Published Books

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Published Books

Dr. Carol Wise

Associate Professor School of International Relations Von KleinSmid Center, 328 Los Angeles, CA 90089-0043 (213) 740-2138 [email protected]

Published Books

 Requiem or Revival? The Promise of North American Integration, co-edited with Isabel Studer. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 2007.  Reinventing the State: Economic Strategy and Institutional Change in Peru. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2003. (Spanish edition published in 2003 by the Universidad del Pacifico, Lima, Peru).  Post-Stabilization Politics in Latin America: Competition, Transition, Collapse, co-edited with Riordan Roett. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 2003. (Spanish edition published in 2004 by Nuevo Hacer Press, Buenos Aires).  Exchange Rate Politics in Latin America, co-edited with Riordan Roett. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 2000. (Spanish edition published in 2001 by Nuevo Hacer Press, Buenos Aires; Portuguese edition published as a special issue of the Brazilian Journal of Political Economy, Spring 2001).  The Post-NAFTA Political Economy: Mexico and the Western Hemisphere, edited by Carol Wise. University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1998.

Books in Progress:

 China, Latin America, and the End of Neoliberalism  Structural Shift: The Politics of Economic Transformation in Mexico (with Manuel Pastor).

Journal Articles:

 “Financial Crisis, Income Effects, and Social Policy: Mexico and Argentina in Retrospect” (with Manuel Pastor). Under review.  “Coalition of the Willing? The Impetus for the U.S. Bilateral Trade Strategy in Latin America” (with Cintia Quiliconi). Under review.  “The North American Free Trade Agreement” New Political Economy 1 (2009).  "China's Surge in Latin American Markets: Policy Challenges and Responses" (with Cintia Quiliconi). Politics and Policy 1 (2007): 410-438.  "The Lost Sexenio: Vicente Fox and the New Politics of Economic Reform in Mexico" (with Manuel Pastor). Latin American Politics and Society 4 (2005): 135-160.  "The Political Impact of NAFTA on Mexico: Reflections on the Political Economy of Democratization" (with Max Cameron). Canadian Journal of Political Science 2 (2004): 301-323.  "Argentina: From Poster Child to Basket Case" (with Manuel Pastor). Foreign Affairs (November- December 2001): 60-72.  "Latin American Trade Strategy at Century's End." Business and Politics 2 (1999): 2-46.  "The Politics of Second Generation Reform" (with Manuel Pastor). Journal of Democracy 10 (1999): 34-48.  "Stabilization and Its Discontents: Argentina's Economic Restructuring in the 1990's" (with Manuel Pastor). World Development 3 (1999): 477-503.  "Liberalization and Ethnic Conflict in Latin America" (with Alison Brysk). Studies in Comparative International Development 2 (1997): 76-104.  "State Policy, Distribution, and Neoliberal Reform in Mexico" (with Manuel Pastor). Journal of Latin American Studies 2 (1997): 419-456.  "The Origins and Sustainability of Mexico's Free Trade Policy" (with Manuel Pastor). International Organization 3 (1994): 459-489.  "The Politics of Peruvian Economic Reform: Overcoming the Legacies of State-led Development." Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 1 (1994): 75-125.  "Peruvian Economic Policy in the 1980's: From Orthodoxy to Heterodoxy and Back (with Manuel Pastor). Latin American Research Review 2 (1992): 83-117.  "The Regional Implications of Public Investment in Peru" (with Patricia A. Wilson). Latin American Research Review 2 (1986): 93-116.

Grants and Fellowships:

 Spring 2009Visiting Scholar, Center for US-Mexico Studies, University of California, San Diego  2008-2009 USC U.S. China Institute, Faculty Research Grant, US-China Relations vis-à-vis Latin America in the 2000s.  2006-2010 Faculty Grant, Center for International Business Education Research (CIBER), USC Marshall School of Business, research on China’s growing political and economic ties with the Western Hemisphere.  2006/07 Future Fuels & Energy Initiative, USC Provost's Office, "Transitioning to a New Energy Fuel Paradigm: The Development, Adaptation, and Export of Natural Gas from the Andean Region."  2006/07 Faculty Fellowship, John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation of Los Angeles, "China, Mexico, & Competition for the U.S. Market: Los Angeles as a Commercial Hub."  2006/07 Faculty Fellowship Research Grant, Earhart Foundation (Ann Arbor, Michigan), "China's Growing Economic Presence in North America: Risks, Opportunities, & Strategic Options."  2006 Senior Fulbright Specialist, Beirut, Lebanon. Six weeks of collaboration with the College of Letters and Arts at Lebanon American University, toward the goal of introducing a teaching and research module on Latin American Studies.  2006 Public Policy Scholar, North American Studies, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, DC.  2005 Carleton University Fulbright Chair in North American Studies, Ottawa, Canada  2005 Fulbright-Hays Senior Fulbright Faculty Award, Universidad de las Americas, Puebla, Mexico  2004/05 James H. Zumberge USC Faculty Research & Innovation Fund Award  2003/04 Faculty Development Award, College of Letters, Arts, & Sciences, USC.  2003/04 Faculty Grant, Center for International Studies, USC, for a project entitled "Continental Divide: Distributional Rigidities in the New North American Bloc."  2002 Faculty Research Grant, Government of Canada, for a book-length project on "Skills, Distribution, and the New Continental Divide in North America."  2001 Bellagio Center Fellow-in-Residence, Rockefeller Foundation Villa, Lake Como, Italy. Project: "Twenty Years After: The Politics of Economic Transformation in Mexico."  May 1999 Rockefeller Foundation Faculty Fellow, University of Cape Town, Centre for African Studies, South Africa. Support for lecturing on development challenges for the emerging market countries, including those of Africa.  1996/98 Fellowship for Studies in International Economic Conflict, U.S. Institute of Peace, Washington, DC.  1992/93 Post-Doctoral grants from: John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Program in Peace and International Cooperation; John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation; North-South Center at the University of Miami; Heinz Endowment at the University of Pittsburgh; and the Fletcher-Jones Foundation.

Education:

 B.A. Sociology, University of California, 1974  Master's of Public Administration, Columbia University, 1982  Master of Philosophy, Political Science, Columbia University, 1986  Ph.D. Political Science, Columbia University, 1991

Recommended publications