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Susan Helen Ellison, Ph.D.

Anthropology Department Wellesley College 106 Central Street Wellesley, MA 02481 [email protected] http://susanhellison.wordpress.com/

EMPLOYMENT

2015-Present Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Wellesley College Faculty Affiliate of Latin American Studies & Peace and Justice Studies

2013 – 2015 , Full-time Lecturer in Anthropology Faculty Affiliate of the Princeton Environmental Initiative (PEI)

EDUCATION

Brown University Ph.D. in socio-cultural anthropology May 2013 Dissertation: Mediating Democracy in El Alto: The Politics of Conflict Resolution in Bolivia Chair: Kay Warren. Readers: Daniel Smith, Jessaca Leinaweaver, Keith Brown, Nancy Postero

Ph.D. Candidacy Awarded May 2010 A.M. in Socio-Cultural Anthropology Awarded May, 2009

Harvard Divinity School Master’s in Theological Studies (MTS), June 2007

Washington University, St. Louis Bachelor of Arts (double major in Cultural Anthropology and Spanish), May 2000 Summa Cum Laude Senior Honors Thesis: “Doing Ants’ Work: The Evolution of Chile’s Popular Movement.” Thesis Advisor, Prof. Richard G. Fox Phi Beta Kappa John Bennett Award to the Outstanding Graduating Senior in Anthropology.

AWARDS

2019 Recipient of the Association of Political and Legal Anthropology (APLA) Book Prize for Domesticating Democracy: The Politics of Conflict Resolution in Bolivia.

2019 Recipient of the Bryce Wood Book Award from the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) for the outstanding book on in the social sciences and humanities published in English. Awarded for Domesticating Democracy: The Politics of Conflict Resolution in Bolivia.

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2018 Honorable Mention, Victor Turner Prize in Ethnographic Writing for Domesticating Democracy: The Politics of Conflict Resolution in Bolivia, from The Society for Humanistic Anthropology

2013 Joukowsky Family Foundation's Outstanding Dissertation Award, .

2013 Elsa Cheney Award for unpublished work by a Junior Scholar. Gender and Feminist Studies section of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) for “The Conflictual Social Life of an Industrial Sewing Machine.”

BOOKS

2018 Domesticating Democracy: The Politics of Conflict Resolution in Bolivia. Duke University Press.

PEER REVIEWED ARTICLES

2019 “Ethnography in Uncertain Times.” Geopolitics. Special Issue: Time and Power in a Violent Moment: Re-Imagining Fieldwork as Social Transformation.

2019 “Painted by Default: Public Shaming and Graffiti on the Homefront.” American Anthropologist. 121 (3): 694-707.

2017 “You Have to Comply with Paper”: Debt and Documents in Bolivia’s Conciliation Projects. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 23(3).

2017 “Corrective Capacities: From Unruly Politics to Democratic Capacitación.” Cambridge Journal of Anthropology. 35(1): 67-83.

2015 "Replicate, Facilitate, Disseminate: The Micropolitics of American Democracy Promotion in Bolivia." Political and Legal Anthropology Review (PoLAR). Vol. 28:2.

OTHER 2018 "Indigeneity in anthropology" under “Anthropology of Politics, Law, Power and Identity,” In The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology, Wiley-Blackwell.

IN PREPARATION n.d. Contribution to Oikography: A New Anthropology of the House, Advanced Seminar at the School for Advanced Study (SAR). n.d. "Of Cebras and Citizens: Pedestrian Politics in Bolivia’s Transport City."

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BOOK REVIEWS 2017 Owners of the Sidewalk: Security and Survival in the Informal City by Daniel M. Goldstein. Durham: Duke University Press, 2016. Anthropological Quarterly. 90(2): 537-542.

2015 Along the Bolivian Highway: Social Mobility and Political Culture in a New Middle Class by Miriam Shakow. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014. 272 pp. American Anthropologist. 117(3).

GRANTS & FELLOWSHIPS 2019 National Science Foundation (NSF), Cultural Anthropology Program Senior Research Award (CA-SR), for the project "An Ethnographic Investigation of Contexts of Trust and Distrust."

