Complete Publications List (PDF 250K)

List of Publications
Papers
Books and Monographs
1. Mexican Political Biographies, 1935-1975 (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1976), 468 pp.
Paperback and hardback. American Library Association Outstanding Reference Book for
1977: “Camp deserves praise and gratitude for his painstaking work of scholarship,” The
Americas.
2. The Role of Economists in Policy-making: A Comparative Case Study of Mexico and the
United States (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1977), 78 pp. Paperback.
3. Mexico's Leaders: Their Education and Recruitment (Tucson: University of Arizona Press,
1980), 246 pp. Paperback and hardback. “A preeminent study of Mexican national leadership,”
World Politics; “This is a major work,” Inter-American Review of Bibliography; “Essential
reading for the Mexicanists and Latin Americanists in the social sciences … a major contribution,”
American Political Science Review; “a mine of information and offers insightful observations on
the regime,” Handbook of Latin American Studies.
Líderes de México: su educación y reclutamiento (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1984).
No. 5, Best Seller list, Uno Más Uno, August, 1984. Second printing, 1986. Third printing,
1992.
4. The Making of a Government, Political Leaders in Modern Mexico (Tucson: University of
Arizona Press, 1984), 249 pp. Hardback. Choice Outstanding Academic Book for 1985; “…is a
significant contribution”, Choice; “… fresh and nicely modulated portrait of Mexico’s political
elite,” Journal of Developing Areas; “Important contribution in both methodology and findings,”
Handbook of Latin American Studies.
La Formación de un gobernante: la socialización de los líderes políticos en México postrevolucionario (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1981), 268 pp. Second printing, 1986.
Third printing, 1992. Fourth printing, 1994.
5. Mexican Political Biographies, 1935-1981, 2nd edition, revised and enlarged (Tucson:
University of Arizona Press, 1982), 447 pp. Hardback.
6. Intellectuals and the State in 20th Century Mexico (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1985),
271 pp. Paperback and hardback. Choice Outstanding Academic Book for 1986; “…an
important study,” Journal of Latin American Studies; “… unique study of the relationship
between Mexican intellectuals and the state,” Choice; “This superb study is a major contribution to
scholarship on Mexican political culture,” Library Journal; “Rarely does one get the opportunity to
review a book of such quality and importance…,” Comparative Education Review;
“Pathbreaking study of the role Mexican intellectuals have played vis-a-vis the State which has
broad theoretical implications for the study of social change in other developing countries,”
Handbook of Latin American Studies.
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Los intelectuales y el estado en México (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1988). Second
printing, 1995.
7. Editor, Mexico's Political Stability, The Next Five Years (Boulder: Westview Press, 1986), 279
pp. Hardback. “a balanced, accurate, current analysis of present problems and probable scenarios
for change.” American Political Science Review; “Interesting effort at political forecasting,”
Handbook of Latin American Studies.
8. Memoirs of a Mexican Politician (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1988). 230
pp. Paperback and hardback.
Memorias de un político Mexicano (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1989). Second
printing, l992.
9. Who's Who in Mexico Today (Boulder: Westview Press, 1988). Choice Outstanding Academic
Book for 1988; “A necessary purchase for all libraries,” Choice
10. Entrepreneurs and Politics in Twentieth Century Mexico (New York: Oxford University Press,
1989), 306 pp. Hardback. “This is a landmark work.” Perspectives on Politics, American
Political Science Review; “… has filled an enormous gap of ignorance of the nature of the prívate
sector and its relations with the state.” Annals of the American Academic of Political and Social
Science; “Excellent treatment of relationship between domestic entrepreneurs and politicians …
with important implications for understanding public-private sector relationships,” Handbook of
Latin American Studies.
Empresarios y la política en México (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1991).
11. Mexican Political Biographies, 1884-1934 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1991), 458 pp.
Hardback. “An invaluable tool for Mexican and U.S. scholars which research libraries must buy,”
Library Journal; “Camp has produced an essential research tool;” Inter-American Review of
Bibliography; “… a very valuable tool for scholars of Mexican history,” Choice; “Provides
excellent portrait of Mexico's political and military elite,” Handbook of Latin American Studies.
12. Generals in the Palacio, the Military in Modern Mexico (New York: Oxford University Press,
1992), 278 pp. Hardback. “a seminal volume,” American Historical Review
13. Co-editor with Charles Hale and Josefina Vázquez. Intellectuals and Power in Mexico (Los
Angeles and Mexico: UCLA Latin American Center and the Colegio de México, 1991), 841 pp.
Paperback. “…welcome publication of valuable papers from a 1981 conference,” Handbook of
Latin American Studies.
14. Politics in Mexico (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993). 200 pp. Hardback and
paperback. Choice Outstanding Academic Book for 1993; “…every sentence of his book is rich
with understanding. I can think of no better introduction to Mexican politics.” Inter-American
Review of Bibliography.
Política en México (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 1995).
15. Biografias de políticos Mexicanos (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1993.
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16. The Successor, A Political Thriller (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1993), 295
pp. Hardback and paperback. “Knocking away every south-of-the-border stereotype, Camp has
written an intelligent, intricately plotted saga, enjoyable equally as an action-packed adventure and a
call to awareness of this neglected and explosive nation,” Library Journal.
El sucesor (Mexico: Grupo Siete, 1993).
17. Who's Who in Mexico Today, 2nd edition revised and enlarged. (Boulder: Westview Press,
1993), 195 pp. Hardback.
18. Political Recruitment across Two Centuries, Mexico, 1884-1992 (Austin: University of Texas
Press, 1995), 289 pp. Hardback and paperback. “Camp’s book is an indispensable read for those
who want to venture into the labyrinth of Mexican politics.” The Historian; “…an innovative
analysis of the roles of gender, class, and family connections in the Mexican political recruitment and
promotional processes,” Choice.
Reclutamiento política en México (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 1996).
19. Mexican Political Biographies, 1935-1993, 3rd edition revised and enlarged. (Austin:
University of Texas Press, 1995), 985 pp. Hardback and paperback. American Reference Book
Annual Outstanding Reference Book and Choice Outstanding Academic Book 1995;
“Excellent reference work for mapping trends in leadership recruitment and socialization,”
Handbook of Latin American Studies; “This volume is essential for any serious researcher of
Mexican public life,” Hispanic American Historical Review.
20. Editor, Democracy in Latin America, Patterns and Cycles (Wilmington: Scholarly Resources,
1995) 294 pp. Hardback and paperback. “…an oustanding collection of a dozen previously
published essays designed to define and analyze the issue of democracy in modern Latin America.”
H-Net Review; “Collection of some of the best articles previously published by political scientists
on the problems of democracy and development in Latin America,” Handbook of Latin American
Studies.
La democracia en América Latina, modelos y ciclos (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 1998).
21. Politics in Mexico, 2nd edition revised and enlarged. (New York: Oxford University Press,
1996), 256 pp. Hardback and paperback.
