Paul Gootenberg

Paul Gootenberg

CURRICULUM VITAE (2019) Paul Gootenberg SUNY Distinguished Professor of History & Sociology, Stony Brook University Chair, Department of History, 2016-22 Address Department of History, Stony Brook University Stony Brook, NY 11794-4348 Telephone Office: (631) 632-7510 Fax: (631) 632-7367 E-mail: [email protected] Education The University of Chicago, Ph.D. in History, 1985 Thesis: "Merchants, Foreigners and the State: The Origins of Trade Policies in Post-Independence Peru" Advisers: John H. Coatsworth and Friedrich Katz University of Oxford, St. Antony's College, 1979-1981 M.Phil., Latin American Studies (Economics/History), 1981 Adviser: T. Rosemary Thorp The College, University of Chicago, 1976-78, B.A., Honors in History, 1978 Boston University, College of Liberal Arts, 1974-1975 Publications: BOOKS ANDEAN COCAINE: The Making Of A Global Drug University of North Carolina Press, 2008, 442 pages. Cloth and paper. CHOICE OUTSTANDING ACADEMIC TITLE 2009. French Edition, Lib. Perseides/Presses Universitares de Rennes. Thomas Van Ruymbeke translator. 2013; Spanish Edition, EUDEBA, Buenos Aires. 2015; Editorial La Siniestra- Universidad de Juliaca Lima, 2016. IMAGINING DEVELOPMENT: Economic Ideas in Peru's “Fictitious Prosperity” of Guano, 1840- 1880. University of California Press, 1993, 244 pages. Cloth and paper. BETWEEN SILVER AND GUANO: Commercial Policy and the State in Post Independence Peru. Princeton University Press, 1989, 234 pages. Paper, 1991. TEJIDOS Y HARINAS, CORAZONES Y MENTES: El imperialism norteamericano del libre comercio en el Perú, 1825-1840. Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, Lima, 1989, 119 pages. Gootenberg C.V. 2017 EDITED BOOKS Editor (with Liliana M. Dávalos) THE ORIGINS OF COCAINE: Colonization and Failed Development in the Amazon Andes. Routledge UK, Spring 2018. P. Gootenberg, Introduction: “Orphans of Development: The unanticipated rise of illicit coca in the Amazon Andes, 1950-1990.” Editor (with Luis Reygadas), INDELIBLE INEQUALITIES IN LATIN AMERICA: Insights from History, Politics, and Culture. Duke University Press, Fall 2010. Cloth and paper. P. Gootenberg, Introduction, “Latin American Inequalities: New Perspectives from History, Politics, and Culture.” Editor, COCAINE: Global Histories Routledge U.K., 1999, 213 pages. Cloth and paper. P. Gootenberg, Introduction, “Cocaine: Hidden Histories.” EDITED JOURNALS With Isaac Campos, “The New Drug History of the Americas,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 95/1, (Feb. 2015). HAHR Blog, Summer 2015. With Froylán Enciso, “Mexico’s Drug Crisis: Alternative Perspectives,” NACLA: Report on the Americas, 44/3, (May/June 2011). MAJOR ARTICLES “Coca and Cocaine in Latin American History” Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History. Oxford University Press, May 2019. “Cocaine Histories and Diverging Drug War Politics in Bolivia, Colombia, and Peru,” A Contracorriente, vol. 15/1 (Fall 2017), 1-35. “A Long Strange Trip: Latin America’s Contribution to World Drug Culture,” in Matthew Gutmann, Jeffrey Lesser, eds., Global Latin America (University of California Press, 2016), 207-20. “Cocaine Powder and Crack Cocaine: A Changeable History?,” ch. 5, in Henry Brownstein, ed. The Handbook of Drugs and Society (Boston: Wiley Publishers, 2015), 90-108. (with Isaac Campos), “Toward a New Drug History of Latin America: A Research Frontier at the Center of Debates,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 95/1 (Feb. 2015), 1-36. “Peru and Theory,” Afterword, in Paulo Drinot, ed., Peru in Theory. London: Palgrave- MacMillan, 2014, 245-50. “Drug Trades in Latin America,” in Ben Vinson III, ed., The Oxford Bibliography of Latin American History, 2014 DOI: 10.1093/OBO/9780199766581-0176 “Searching for Leviathans?: Shifting Views on the Liberal State and Development in Peruvian History,” Journal of Latin American Studies, 45/1, (Feb. 2013), 119-39. “Cocaine's Long March North: 1900-2010,” Latin American Politics and Society, 54/1, (Spring 2012), 159-80. “The ‘Pre-Colombian’ Era of Drug Trafficking in the Americas: Cocaine, 1945-1965,” The Americas, 64/2, (Oct. 2007), 133-76. “A Forgotten Case of ‘Scientific Excellence on the Periphery’: The Nationalist Cocaine Science of Alfredo Bignon, 1884-1887,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 49/1, (Jan. 2007), 202-32. Gootenberg C.V. 2 2017 “Cocaine in Chains: The Rise and Demise of a Global Commodity, 1860-1950,” 321-51, in S. Topik, C. Marichal, Z. Frank, eds., From Silver to Cocaine: Latin American Commodity Chains and the Building of the World Economy, 1500-2000 (Duke Univ. Press, 2006); rev. French version, Hérodote (P.