2018 American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) Fellow / National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) International and Area Studies Fellow for the project “Betrayed: Politics, Pyramid Schemes, and Bolivian Vernaculars of Fraud.”

2018 Wenner-Gren Foundation Post-Ph.D. Research Grant for the project “Betrayed: Politics, Pyramid Schemes, and Bolivian Vernaculars of Fraud.”

2017 Wellesley College Committee on Faculty Awards for exploratory research

2014 Princeton University Committee on Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences (UCRHSS), summer research grant.

2011 Social Science Research Council SSRC-ACLS International Dissertation Research Fellowship

2010 Wenner-Gren Foundation International Dissertation Research Fellowship

2010 National Science Foundation (NSF) dissertation research fellowship. Jointly funded by the Cultural Anthropology and Law and Social Sciences Programs.

2010 Fulbright-Hayes (awarded but declined).

2008- 2013 Jacob K. Javits Fellow, U.S. Department of Education

2009 Tinker Field Research Grant, Brown University Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS). For Pre-dissertation research, summer 2009.

2008 Honorable Mention, National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship

2007 Brown University Fellowship, Brown Graduate School

2008 Summer research grant, Graduate Program in Development (GPD), Brown University

2005- 2007 Guerrand-Hermés Scholarship (full tuition), Harvard Divinity School

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CONFERENCE PAPERS, INVITED LECTURES, & WORKSHOPS Ongoing Participating member of the Contemporary Latin American Anthropology Workshop (CLAAW) at David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, .

Pending panel acceptance (May 2020) Law and Society annual meeting, Denver, CO. Roundtable: “Revisiting the Amherst Seminar in a Populist Era: Informalism, Popular Justice, and Legal Form.”

Forthcoming (April 2020) Harvard University Contemporary Ethnography and Inequality (CEI) Workshop, invited presentation on new book project-based article-in-progress. Title TBD.

Forthcoming (March 2020) School for Advanced Study (SAR), Invited Contributor to the Advanced Seminar, Oikography: A New Anthropology of the House, João Biehl & Federico Neiburg, Organizers. Santa Fe, NM, March 15-20, 2020.

2019 “Champions, Fraudsters, and Failures: Subjectification and Surveillance in Bolivian Multilevel Marketing (MLM).” Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association. Paper read in my absence.

2019 Latin American Studies Association Annual Congress, invited panel/author meets critic honoring my book Domesticating Democracy as the winner of the Bryce Wood Book Award.

2018 Invited book lecture at the University of Georgia’s Wilson Center for the Humanities & Arts, co-sponsored with the Georgia Workshop on Culture, Power, and History and the UGA Department of Sociology. “Violence on Loan: Domesticating Conflict in Bolivia.”

2018 Invited book lecture, University of Kansas Dept. of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. “Domesticating Democracy: The Gendered Politics of Conflict Resolution in Bolivia.”

2017 “Ethnography in ‘Unstable’ Places, Anthropology in Uncertain Times.” Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association.

2017 White Paper: “VAWIP: What Differences Influence Understanding of These Issues.” Feminist Research Seminar, “Opposition to the Political Participation of Women and Gender Justice Advocates: Building A Feminist Research Agenda.” Invited Workshop with the University of Michigan Institute for Research on Women and Gender (IRWG).

2017 Discussant, Contemporary Latin American Anthropology Workshop (CLAAW) at Harvard’s David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies for Carlota McAllister’s “The Good Road: Conscience and Consciousness in a Postrevolutionary Mayan Village.” 2/13/17

2016 “Domesticating Conflict: Dispute Resolution and Accidental Governance in Bolivia.” Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association (11/16)

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2015 “Corrective Capabilities: From Unruly Politics to Democratic Capacitación.” From the Wenner- Gren Foundation-sponsored workshop titled, Hope and Insufficiency: Capacity Building in Ethnographic Comparison. IT University, Copenhagen, Denmark.