22. Editor, Polling for Democracy, Public Opinion and Political Liberalization in Mexico
(Wilmington: Scholarly Resources, 1996). 186pp. Hardback. “ illuminates the state of Mexican
polling and its impact on political liberalization,” Handbook of Latin America Studies.
Encuestas y democracia: opinión pública y apertura política en México (Mexico: Siglo XXI,
1997).
23. Crossing Swords, Religion and Politics in Mexico (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997).
341pp. Hardback. “… a major contribution to undersanting the Catholic Church and its growing role
in Mexican society.” American Political Science Review; “the book is an invaluable resource on
the international, national and regional structure of the Catholic Church.” Review of Religious
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Research.
Cruce de espaldas, política y religión en México (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 1998).
24. Politics in Mexico, the Decline of Authoritarianism, 3rd edition revised and enlarged. (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 277 pp. Hardback and paperback.
La política en México (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 2001).
25. Citizen Views of Democracy in Latin America (Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh University Press, 2001),
294 pp. Hardback and paperback, with CD-ROM included. “Excellent book” International
Journal of Public Opinion Research; “this book remains a major and well-substantiated
contribution to the debate about democracy’s values and its future in Latin America.” Foreign
Affairs.
Visiones ciudadanos de la democracia en América Latina (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 2008) CDROM included.
26. Mexico’s Mandarins, Crafting a Power Elite for the 21st Century (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2002), 308 pp. Hardback and paperback. “a major contribution to the study of
elites.” American Political Science Review; “Required reading for anyone interested in the
institutional life of Mexico.” Política y Gobierno; “… fascinating and serious study…utterly new
and entirely compelling case for the overriding importance of mentors and their networks in
determining elite composition, ideological evolution, and decision-making in modern Mexico,” The
Americas; “a seminal study,” Perspectives on Political Science; “required reading for specialists
in elite socialization or Mexican politics,” and “a launching pad for future research and a challenge
to theories of elite politics in the developing world.” Latin American Politics & Society; “…has
produced another masterful work about Mexican politics.” Foreign Affairs en Español.
Las elites del poder en México (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 2006).
27. Politics in Mexico, the Democratic Transformation 4th edition, revised and enlarged. (New
York: Oxford University Press, 2003), 292 pp. Hardback and paperback.
28. Mexico’s Military on the Democratic Stage (Washington, D.C.: Center for Strategic and
International Studies and Praeger Publishers, 2005). 366 pp. Hardback. “impressive,” and
“unprecedented look at the sociology of the Mexican officer corps,” and significantly raises the bar
of future research,” Political Science Quarterly.
Las fuerzas armadas en el México democratic (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 2010) 608 pp. Paperback
29. Politics in Mexico, the Democratic Consolidation? 5th edition, revised and enlarged. (New
York: Oxford University Press, 2007), 338 pp. Hardback and paperback.
30. The Metamorphosis of Leadership in a Democratic Mexico (New York: Oxford University
Press, 2010). 301 pp. Hardback. “…may be the best contemporary study of the sociological,
demographic, and political characteristics of a nation’s ruling elites anywhere.” Perspectives on
Politics, America Political Science Association; “Impressively full and interesting.” Journal of
Latin American Studies; “…is an essential read.” Bulletin of Latin American Research. “A
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must read for anyone who hopes to know Mexico.” Handbook of Latin American Studies;
“without question a book every Mexicanist should read.” American Review of Politics; “Provides
excellent portrait of Mexico’s political and military elite,” Handbook of Latin American Studies.
Metamorfosis del liderazgo en un México Democrático (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura
Económica, 2012). 325 pp. Paperback. Electronic edition, 2013.
31. Mexican Political Biographies, 1935-2009, 4th Edition (University of Texas Press, 2011), 1,310
pp. Hardback. CD Included. Choice Outstanding Academic Title, 2012
32. Mexico, What Everyone Needs to Know (Oxford University Press, 2011), 196pp. Hardback and
paperback. "A timely, valuable asset for understanding an important, emerging nation," Booklist.
33. Oxford Handbook of Mexican Politics (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012), 824 pp. “…
an indispensable reference book for students of Mexican politics at all levels,” Handbook of Latin
American Studies;“Timely contribution.” Mexican Studies.
34. Politics in Mexico, Democratic Consolidation or Decline? 6th edition (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2013), 358pp. Reprinted, 2014. “Highly recommended as a textbook for courses
on Mexico, Latin American, and comparative politics.” Choice
Refereed Scholarly Articles and Chapters
1. "The Cabinet and the Técnico in Mexico and the United States," Journal of Comparative
Administration, Vol. 3, (August, 1971), pp. 188-213.
2. "The Middle-level Technocrat in Mexico," Journal of Developing Areas, Vol. 6 (July, 1972), pp.
571-582.
3. "Mexican Governors Since Cárdenas, Education and Career Contacts." Journal of InterAmerican Studies and World Affairs, Vol. 16 (November, 1974), pp. 454-481.
4. Co-authored with Donald Mabry, "Mexican Political Elites 1935-1973: A Comparative Study,"
The Americas: A Quarterly Journal of Inter-American Cultural History, Vol. 31 (April, 1975), pp.
452-569.
5. "La Cuestión Chiapaneca: Revisión de una polémica territorial, Historia Mexicana, Vol. 24
(Spring, 1975), pp. 579-606.
6. "The National School of Economics and Public Life in Mexico," Latin American Research
Review, Vol. 10 (Fall, 1975), pp 137-151.
7. "A Re-examination of Political Leadership and Allocation of Federal Revenues in Mexico, 19341973," Journal of Developing Areas, Vol. 10 (January, 1976), pp. 193-213.
8. "Education and Political Recruitment in Mexico: The Alemán Generation," Journal of Inter-
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American Studies and World Affairs, Vol. 18 (August, 1976), pp. 295-321.
9. "El sistema mexicano y las decisiones sobre el personal político," Foro Internacional, Vol. 17
(July-September, 1976), pp. 51-82.
10. "Autobiography and Decision-Making in Mexico: A Review Essay," Journal of InterAmerican Studies and World Affairs, Vol. 19 (May, 1977), pp. 275-283.
11. "Losers in Mexican Politics: A Comparative Study of Official Party Precandidates for
Gubernatorial Elections, 1970-75," in James W. Wilkie and Kenneth R. Ruddle, eds. Quantitative
Latin American Studies: Methods and Findings. Statistical Abstract of Latin America Supplement
Series, Vol. 6 (Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center, 1977), pp. 23-33.
12. "La Campaña presidencial de 1929 y el liderazgo político en México," Historia Mexicana, Vol.
27 (Fall, 1977), pp. 231-259.
13. Urbanization, Participation and Authoritarianism in Latin America, A Review Essay," Polity,
Vol. 10 (Summer, 1978), pp. 568-573.
