the Commission for Labor Cooperation,
he leads a unique multinational institution devoted to advancing labor rights
and labor standards as an integral part of expanding trade relations in the North
American region. Under his direction, The Secretariat undertakes labor-related
research and public information, and assists the member countries with the cooperative
activities. Before his
present responsibility Oñate´s professional career evolved along
two main fields: Academic life and Civil Service. His governmental experience
comprises Mexican Government's three branches, i.e., Judiciary, Legislative and
Executive. Many of the activities developed for the Mexican Government have dealt
with planning of new structures for governmental agencies starting from project
definition and concluding with its implementation. Probably, the most important
of the latter has been to bring into existence the new structure of the Mexican
Federal Judiciary due to the Constitutional Reform of 1994.
Monica
Verea is the Director of the department of interinstitutional collaboration at
the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) in Mexico City. She is a specialist
in contemporary migration in the North American region as well as in Mexico-U.S.-Canada
relations. She received her bachelor and masters in sociology and international
relations correspondingly, from the Political and Social Sciences School of UNAM.
She has also made certifications on American Studies in The University of North
Carolina and in Quebec Studies in the Mc Gill University in Quebec, Canada. In
1982, Monica Verea created the master degree in Mexico-U.S. studies at the National
Professional Studies School of Aclatan-UNAM. She teaches several courses at the
master's level as well as for the certification she founded and coordinates: "U.S.
and its Relations with Mexico: A Close Multidisciplinary and Regional Outlook".
Monica Verea is the author of multiples essays and book's chapters with a bi-national
perspective in different issues such as migrations, labor and politics between
Mexico and the U.S. Monica has written two books on migration between the two
countries: The Illegal: Mexico and the U.S. in front of Migrations of the Illegal
and Temporary Migration in North America: Proposals and Answers. A
Common Destiny: Mexico and the United States, Tony Garza
The U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, Tony Garza, received his Bachelor of Business Administration from the University of Texas at Austin in 1980 and was recognized as one of five Outstanding Young Texas Exes in 1989. He received his Doctor of Jurisprudence in 1983 from the Southern Methodist University School of Law. In 1988, Ambassador Garza was the first Republican elected to countywide office in traditionally Democratic South Texas. He was re-elected with nearly 60% of the vote, and continued to serve as Cameron County Judge until 1995. In 1994, shortly after George W. Bush became Governor-elect, he made his first appointment, naming Ambassador Garza as Texas' 99th Secretary of State and a Senior Advisor. During his 3-year tenure as the State's Chief Elections Officer, he worked with the 74th and 75th Legislatures to reform Texas Election Law. As a Senior Advisor to then-Governor Bush, Ambassador Garza served as the lead liaison on border and Mexico affairs, working on issues as diverse as free trade, the environment and other border-specific concerns. Before being sworn in as Ambassador, Mr. Garza was Texas' 41st Railroad Commissioner. Elected in 1998, Ambassador Garza was a partner in the Austin office of Bracewell & Patterson, L.L.P., a Houston-based law firm. As Railroad Commissioner, he was committed to keeping the energy sector strong and healthy. In February of 2001, Ambassador Garza received the SMU School of Law's Distinguished Alumnus Award. Hispanic Business Magazine has twice named him one of its "Top 100 Most Influential Hispanics."
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