2015 "The Conflictual Social Life of an Industrial Sewing Machine." Invited colloquia: Oikos: Affects, Economies and Politics of House-ing. Princeton University, May 22-24th 2015. Sponsored by the Princeton Mellon Initiative in Architecture and Urban Humanities, Núcleo de Pesquisas em Cultura e Economia (NuCEC), and Princeton Department of Anthropology.

2015 Invited talk, “You Have to Comply with Paper: Debt and Documents in Bolivia’s Conciliation Projects.” Dayton University. Jan 29, 2015.

2015 Invited talk, “Materializing Care.” Princeton University, January 18, 2015.

2014 “Of Cebras and Citizens: Pedestrian Politics in Bolivia’s Transport City. “Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association.

2014 “Errors in Form, Errors in Content.” Panel: Aesthetics and Ethics of the Form. American Ethnological Society/Society for Visual Anthropology meeting.

2013 “A Market for Mediators.” Panel: Technopolitical Futures. Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, November 2013

2013 “Words are Carried Off by the Wind: Debt, Conflict, and the Judicialization of Kinship in El Alto,” for panel, Anthropologies of Conflict in a New Millennium. American Ethnological Society and Association for Political and Legal Anthropology joint Spring Conference.

2013 “Studying Aid Workers or Becoming One?: The Perils of Studying Up in Engaged Research.” Delivered at the international workshop, Knowledge Production, Ethics, Solidarity: Stories from the field, hosted by Brown University’s Middle East Studies Center.

2011 “El Alto, Problem City: The Politics of Capacitación for Conflict Resolution in Bolivia.” Invited Panel (AAA Committee on the Anthropology of Public Policy): Legacies of the Past, Promises of the Future: Capacity Building as a Practice of Contemporary Development, Intervention and Governance. Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association.

2009 “Replicate, Facilitate, Disseminate: ‘Translating’ American Democracy Assistance in El Alto, Bolivia.” Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association.

2009 "‘The Rome of Yesterday Reflected in the Bolivia of Today’: Faith-based Advocacy, Structural Inequality, and Health in the ." Brown University Lecture Series, “Innovative Approaches to Global Health.” Series theme, “Religion and Global Health.” April 9, 2009.

2008 “Debating Democracy: American Foreign Aid and Democracy Promotion in Bolivia.” Panel: “New Directions with Core Heuristics in Political Anthropology.” Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association.

2008 Brown Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS) Graduate Student Conference. November 14, 2008, Co-Organizer and paper presenter. Ellison 5

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2008 "Back from the Field: American Foreign Aid and Democracy Promotion in Bolivia." Brown Graduate Program in Development student conference October 10, 2008.

2008 “Debating Democracy and American Foreign Aid in Bolivia.” New England Council of Latin American Studies (NECLAS) annual conference. Panel: “Changes in the Andes.” October 4, 2008.

TEACHING

Undergraduate Advising, Student Independent Work 2019 Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship (MMUF) Mentor, Looghermine Claude FA2019 ANTH 360/Senior Thesis with Zulia Martinez FA2019 PEAC 250H & Tanner Conference Advisor for Alberta Born-Weiss FA 2019 ANTH 350 with Georgia Marquez-Grap (co-advising w/Adam Van Arsdale) SP2018 ANTH 370/Senior Thesis Advisor for Maureen McCord SP2018 Thesis Reader for Audrey Choi SP2018 Thesis Reader for Margaretta (‘Kit’) Mitchell FA2017 ANTH 360/Senior Thesis Advisor for Maureen McCord FA2017 ANTH 350 with Lydia (Hans) Han FA2017 Tanner Advisor for Siena Harlin FA2016 Tanner Advisor for Isabelle Herde FA2016 Tanner Advisor for Netanya Perluss FA2016 Tanner Advisor for Sabina Unni FA2016 Tanner Advisor for Maureen McCord SP2016 ANTH 250 with Margaretta (‘Kit’) Mitchell SP2016 Ruhlman advisor for Margaretta (‘Kit’) Mitchell SP2016 Reader for senior thesis of Katie Donlan SP2016 Reader for senior thesis of Lizzy Star

2013-2015 Princeton University. Primary advisor on seven (7) Senior Theses, including project development, IRB applications, and students’ writing processes. Advised three (3) Junior Papers.