14. "Martín Chambi: Photographer of the Andes," Latin American Research Review, Vol. 13
(Summer, 1978), pp. 222-228.
15. "Pioneer Photographer of Peru," with illustrations, Americas, Vol. 30 (March, 1978), pp. 5-10.
16. "Quienes alcanzan la cumbre: la élite política mexicana," Foro Internacional, Vol. 19 (JulySept., 1978), pp. 24-61.
17. "The Elitelore of Mexico's Revolutionary Family," Journal of Latin American Lore, Vol. 4 (No.
2, 1978), pp. 149-82.
18. "Women and Political Leadership in Mexico: A Comparative Study of Female and Male
Political Elites," Journal of Politics, Vol. 41 (May, 1979), pp. 417-441.
19. "Los Intelectuales y la política en el México posrevolucionario, el caso de los profesores," in
Instituto Mexicano de Cultura, Sociología de la Paz y de la Guerra, (Mexico, 1979), pp. 523-552.
20. "University Environment and Socialization: The Case of Mexican Politicians," History of
Education Quarterly, Vol. 20 (Fall, 1980), pp. 313-335.
21. "Mexican Military Leadership in Statistical Perspective Since the 1930s, in James W. Wilkie
and Peter Reich, eds., Statistical Abstract of Latin America Supplement Series, Vol. 20 (Los
Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center, 198O), pp. 595-606.
22. "Reclutamiento político y cambio en el México de los setentas" Foro Internacional, Vol. 20
(January-February, 1980), pp. 463-483.
23. "Intellectuals: Agents of Change in Mexico?," Journal of Inter-American Studies and World
Affairs, Vol. 23 (August, 1981), pp. 297-320.
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24. "La educación de la élite política Mexicana," Revista Mexicana de Sociología Vol. 43
(January-March, 1981), pp. 421-454.
25. "Un Intelectual e la política Mexicana: Agustín Yáñez," Relaciones, Vol. 2 (Summer, 1981),
pp. 137-162. and "An Intellectual in Mexican Politics, The Case of Agustín Yáñez," Mester, Vol. 12
(May, 1983), pp. 3-17.
26. "Family Relationships in Mexican Politics, a Preliminary View," Journal of Politics, Vol. 44
(August, 1982), pp. 848-862.
27. "Censure, media et vie intellectuelle," Etudes Mexicaines Vol. 5 (1982), pp. 29-57.
28. "The Influence of European and North American Ideas on Students at Mexico's National School
of Law," New Scholar, Vol. 8 (1982), pp. 289-307.
29. "Tecnocracía, representación y crítica: México en los proximos seis años," in Comite Ejecutivo
Nacional del PRI, Perspectivas del sistema político mexicano (Mexico: PRI, 1982), pp. 61-66.
30. "El tecnócrata en México," Revista Mexicana de Sociología, Vol. 45 (April-June, 1983), pp.
579-599.
31. "Le botin mondain des intellectuels mexicains," Etudes Mexicaines, Vol. 6, (1983).
32. "Mexican Presidential Pre-candidates, Changes and Portents for the Future," Polity, Vol. 16
(Summer, 1984), pp. 588-605.
33. "Mexico", in Jack W. Hopkins, ed., Latin American and Caribbean Contemporary Record,
Vol. 2 (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1984), pp. 538-560.
34. "An Image of Mexican Intellectuals, Some Preliminary Observations," Mexican Studies, Vol. I
(Winter, 1985), pp. 61-81.
35. "Generals and Politicians in Mexico: A Comparison of Career and Recruitment Characteristics,"
in David Ronfeldt, ed., The Modern Mexican Military: A Reassessment (La Jolla: UCSD, U.S.Mexican Studies Center, 1984), pp. 107-156; and "Generales y políticos en Mexico," Nexos, No. 82
(October, 1984), pp. 17-29.
36. Co-authored with Miguel Basáñez, "The Nationalization of the Banks and Mexican Public
Opinion," The Mexican Forum, Vol. 4, No. 2 (April, 1984), pp. 1-8; and Foro Internacional, Vol.
25 (October-December, 1984), pp. 202-216.
37. "The Technocrat in Mexico and the Survival of the Political System," Latin American Research
Review, Vol. 20, No. 1 (1985), pp. 97-118.
38. "The Cartoons of Abel Quezada," Studies in Latin American Popular Culture, Vol. 4 (1985),
pp. 125-138.
39. "Government and Politics: Mexico and Central America," Handbook of Latin American
Studies, Vol. 45, Social Sciences (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1985), pp. 467-482.
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40. "Education and Politics, Politics and Education, Mexico in the 20th Century," History of
Education Quarterly, Vol. 25 (Summer, 1985). pp. 215-220.
41. "Mexico," in Jack W. Hopkins, ed., Latin America and the Caribbean Contemporary Record,
Vol. 4 (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1986), pp. 545-564.
42. "Opposition in Mexico, A Comparison of Leadership," in Judith Gentleman, ed. Mexican
Politics in Transition (Boulder: Westview Press, 1987), pp. 235-260.
43. "Overview," in Mexico's Political Stability, The Next Five Years (Boulder: Westview Press,
1986), pp. 1-18.
44. "What are the Potential Strengths of Mexico's Political Opposition and What Will it Mean to
PRI?," in Mexico's Political Stability, The Next Five Years (Boulder: Westview Press, 1986), pp.
185-210.
45. "Relaciones familiares en la política mexicana," Foro Internacional, Vol. 26 (January-March,
1986), pp. 349-372.
46. "Las Generaciones políticas en México," Vuelta, Vol. 11 (October, 1986), pp. 30-36.
47. "Government and Politics, Mexico," Handbook of Latin American Studies, Vol. 47, Social
Sciences (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1987), pp. 485-492.
48. "Attitudes and Images of the Mexican Entrepreneur: Political Consequences," in Sylvia
Maxfield and Ricardo Anzaldua, ed. Government and Private Sector in Contemporary Mexico (La
Jolla: UCSD, U.S.-Mexican Studies Center, 1987), pp. 127-144.
49. Co-authored with James D. Riley, "Mexico," World Book Encyclopedia, Vol. 13 (1988), pp452-479.
50. "Collective Biography and a Portrait of Mexican Elites," Vuelta, Vol. 12 (May, 1988), pp. 3538.
51. "Political Elites: A Mini Portrait," Vuelta, Vol. 12 (June, 1988), pp. 40-43.
52. "Intellectual Elites: A Mini Portrait," Vuelta, Vol. 12 (July, 1988), pp. 32-34.
53. "Entrepreneurial Elites: A Mini Portrait," Vuelta, Vol. 12 (August, 1988), pp. 41-43.
54. "Religious Elites: A Mini Portrait," Vuelta, Vol. 12 September, 1988), pp. 28-31.
55. "Presidency, The Party and The State," in George W. Grayson, ed., Prospects for Democracy in
Mexico (New Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1989) pp. 3-14.