-A. Chouvy, ed.), 112, 2004, 66-83. “Talking Like a State: Drugs, Borders and the Language of Control,” 165-206, in I. Abraham and W. van Schendel, eds., Illicit Flows and Criminal Things (Indiana Univ. Press, 2005), 101-27; as “Talking About the Flow: Drugs, Borders and the Discourse of Drug Control,” B. Neilson, M. Bamyeh, eds., Cultural Critique, 71, 2009, 13-49. Reprint in Bröcking & Schmidt-Semisch, eds., Handbuch Soziologie der Drogen (Springer, 2018). “Secret Ingredients: The Politics of Coca in US-Peruvian Relations, 1915-65,” Journal of Latin American Studies, 36/2, (May 2004), 233-65; rpt “An American Invention: Cocaine and Coca-Cola,” E.C. Bern, ed., History of Drugs: Cocaine (Greenhaven, 2005), 56-63. “Desigualdades persistentes en América Latina: historia y cultura,” Alteridades (UAM- Iztalapalpa, Mexico) 14/20, July-Dec. 2004 (Inequalities issue), 9-19. “Between Coca and Cocaine: A Century or More of U.S.-Peruvian Drug Paradoxes,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 83/1 (2003), 119-50. “Seeing a State in Peru: From Nationalism of Commerce to the Nation Imagined, 1820-80,” 254-74. In J. Dunkerley, ed., Studies in the Formation of the Nation State in Latin America. Institute for Latin American Studies (London), 2002. “Hijos of Dr. Gerschenkron: ‘Latecomer’ Conceptions in Latin American Economic History,” 57-80. In M. Centeno, F. López-Alves, eds., The Other Mirror: Grand Theory through the Lens of Latin America. Princeton, 2001. “Reluctance or Resistance?: Constructing Cocaine (Prohibitions) in Peru, 1900-1950," 46- 79. In P. Gootenberg, ed., Cocaine: Global Histories. Routledge U.K., 1999. “Paying for Caudillos: The Politics of Emergency Finance in Peru, 1820-45.” In V. Peloso, B. Tenenbaum, eds., Liberals, Politics & Power: State Formation in 19th-Century Latin America. University of Georgia Press, 1996, 134-65. “Not So Liberal: Protectionist Peru.” In R. Salvucci, ed., Latin America and the World Economy: Dependency and Beyond. D.C. Heath and Co., 1996, 78-84. “Order(s) and Progress in Developmental Discourse: A Case of Nineteenth-Century Peru,” Journal of Historical Sociology, 8/2, (1995), 111-135. Also in E. Posada, ed., In Search of a New Order, 61-83. Institute for Latin American Studies, London, 1998. “Population and Ethnicity in Early Republican Peru: Some Revisions,” Latin American Research Review, 26/3, (1991), 109-57. “North-South: Trade Policy, Regionalism and Caudillismo in Post-Independence Peru,” Journal of Latin American Studies, 23/2, (1991), 1-36. “Carneros y Chuño: Price Levels in Nineteenth-Century Peru," Hispanic American Historical Review, 70/1, (1990), 1-56. “Beleaguered Liberals: The Failed First Generation of Free Traders in Peru,” In J. Love, N. Jacobsen, eds., Guiding the Invisible Hand: Liberalism and the State in Latin American History. Praeger Publishers, 1988, 63-98. “The Social Origins of Protectionism and Free Trade in Nineteenth-Century Lima,” Journal of Latin American Studies, 14/2, (1982), 329-58. INVITED REVIEW ESSAYS “Hustlin’ with some Transnational Women (and the Emerging Drug History of Mexico)” (Review of Carey, Women Drug Traffickers), Contracorriente, 13/1 (Fall 2015), 341-48. Gootenberg C.V. 3 2017 “Recovering Hirschman, and Development, in Latin American History,” (Review of Adelman’s Worldly Philosopher) HAHR Forum, online, Winter 2014. Review essay on K. Frydl, “Drug Wars in America, 1940-1973,” Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books, (Rutgers University Law School), online, Nov. 2013 “Short People, Tall Folks, and the Revival of Latin American Economic History,” Contracorriente, 9/3 (Summer 2012), 382-90. “More and More Scholars on Drugs,” Qualitative Sociology, 31/4, (2008), 425-36. “Scholars on Drugs: Some Qualitative Trends,” Qualitative Sociology, 28/4, (2005), 479-91. “Between a Rock and a Softer Place: New Trends in Latin American Economic History,” Latin American Research Review, 39/2, (June 2004), 239-57. “On Salamanders, Pyramids, and Mexico's 'Growth-without-Change': Reflections on a Case of Bourbon New Spain,” Colonial Latin American Review, 5/1, (1996), 117-28. FORTHCOMING PUBLICATIONS. “Shifting South: Cocaine’s Historical Present and the Changing Politics of Drug War, 1975- 2015,” for D. Arias & T. Grisaffi, The Moral Economy of the Cocaine Trade (Duke, 2020). “Cocaine’s Malleable Past,” in Blueprint to Regulation: Coca, Cocaine and Derivatives (Online Report of the Beckley Foundation, UK, 2017; also Introduction to Part I, “Clarifying Cocaine”). Co-Coordinator, Blueprint to Regulation (print, OUP, 2020?). “Building the Global Drug Regime: Origins and Impact, 1909-1990s,” in The International Drug Control Regime beyond UNGASS2016: Perspectives from the Global South (edited by Juan Carlos Garzón & Annette Idler), OUP, CCW series, 2019. “The New Global Histories of Drugs,” Introduction to P. Gootenberg, General Editor, The Oxford Handbook of Global Drug History (forthcoming OUP, 2020)., 35 chapters. Hecho

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