Undergraduate Courses: • Anthropology In and Of the City • Indigenous Resurgence • Political Anthropology • Doing Well, Doing Good: The Political Lives of NGOs • Introduction to Cultural Anthropology • Culture, Politics, Power: Anthropological Approaches to Latin America • The Politics of Nature • The Anthropology of Crime and Punishment (Princeton only: Fall 2013; Fall 2014)

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• Indigeneity (Princeton, Spring 2015)

Graduate Advising • External Examiner for Andrea Steigerwald’s MA thesis in Anthropology, Simon Fraser University, (Re)Negotiating Meaning, Dismantling Patriarchy: The Politics of Translation in a Bolivian, Feminist NGO (September 2018)

TEACHING INVITATIONS & GUEST LECTURES Date TBD - Rescheduled Co-leading an intensive workshop and week-long activities for the Latin American Social Issues Summer School in Coquimbo, Chile. Citizenship and Political Subjectivity: Ethnographic Approaches to Latin America’s Political Juncture.

2018 Covered two weeks of class meetings for Prof. Deborah Matzner’s Anthropology of Media course (ANTH/CAMS 232) while she was on maternity leave. Class sessions covered indigenous media in Australia and the Amazon region.

2018 Guest speaker: Introduction to Latin American Studies seminar, discussing how I situate myself as a Latin Americanist researcher

2018 Invited Lecture with the Wellesley International Relations council, “Training Women for Empowerment?: Views from India and Bolivia.” With Smitha Radhakrishnan

2018 Invited Talk with the Wellesley Anthro Enthusiasts, “Engaged Anthropology”

2015 Spoke to Prof. Kathleen Millar’s Latin American Development graduate seminar (via Skype) at Simon Fraser University (Canada) about my article appearing in PoLAR, research methods, and my research more broadly.

2014 Guest Speaker for Prof. Carolyn Rouse’s undergraduate ethnographic research and writing course The Ethnographer’s Craft.

2013 Guest Speaker for Prof. Carol Greenhouse’s undergraduate seminar, Ethnography, Evidence, Experience.

2013 Guest speaker, grant writing and research design for the interdisciplinary course, Theory and Research in Development II, Brown University.

2013 Guest speaker for the course Theories of Latin American Development, taught by Kathleen Millar, Simon Fraser University. Discussed my article manuscript (which was assigned reading), “Replicate, Facilitate, Disseminate: The Micropolitics of American Democracy Promotion in Bolivia.”

2012 Guest lecturer for the Brown University seminar Two Billion Cars: Humans, Markets, Cultures, and the Automobile taught by Prof. Cathy Lutz. Lecture: “Of Citizens and Cebras: Transportation and the Birth of a City.”

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2012 Guest speaker, grant writing and research design for the interdisciplinary course, Theory and Research in Development II, Brown University.

2011 Guest lecturer, Louisville Presbyterian Seminary class taught by Prof. Cláudio Carvalhaes. “Everyday Violence and Religious Pluralism in Post-Multicultural Bolivia.”

2008 Guest lecturer for Prof. Jessaca Leinaweaver’s seminar Andean Anthropology, Brown University. Discussing course book The Spectacular City and lynching violence/vigilante justice in Bolivia.

ACADEMIC SERVICE

College-wide Service 2019- present Wellesley College Tenure Track Advisory Committee (TTAC)

2017- 2018 Wellesley College Board of Admissions

2016- 2017 Wellesley College Academic Review Board (ARB)

Departmental Service

Ongoing Peace and Justice Studies Advisory Board

Ongoing Latin American Studies affiliated faculty, active in curriculum redesign and other departmental planning meetings.

2019 Representative of the Latin American Studies Program on the Political Science Tenure Track search in Comparative Politics.