56. "The Military," in George W. Grayson, ed., Prospects for Democracy in Mexico (New
Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1989), pp. 85-92.
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57. "Mexico," in Handbook of Political Science Research on Latin America, David Dent, ed.
(Greenwood Press, 1990), 25-45.
58. "Government and Politics, Mexico," Handbook of Latin American Studies, Vol. 49, Social
Sciences (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1989).
59. "Camarillas in Mexican Politics, the Case of the Salinas Cabinet," Mexican Studies, Vol. 6
(Winter, 1990), 85-108.
60. "Mexico's 1988 Elections, A Turning Point for its Political Development and Foreign
Relations?," in Sucesión Presidencial, The 1988 Mexican Presidential Election, Edgar Butler, ed.,
(Westview Press, 1991), 95-114.
61. "Intellectuals and the State in Mexico, 1920-1980, the Influence of Family and Education," in
Roderic Ai Camp, Charles Hale and Josefina Vázquez, eds., Intellectuals and Power in Mexico
(Los Angeles: Latin American Center, UCLA, 1991), pp. 551-568.
62. "Civilian Supremacy in Mexico, the Case of a Post-Revolutionary Military," in Constantine P.
Danopoulos, ed., Military Intervention and Withdrawal (London: Routledge, 1991), pp. 158-175.
63. "Government and Politics in Mexico," in Dolores Moyano Martin, ed., Handbook of Latin
American Studies Vol. 51, Social Sciences (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1991), pp. 474-485.
64. "Generali e statisti in Messico: Uno studio comparata preliminare delle caratteristiche di carriera
e di reclutamento," in Dino Fiorot, ed., Studi e ricerche sulla classe politica in Italia, Argentina, e
Messico (Padua: University of Padua, Milan, 1991), pp. 411-468.
65. "Consequences of Rural and Urban Origins for Mexico's Post Revolutionary Leadership," in
Eric Van Young and Roberto de los Arcos, eds., City & Country in Mexican History, Vol. 2
(Mexico: UNAM, 1992), pp. 649-664.
66. "Intellectuals in Comparative Perspective: The Case of Mexico," in Alistair Hennessy, ed.,
Intellectuals in the Twentieth-Century Caribbean, Vol. 2 (London: MacMillan, 1992), pp. 36-48.
67. "Mexican Intellectuals and Collective Biography in the Twentieth Century," in Alistair
Hennessy, ed., Intellectuals in the Twentieth Century Caribbean, Vol. 2 (London: MacMillan,
1992), pp. 211-224.
68. "Political Modernization in Mexico, Through a Looking Glass," in Jaime Rodríguez, ed., The
Evolution of the Mexican Political System (Wilmington: Scholarly Resources, 1992), pp. 211-228.
68. "Political Liberalization: The Last Key to Economic Modernization in Mexico," in Riordan
Roett, ed., Political and Economic Liberalization in Mexico, At a Critical Juncture? (Boulder:
Lynne Rienner, 1993), pp. 17-34; and in La Liberalización Económica y Política de México
(Mexico: Siglo XXI, 1993), 35-58.
69. "Mexico, Government and Politics," in Dolores Moyano Martin, ed., Handbook of Latin
American Studies Vol. 53, Social Sciences (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1994), pp. 439-452.
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70. "The Cross in the Polling Booth: Religion, Politics, and the Laity in Mexico," Latin American
Research Review, Vol. 29, No. 3 (Winter, 1994), 69-100.
71. The PAN's Social Basis, Implications for Leadership," in Opposition Government in Mexico,
Victoria Rodríguez and Peter Ward, eds. (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1994),
pp. 65-80.
72. "Mexico's Legislature: Missing the Democratic Lockstep?," in David Close, ed., Legislatures
and the New Democracies in Latin America (Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 1995), 17-36.
74. "Mexico," in Philip Shively, ed., Comparative Governance (New York: McGraw Hill, 1995),
718-755.
75. "Striving for Mexican Democracy: The PRI and the Opposition," in Donald E. Schulz and
Edward J. Williams, Mexico Faces the 21st Century (Westport: Greenwood, 1995), 29-44.
76. Co-authored with Shannan Mattiace, "Democracy and Development, An Overview," in Roderic
Ai Camp, ed., Democracy in Latin America, Patterns and Cycles (Wilmington: Scholarly
Resources, 1995), 3-20.
77. "Introduction: Polling, Public Opinion, and the Mexican Polity," in Roderic Ai Camp, ed.,
Polling for Democracy, Public Opinion and Political Liberalization in Mexico (Wilmington:
Scholarly Resources, 1996), 1-16.
78. "Revolutionizing Intellectuals and Landlords: Mexico in the Twentieth Century," A Review
Essay Journal of Inter-American Studies and World Affairs, Vol. 38, No. 4 (Winter, 1996), 189192.
79. "Mexico," in James Malloy and Eduardo Gamarra, Latin America and Caribbean
Contemporary Record, Vol. 8 (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1996), 289-302.
80. "Zedillo Legacy in Mexico," Policy Papers on the Americas (Washington, D.C: Center for
Strategic and International Studies, October, 1996).
81. "Mexico," in Constantine Danopoulous and Cynthia Watson, eds. The Political Role of the
Military (Westport: Greenwood, 1997), 271-282.
82. "Repeating the Past, Educating Mexico's Elite?," in Sylvia Ortega Salazar and David E. Lorey,
Crisis y cambio de la educación superior en México (Mexico: Universidad Autónomo
Metropolitana, 1997), 55-72.
83. "Mexico," in Philip Shively, ed. Comparative Governance, 2nd edit. (New York: McGraw Hill,
1997), 1-42.
84. "Technocracy a la Mexicana, Antecedent to Democracy," in Miguel A. Centeno and Patricio
Silva, The Politics of Expertise in Latin America (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1997), 196-213.
"Tecnocracia a la mexicana, antecedent a la democracia," Pensamiento Iberoamericano, Revista
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de Economía Política Vol. 30 (1997), 155-176.
85. "Mexico, Politics and Government," in Dolores Moyano Martin, ed., Handbook of Latin
American Studies, Vol. 55 Social Sciences (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1997), 387-404.
86. "Presiding Over Change? Zedillo's First Year," Policy Papers on the Americas (Washington,
D.C.: Center for Strategic and International Studies, January, 1997).
87. "Province Versus the Center, Democratizing Mexico's Culture," in Philip Kelly, ed., Assessing
Democracy in Latin America: A Tribute to Russell H. Fitzgibbon (Boulder: Westivew Press, 1998),
76-92.
88. "Battling for the Voter, Elections, Parties, and Democracy in Mexico," in Kurt von Mettenheim
and James M. Malloy, eds. Deepening Democracy in Latin America (Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh
University Press, 1998), 38-54.