2017- 2018 Search committee, two-year lecturer position with a focus on archaeology, Department of Anthropology

2017 Latin American Studies internal committee/group to draft reaccreditation learning goals.

2016 Search committee Mellon Postdoc in Archaeology, Wellesley Department of Anthropology

2016 Latin American Studies core course development in collaboration with Patrick McEwan and Koichi Hagimoto (met several times apart from the larger LAST faculty to develop the proposal for LAST 101, which will be taught as a pilot by McEwan and Hagimoto)

Service to the discipline & earlier service work 2019 Peer Reviewer for the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (JRAI)

2019 Peer Reviewer for the journal American Anthropologist (AA), two separate articles

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2019 Peer Reviewer for the journal Political and Legal Anthropology Review (PoLAR)

2017 Co-organizer and Discussant for “Irresolution and the Politics of Possibility,” Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. 12/17.

2017 Peer Reviewer for the journal Anthropological Quarterly

2016 Peer Reviewer for the Journal Science Technology and Human Values

2015 Co-organizer and Chair for the panel, The Unexamined Everyday. Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, November 18-22, 2015. Presenting the paper “Accounting for the Everyday.”

2013 Fieldwork consultant for a joint Anthropology Department / Brown University Medical School study on translation and communication challenges in Rhode Island’s clinics. Provided training in facilitating focus groups to Brown medical students involved in the study.

2009 Co-Organizer III Annual Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS) Graduate Student Conference, Brown University.

2008 Center for Latin American Studies and Caribbean Studies liaison between the Bolivian Embassy and Brown University Events planning team for visit of Bolivian President Evo Morales to Brown University, where he delivered the Ogden Lecture in International Affairs, April 22nd, 2008. Worked with Brown staff, Bolivian Embassy, Secret Service, and Bolivian community representatives in Providence, among others involved in coordinating President Morales’ visit.

2008 Co-organizer, conference “Changes in the Andes: Realities, Challenges and Opportunities for Inter-American Relations.” February 12-13, 2008. Co-sponsored by the Center for Latin American Studies and Caribbean Studies and Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University.

2005- 2007 Graduate Student representative on Harvard’s University-wide Advisory Committee on Shareholder Responsibility (ACSR). Also served on a sub-committee advising the ACSR and Harvard Corporation on investments in – and possible divestment from – companies doing business in Sudan.

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STUDIES / REPORTS FOR RESEARCH INTERLOCUTORS & MEDIA APPEARANCES 2019 Interviewed for a dedicated podcast on the New Books Network about Domesticating Democracy.

2017 Interviewed by Bolivian historian Carmen Soliz during an hour-long national radio program focused exclusively on my research. The Spanish-language radio show, Trajines, features in-depth interviews with researchers working in Bolivia on the popular Radio Deseo 103.3FM, and enables Bolivianist scholars to disseminate their findings to broader publics.

2016 Interviewed for a column in the New Hampshire Valley News, “In Bolivia, Commuters Take Elevated Route.” By Katrina Wheelan. Published 10/22/16

2011 Internal study for District 6 of el Alto, Bolivia regarding racial, class, and gendered dynamics affecting the work of the Integrated Justice Center, particularly staff-client relations. Based on fifteen months of ethnographic fieldwork in the Center as well as interviews with staff and clients. Report identified patterns and suggested steps for improving service provision to Clients, as well as improved communication and coordination with the Center’s interns.

2011 Internal study for the [UNDISCLOSED] Criminal Tribunal in La Paz, Bolivia. Study focused on problems of corruption and coima (small bribes charged by public servants to speed along court cases, or to impede them) in one of La Paz’s courtrooms. Study based on several months of ethnographic research as well as interviews with judges, paid staff, and unpaid interns who are responsible for much of the functioning of the courtroom. Study offered short, medium, and long-term recommendations for addressing staff concerns with pervasive coima/bribes and other actions intended to delay (or advance) court cases.

2011 Report on preliminary findings of dissertation research to the Bolivian Ministry of Justice

ADDITIONAL TRAINING 2013 Teaching Certificate III, Sheridan Center for Teaching and Learning, Brown University.

2012 Teaching Certificate I, Reflective Teaching Practice. Sheridan Center for Teaching and Learning, Brown University.

Languages: Fluent in both written and spoken Spanish

RESEARCH EXPERIENCE Research leave, 2018/2019 academic year Extended ethnographic fieldwork for my second book project, tentatively titled, Betrayed: Politics, Pyramid Schemes, and Bolivian Vernaculars of Fraud. Funded by the NSF, Wenner-Gren Foundation, and ACLS/NEH.