89. "Women and Men, Men and Women: Gender Patterns in Mexican Politics," in Victoria
Rodríguez, ed., Women's Participation in Mexican Political Life (Boulder: Westview Press, 1998),
167-178.
90. "Democracy Through Mexican Lenses," The Washington Quarterly, Vol. 23, No. 3 (Summer,
1999), 229-242.
"La democracia desde los mexicanos," Este País, July, 1999, 2-8.
91. "Militarizing Mexico, Where is the Officer Corps Going?," Center for Strategic and
International Studies, Policy Paper on the Americas, Washington, D.C., January 15, 1999.
92. "The Time of the Technocrats and Deconstruction of the Revolution," in Michael C. Meyer and
William H. Beezley, eds., The Oxford History of Mexico (New York: Oxford University Press,
2000), 609-636.
93. "Mexico, Government and Politics," Handbook of Latin American Studies, Dolores Moyano
Martin, ed. Social Sciences, Vol. 57 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2000), 840-876.
94. “Actitudes de los ciudadanos hacia la democracia y la Victoria de Fox en el 2000,” Revista de
Ciencias Políticas y Humanidades, Vol. 1 (No. 2, 2001), 51-69.
95. “Mexican Attitudes toward Democracy and Vicente Fox’s Victory in 2000,” in Chappell
Lawson and Jorge Dominguez, eds. Mexico’s Pivotal Democratic Elections, Campaign Effects and
the Presidential Race of 2000 (Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, 2003), 25-41.
96. “Performing on the Mexican Democratic Stage, New Actors, New Scripts,” Latin American
Research Review Vol. 38, No. 2 (2003), 195-206.
97. “Informal and Formal Networking Among Elites: Mexican Capitalists and Politicians,”
Comparative Sociology, 2, No. 1 (2003), 135-154.
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98. “Informal and Formal Networking Among Elites: Mexican Capitalists and Politicians,” in
Mattei Dogan, ed. Elite Configurations at the Apex of Power (Amsterdam: Brill, 2003), 135-154.
99. “Mexico,” in Phillip Shively, ed. Comparative Governance (New York: MacMillan, 2003), 145.
100. Editor, “Forum, Three Views of Mexican Democracy,” Mexican Studies, Vol. 19, No. 1
(Winter, 2003), pp. 1-106. Special issue including a CD-ROM of data from the Hewlett project.
Two of the essays in this special issue are among the most frequently cited in the journal.
101. “Learning Democracy in Mexico and the United States,” Mexican Studies, Vol. 19, No. 1
(Winter, 2003), 3-28.
One of the most frequently cited articles in Mexican Studies.
102. "Mexico, Government and Politics," Handbook of Latin American Studies, Lawrence Boudon,
ed. Social Sciences, Vol. 59 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2003), 429-454.
103. Cover essay of Este País, one of Mexico’s leading intellectual magazines, “Paseando le linea
democrática en México, quien es democrático?,” Este País, November, 2003, 4-10.
104. “The Mexican Military, Marching to a Democratic Tune?,” in Kevin Middlebrook, ed.,
Dilemmas of Political Change in Mexico (London: Institute of Latin American Studies, University
of London, 2004), 353-372.
105. “Mexico in 2001: A Middle-Road Scenario,” in Armand B. Peschard, Forecasting Mexico’s
Democratic Transition, Scenarios for Policymakers (Washington, D.C., CSIS, 2004), 34-48.
106. Co-author with Charley Davis and Kenneth Coleman, “The Influence of Party Systems on
Citizens' Perceptions of Corruption and Electoral Response in Latin America,” Comparative
Political Studies, Vol. 37, No. 6 (August, 2004),677-703.
107. “Mexico Alert, Military Development Under a Democracy: Charting a New Direction?”
Hemisphere Focus, Vol. 12, No. 11 (Washington, D.C.: Center for Strategic and International
Studies, November, 2004), 1-8.
108. “Mexico’s Democratic Transformation,” in Philip Shively, ed. Comparative Governance, 3rd
edit. (Marlboro: McGraw-Hill, 2005), 1-45.
109. “The Role of the Press,” in Rosanna Fuentes-Berain, et.al. eds., Writing Beyond Boundaries,
Journalism Across the U.S.-Mexico Borders (Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center, 2005),
13-21.
110. “Mexico, Politics and Government,” Library of Congress, Handbook of Latin American
Studies, Vol. 61 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2006), pp. 297-314.
111. “Challenges to Civil-Military Relations in the 21st Century,” in Jordi Diez, ed., Canadian and
Mexican Security in the New North America, Challenges and Prospects (Montreal: Queen’s
University and McGill University Press, 2006), pp.69-100.
13
112. Co-Author with Keith Yanner, “Democracy Across Cultures, Does Gender Make a
Difference?,” in Joseph Tulchin and Meg Ruthenburg, eds., Citizenship in Latin America (Boulder:
Lynne Rienner and Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 2006), 149-170.
113. “Los Valores Democráticos Transfigurados,” Metapolítica, Vol. 11 (January-February, 2007),
pp. 23-30.
114. “Mexico,” Comparative Governance, ed. Phil Shively (New York: McGraw Hill, 2007), 1-46
115. “Mexico Politics and Government Section,” Handbook of Latin American Studies, Vol. 63,
Library of Congress (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2008). 16-28.
116. “Political Recruitment, Governance, and Leadership in Mexico, How Democracy Has Made a
Difference,” in Peter Siavelis and Scott Morgenstern, eds., Pathways to Power: Political
Recruitment and Candidate Selection in Latin America (Penn State University Press, 2008), 292315
117. “Exercising Political Influence, Religion, Democracy, and the Mexican 2006 Presidential
Race,” Journal of Church and State, 50, no. 1 (Winter, 2008), 101-122.
118. “Democracy’s Path in Mexico,?” Latin American Perspectives, No. 163 (November, 2008),
189-195
119. “Democracy Redux? Mexico’s Voters and the 2006 Presidential Race,” in Jorge Domínguez,
Chappell Lawson, and Alejandro Moreno, eds., Mexico’s Choice: The 2006 Presidential Campaign
in Comparative Perspective (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009), 29-49.
120. “Mexico’s Democratic Revolution, Where is it Leading?,” Mexican Studies 24, No. 2
(Summer, 2009), 365-74.
121. "Mexico," in Philip Shively, ed., Comparative Governance (New York: McGraw Hill, 2010).
122.“The Time of the Technocrats and the Deconstruction of the Revolution,” in William H.
Beezley, ed., Oxford History of Mexico (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010), 569-597.
Chinese translation of The Oxford History of Mexico, Vol. II (2014), 609-636.
123. “Armed Forces and Drugs: Public Perceptions and Institutional Challenges,” in Eric L. Olson,
David A. Shirk, and Andrew Selee, eds., Shared Responsibility: U.S.-Mexico Policy Options for
Confronting Organized Crime (Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars and the
University of San Diego, 2010), 291-326.
124. “Mexico Politics and Government Section,” Handbook of Latin American Studies, Vol. 65,
Library of Congress (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2010), 264-275.
125. “The Revolution’s Second Generation: The Miracle, 1946-1982 and Collapse of the PRI, 19822000, “ in William Beezley, ed., A Companion to Mexican History and Culture (New York: WileyBlackwell, 2011), 468-79.
14
126. “Mexico Politics and Government Section,” Library of Congress, Handbook of Latin American
Studies, Vol. 67 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2012), 198-214.
127. “The Democratic Transformation of Mexican Politics,” in Roderic Ai Camp, ed., Oxford
Handbook of Mexican Politics (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012), 3-30.
128. “Mexican Political Elites in a Democratic Setting,” in Roderic Ai Camp, ed., Oxford Handbook
of Mexican Politics (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012), 286-312.
129. “Mexico,” in Phil Shively and Paulette Kurzer, eds., Comparative Governance (New York:
McGraw-Hill, 2013), 1-45.
130.” “The 2012 Presidential election and What it Reveals about Mexican Voters,” Journal of Latin
American Studies, Vol. 45, no. 3 (August, 2013), 451-481.
131. “Ordinary Opinions of Everyday Mexicans: Polling in the Second Half of the Twentieth
Century,” in William Beezley, ed., Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), 1-33.
132. “Democratizing Mexican Politics, 1982-2012,” in William Beezley, ed., Oxford Research
Encyclopedia of Latin American History (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015), 1-39.
133. Co-author with Caroline Beer, “Democracy, Gender Quotas and Political Recruitment in
Mexico,” Politics, Groups and Identities, Vol. 4, No. 2 (2016), 1-17.
Non-Refereed Essays and Articles
1. "The Educational Background of Mexico's Political Leadership," Discussion Paper Series, Latin
American Center, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, 1978, 49 pp.
15
2. "Mexico in Crisis, An Intellectual View," Latin American Digest, Vol. 13 (Summer, 1979), pp.
1-4, 28.
3. "Yucatán's Green Gold," with illustrations, Americas, Vol. 32 (May, 1980), pp. 3-8.
4. "Otis A. Aultman, Window on War," Texas International Flyer, Vol. 11 (May, 1982), pp. 70-73;
and Ozark, Vol. 11 (May, 1982), pp. 54-57.
5. "Technocracy, Representation and Criticism: Mexico in the Next Six Years " The Mexican
Forum, (December, 1982), pp. 23-25.
6. "Organized Labor and the Mexican State: A Symbiotic Relationship?," The Mexican Forum,
Vol. 4, No. 4 (October, 1984), pp. 1-8.
7. "Decision Making and Mexico in Crisis," Revista Occidental, Vol. 1, No. 3 (May-August, 1984),
pp. 431-435.
8. "Frida and Intellectual Biography in Mexico," Revista Occidental, Vol. 1, No. 2, (January-April,
1984, pp. 285-292.
9. "Toluca's Glass-covered Garden," with illustrations, Americas, Vol. 37 (March-April, 1985). pp.
60-63.
10. "Centralization of Ideas and Self-Censorship in the Making of American Foreign Policy: The
Case of Mexico," PROFMEX Letter, Vol 1, No. 2 (October, 1987), pp. 1-6.
11. "Miguel de la Madrid," in Mary Lee Kerr, ed. Foreign Visitors to Congress: Speeches and
History (White Plains: Kraus International Publications, 1989).
12. "Repercusiones de la modernización política de México en EU," "Tolerancia a la oposición,"
"Los militares y el liderazgo político," "Los militares de carrera y la carrera política," "Diferencias
entre grupos de intelectuales," "Los intelectuales y la política," and "La élites políticas," Uno Más
Uno, June 23 to July 8, 1989.
13. "Democracy in Mexico, through Gringo Lenses," Excélsior, Editorial Page, October 23, 1990,
1, 6.
14. "México leido en inglés," Este País, Vol. 1, No. 1, April, 1991, pp. 41-42.
15. "Generational Change and Political Leadership in Mexico," Working Paper Series: U.S.-Mexico
Studies, No. 14, Bildner Center for Western Hemisphere Studies, Graduate School, City University
of New York, October, 1992.
16. "Los militares en México," etcétcera, No. 5, March 4, 1993, 11-22.
17. “For the Good of Mexico, Salinas Ought to Stop Dictating Electoral Politics, Outlook Section,
Houston Chronicle, December 27, 1992.
16
18. "Mexico City," in World Book Encyclopedia (1993), pp. 476-479.
19. "Mexico," The Americana Annual (Grolier, 1993), pp. 357-359.
20. "Las relaciones entre civiles y militares," Trace, No. 23 (June, 1993), 56-67.
21. "The Significance of Colosio," Op Ed, Mexico Insight, December 19, 1993, 28.
22. "Mexico," The Americana Annual (Grolier, 1994), pp. 367-369.
22. "The Sword and the Cross, New Battlefields in Chiapas?," "Enfoque," La Reforma (Mexico),
February 20, 1994, No. 11, 16-20.
24. "The Zedillo Cabinet, Continuity or Radical Change?," (Washington, D. C.: Center for Strategic
and International Studies, 1995); and "El equipo de Zedillo: continuidad, cambio revolucionario?,"
Este País (June, 1995), 46-54.
25. One hundred entries, Encyclopedia of Latin America 5 Vols. (New York: Scribners, 1996).
Best Reference Work, American Historical Association, 1991-96.
26. "Mexican States," Encarta (CD-Rom Encyclopedia), Microsoft, 1996, 1997.
27. "Mexico," Encarta (CD-Rom Encyclopedia), Microsoft, 1997.
28. "Changing Patterns in the Mexican Military, Presaging Change?," RAND Corporation, Santa
Monica, California, January, 1997.
29. "The Educating and Training of the Mexican Officer Corps," in Elliott V. Converse, ed.,
Forging the Sword, Selecting, Educating, and Training Cadets and Junior Officers in the Modern
World, Vol. 5, Military History Symposium Series of the United States Air Force Academy
(Chicago: Imprint Publications, 1998), 336-346.
30."Mexico's Armed Forces, Marching to a Democratic Tune?," Enfoque (Fall/Winter, 2000),
Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies, UCSD, 4, 14.
31. “Mexico City” and “Veracruz,” World Book Encyclopedia (Chicago, 2000).
32. "Vicente Fox," Microsoft Encarta (Redmond, 2000).
33. "Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de Léon” and “Vicente Fox," World Book Encyclopedia (Chicago,
2001).
34.“Vicente Fox’s Election is Just the Tip of the Iceberg,” Los Angeles Times, January 14, 2001.
35. “Mexicali,” World Book Encyclopedia (Chicago, 2005), 445.
36. “Deepening Scholarship Through Study Abroad,” Frontiers, The Interdisciplinary Journal of
Study Abroad, Vol. 12 (November, 2005),152-154.