Exploratory Research for After Aid and Betrayed: Politics, Pyramid Schemes, and Bolivian Vernaculars of Fraud. Summers of 2016 & 2017 El Alto and La Paz, Bolivia.

Domesticating Democracy follow-up research toward completion of book manuscript Summers of 2014 & 2016, El Alto, La Paz, and Sucre, Bolivia.

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Dissertation Fieldwork August 2010-November 2011; June-July 2009 . Seventeen (17) months of ethnographic fieldwork in El Alto and La Paz, Bolivia toward my doctoral dissertation. Funded by the Wenner-Gren foundation, Social Science Research Council, and National Science Foundation, and the Jacob K. Javits Foundation, and the Tinker Foundation and Brown University’s Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS).

Masters Fieldwork June-August 2008. Nine (9) weeks of fieldwork in El Alto, Bolivia investigating the interplay between U.S. democracy promotion programs and indigenous and sindicalista (labor union) forms of political participation and political subject formation. Supported by the Summer Fieldwork research grant, Graduate Program in Development (GPD), Brown University.

Independent research, U.S. drug policy in the Andes July 2000. Conducted independent research in San Sebastian Women’s Prison in Cochabamba, Bolivia as part of an investigation into U.S. drug policy in the Andean region. My article following the stories of women imprisoned under U.S.-backed drug policy—and the lives of their children—was published in a long editorial in The Courier-Journal November 19, 2000. Accompanying award-winning photographs of women prisoners and their children selected for an exhibit by ArtsWatch in Louisville, Kentucky in July 2001.

Undergraduate Honors Thesis, “Doing Ants’ Work: The Evolution of Chile’s Popular Movement.” Jan-August 1999. Seven months in Santiago, Chile conducting fieldwork for my senior honors thesis at Washington University in St. Louis. Studied the collapse of the popular movement against Pinochet following Chile’s transition to democracy, with a particular focus on the experience of pobladora women who participated in Christian Base Communities during the dictatorship. My fieldwork included participant observation in ongoing Christian Base Communities, in-depth interviews with women religious and former movement participants, the Catholic hierarchy, and former prisoners and survivors of torture, as well as the families of the disappeared. Graduated Summa Cum Laude and received the John Bennett Award to the Outstanding Graduating Senior in Anthropology for my project.

RESEARCH-RELEVANT WORK EXPERIENCE August 2001-May 2005 Prior to beginning graduate studies, I worked as the facilitator for a national network of Bolivian grassroots, non-profit, and faith-based organizations that were working to identify and address what they considered to be the structural causes of poverty in the country (position based in Bolivia). That network was part of a larger transnational advocacy network of organizations mobilizing in response to neoliberal economic restructuring policies and various forms of socio-political and economic exclusion. My work focused heavily on indigenous rights and environmental justice issues related to the mining sector and water privatization. I regularly wrote and spoke at international conferences, on radio programs, and in international advocacy training workshops on the unfolding social, political and economic situation in Bolivia. These issues included two violent episodes in 2003 that precipitated the flight of President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada (the “Gas War”), the ascension of President Evo Morales, as well as ongoing conflicts over the privatization of water, and efforts to redress the historic and ongoing social, political, and economic exclusion of indigenous Bolivians from political power.

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RESEARCH-RELEVANT NON-ACADEMIC PUBLICATIONS

“In Bolivia, Rebecca’s Story Is All Too Real,” Sunday Forum section, The Courier-Journal, Louisville, KY, December 22, 2002.

“Bolivia and the Drug War: Are women, children victims of policies to limit imports of cocaine?” Sunday Forum section, The Courier-Journal, Louisville, KY, November 19, 2000.

“Haunting Visions of the ‘Disappeared’: School of the Americas protest is a reminder of Chilean horrors,” Sunday Forum section, The Courier-Journal, Louisville, KY, December 5, 1999.

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