17
37. President Vicente Fox,” World Book Encyclopedia (Chicago, 2007).
38. “Citizen Views of Democracy in Latin America,” Chapter 3, in Democracy as a Starting Point,
The Civic Journey in Latin America, A Social Studies Curriculum for Secondary Students
(Washington, D.C.: American Federation of Teachers, 2008), 28-32.
39. Forty-one entries on Mexico, Encyclopedia of Latin America History and Culture, 2nd edit.
(Charles Scribner, 2008).
40. “Drugs, Guns and Money, A Violent Struggle Across the Border,” Editorial Page, San Diego
Union, March 15, 2009.
41. “Church and Narcostate,” Foreign Policy, August 13, 2009, 1-3,
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/08/13/of_church_and_narcostate.
42. “How Would Calderon’s Proposed Fiscal Reform Affect Mexico,?” Inter-American Dialogue
Latin American Adviser, September 22, 2009, 3.
43. “Mexico’s Pacto,” Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars,
Smithsonian Institution, webpage editorial, January, 2013.
44. “Peña Nieto’s Cabinet, What Does it Tell Us About Mexican Leadership,” Democracy and
Election Series, Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, Washington,
D.C., March, 2013.
Non-Mexican Essays
1. “Local Motion: Life at the Huntington Beach Pier,” Focus, American Geographical Society, Fall,
1989, pp. 1-4.
2. Co-author Roger O. Camp, “Two-Wheeling the West: Reliving the 1960s,” Part I, Focus,
American Geographical Society, Fall, 1990, pp.7-12.
3. Co-author Roger O. Camp, “Two-Wheeling the West: Reliving the 1960s,” Part II, Focus,
American Geographical Society, Winter, 1990, pp.12-15.
Photographs
1. Cover photograph, Haiku Magazine, Vol. 5, no. 4 (1972).
2. Ann Arbor Review, Vol. 10, no. 11 (1970), p. 23.
18
3.Cover photograph, Ann Arbor Review, Vol. 10, no. 12 (1970), pp. 12, 14, 22.
4.Cover photograph, Ann Arbor Review, Vol. 10, no. 13 (1971), pp. 11, 15, 21, 36.
5.West Coast Review, Vol. 6, no. 3 (January 1972), pp. 82, 83.
6.West Coast Review, Vol. 6, no. 1 (June 1971), pp. 20, 23, 30, 43.
7.West Coast Review, Vol. 8, no. 1 (1973), p. 2.
8.Wisconsin Review, Vol. 6, no. 2 (1971), pp. 5, 22, 24.
9.Cover photograph, Jiva and other Poems (Lakemont: GSA Press, 1971).
10. Voyages, Vol. 4-5 (1971), p. 162.
11. "Yucatán's Green Gold," with illustrations, Americas, Vol. 32 (May, 1980), pp. 3-8.
12. "Toluca's Glass-covered Garden," with illustrations, Americas, Vol. 37 (March-April, 1985). pp.
60-63.
Papers and Presentations
1. Paper presented at the International Studies Association, San Francisco, 1970, on the "Dominican
Intervention of 1965: Power and Legal Considerations."
2. Paper presented at the Latin American Studies Association, 5th National Convention, San
Francisco, 1974, on "A Re-examination of Political Leadership and Allocation of Federal Revenues
in Mexico, 1934-1973."
3. Paper presented at the Rocky Mountain States Council of Latin American Studies, Arizona State
University, Phoenix, 1975, on "Political Change and the Role of UNAM."
4. Paper presented at the Latin American Studies Association, 6th National Convention, Atlanta,
1976, on "The Vasconcelos Campaign and Future Political Leadership in Mexico."
5. Chairperson, Luncheon Roundtable, "Mexico in the 1970's," Latin American Studies Association,
6th National Convention, Atlanta, 1976.
6. Paper presented at the North Central Council of Latin Americanists, University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee, 1976, on "The Educational Background of the Political Elite in Mexico."
7. Guest speaker at the International Symposium on Mexico and the United States: The Next Ten
Years, American University, Washington, D.C., 1976.
8. Paper presented at the 19th National Sociology Congress, Mexico City, 1976, on "North
American and European Intellectual Influence in the Schools of Law and Economics during the
1920's and 1930's."
19
9. Paper presented at the Western Illinois University League of Latin Americanists, Macomb, 1977,
on "Women in Mexican Politics, New Frontiers or Old Traditions?"
10. Paper presented at the Rocky Mountain States Council of Latin American Studies, University of
Arizona, Tucson, 1977, on "The Mexican Revolution as a Socializing Agent: Mexican Political
Leaders and Their Parents."
11. Guest speaker on "The New Administration in Mexico: Implications for the Future," University
of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1977.
12. Paper presented at the North Central Council of Latin Americanists, University of Wisconsin,
Eau Claire, Wisconsin, 1977, on "The Mexican Military: A Comparative Analysis."
13. Paper presented at the Mid-West Association of Latin Americanists, Washington University, St.
Louis, 1977, on "The Values and Ideological Beliefs of Mexican Political Leaders Since 1946."
14. Paper presented at the 20th National Sociology Congress, Mexico City, June, 1978, on "The
Role of Intellectuals in Post-Revolutionary Mexico."
15. Paper presented at the Western Illinois University League of Latin Americanists, Macomb,
1979, on "Intellectuals: Agents of Change in Mexico?"
16. Paper presented at the Western Political Science Association, San Francisco, 1980, on
"Intellectuals: Agents of Change in Mexico?"
17. Paper presented at the North Central Council of Latin Americanists, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, 1980, on "Censorship, The Media and Intellectual Life in Mexico."
18. Chairman, "Political and Cultural Effects of Mexican Apertura," Latin American Studies
Association, 9th National Convention, University of Indiana, Bloomington, 1980.
19. Guest speaker on "The Political Role of Agustín Yáñez," International Symposium on Agustín
Yáñez, Latin American Studies Center, UCLA, Los Angeles, 1980.
20. Guest speaker on "Intellectual Life in Mexico," Latin American Studies Program, Grinnell
College, Grinnell, 1980.
21. Paper presented at the Rocky Mountain States Council of Latin American Studies, Las Cruces,
1981, on "An Image of Mexican Intellectuals, Some Preliminary Observations."
22. Guest speaker on "1982 Presidential Elections in Mexico, Who, How, and What Does it Mean?,"
Latin American Studies Institute, University of Texas, Austin, 1981.
23. Guest speaker on "Mexican Intellectuals and the State," Center for Latin American Studies,
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, 1981.
24. Guest speaker on "Otis A. Aultman, Photographer of the Mexican Revolution," Institute of InterAmerican Studies, University of Texas, El Paso, 1981.
20
25. Paper presented at the 6th International Meeting of United States-Mexican Historians, University
of Chicago, 1981, on "Intellectuals and the State in Mexico, 1970-1980, The Influence of Family and
Education."
26. Guest speaker on "The Government and the Media in Mexico," Illinois League of Latin
Americanists, Western Illinois University, Macomb, 1981.
27. Paper presented at the Latin American Studies Association, 10th National Convention,
Washington, D.C., 1982, "The Influence of Mexican Intellectuals on Public Policy, A View from
Intellectuals and Politicians."
28. Guest speaker on "Mexican Intellectuals, The Current Conversation," Foreign Service Institute,
U.S. Department of State, 1982.
29. Guest speaker on "Mexico, the Contemporary Scene," Mexico Seminar, Colegio de México,
Mexico City, 1982.
30. Paper presented at the Seminar on Perspectives of The Mexican Political System, The National
Executive Committee of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, Mexico City, 1982, on "Technocracy,
Representation and Criticism: Mexico in the Next Six Years."
31. Guest speaker on "Mexican Politics in the 20th Century," History Forum, University of
Wisconsin, La Crosse, 1982.
32. Guest speaker on "Corridors of Power in Mexico, Where Will They Lead North and South?,"
and "Censorship, Media and Intellectual Life in Mexico", Joint series, Carleton and St. Olaf
Colleges, Northfield, 1983.
33. Guest speaker on "Mexico, Revolution from Within or Without?," The Houston Seminar,
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1983.
34. Guest speaker on "Mexican Politics from a North American Perspective," Seminar of Mexico,
Colegio de México, Mexico City, 1983.
35. Guest speaker on "Current Perspectives on the Mexican Political System," President's Salon,
Autonomous University of the State of México, Toluca, México, 1983.
36. Guest speaker on "Intellectuals and the State," Institute of Social Research, National
Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico City, 1983.
37. Guest speaker on "Technocracy in the Corridors of Power in Mexico," and "An Image of
Intellectuals, A View From Mexico," Institute of Juridical Research, National Autonomous
University of Mexico, Mexico City, 1983.
38. Paper presented at the Latin American Studies Association, 11th National Meeting, Mexico City,
September, 1983, on "Collective Biography in the Analysis of Latin American Intellectuals: The
Case of Mexico."
21
39. Guest speaker on the "Influence of the Mexican Political System on Educational Development,"
Director General of Planning, Secretariat of Public Education, Mexico City, 1983.
40. Guest speaker on "An Overview of the Educational System in Mexico," Foreign Service
Institute, US Department of State, 1983.
41. Guest speaker on "Economic Elites after José López Portillo," Foreign Service Institute, US
Department of State, 1983.
42. Guest speaker on "Current Political Situation in Mexico," Des Moines Foreign Relations
Committee, The Des Moines Club, Des Moines, Iowa, 1983.
43. Guest speaker and moderator, "Mexican Politics, the Next Five Years," Workshop on Mexican
Politics, U.S. Department of State, 1984.
44. Paper presented at the Research Workshop on The Role of The Military in Mexican Politics and
Society, U.S.-Mexican Studies Center, UCSD, La Jolla, California, 1984, on "Generals and
Politicians in Mexico."
45. Guest speaker on "The Role of The Church in Contemporary Latin America," Foreign Service
Institute, U.S. Department of State, 1984.
46. Guest speaker on "Generals and Politicians in Mexico, A Comparison of Career and Recruitment
Characteristics," International Seminar on the Political Class, Elites and Parties, La Trinidad,
Tlaxcala, Mexico, 1984.
47. Guest speaker on "Recent Trends in Political Leadership," Fondo de Cultura Económica,
Mexico City, 1984.
48. Guest speaker on "Contemporary Politics in Mexico," Center for Research in Economic
Development (CIDE), Mexico City, 1984.
49. Paper presented at the American Historical Association, Chicago, Illinois, 1984, on "Mexican
Political Generations, the Last One Hundred Years."
50. Guest speaker on "Mexican Politics, An Update," The Forum, Rice University Art Museum,
Houston, Texas, 1984.
51. Paper presented at the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C., 1984, on "Private-Public Interests in Mexico."
52. Guest speaker on "The Impact of the Revolution on Political, Military & Intellectual Leadership,"
and "The Relationship between the Private-Public Sectors in Mexico," Joint Symposium on Latin
America, St. Olaf and Carleton Colleges, Northfield, Minnesota, 1984.
53. Guest speaker on "Research on Mexican Business Leaders," Mexican Studies, University of
California, Irvine, 1984.
54. Organizer and guest speaker on "Issues in Mexico, the Next Five Years," U.S. Department of
22
State, Washington, D.C., 1985.
55. Guest speaker on "The 1985 Congressional Elections in Mexico: Domestic Political
Implications," Conference on "Mexico, Crises and Conflict," U.S. Department of State, Washington,
D.C., 1985.
56. Guest speaker on "Mexico's Educational System, University Structure and Intellectual Life,"
Foreign Service Institute, U.S. Department of State, Washington, D.C., 1985.
57. Paper presented at the 7th International Conference of U.S.-Mexican Historians, Oaxaca,
Mexico, 1985, on "Consequences of Rural and Urban Origins for Mexico's Post-Revolutionary
Leadership."
58. Organizer and speaker on "An Overview of Issues in Mexico, the Next Five Years," U.S.
Department of State, Washington, D.C., 1985.
59. Guest speaker on "Opposition in Mexico, A Comparison of Leaders," Institute of Juridical
Research, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico City, 1986.
60. Keynote speaker on "Mexico, the Path Ahead," Institute of Latin American Studies, University
of Texas, Austin, 1986.
61. Paper presented at Workshop on the Government and Private Sector in Contemporary Mexico,
UCSD, La Jolla, California, 1986, on "Political Consequences of Self-Image among Mexican
Entrepreneurs."
62. Guest speaker on "How the United States Views Mexico," Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public
Affairs, University of Texas, Austin, 1986.
63. Guest speaker on "The Presidency and PRI," Conference on "Prospects for Mexico," Center for
the Study of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Service Institute, Washington, D.C., 1986.
64. Guest speaker on "Mexican Domestic Politics and U.S.-Mexican Relations," Research
Committee, Ford Foundation, Bi-National Commission on Mexico-United States, Washington,
D.C., 1986.
65. Guest speaker on "Mexico: Violence at our Door," Houston Seminar, Houston, 1987.
66. Guest speaker on "Origins of Mexico's Political Crisis, Consequences for the Future," Rosenfeld
Public Lecture Series, Grinnell College, Grinnell, 1987.
67. Guest speaker on "Preliminary Examination of Political Generations in Mexico," Ibero-American
University, Mexico City, 1987.
68. Paper presented at the North Central Council of Latin Americanists, Carleton College,
Northfield, Minnesota, 1987, on "Entrepreneurs, the State, and Decision-making in Mexico."
Award for the best paper from NCCLA, 1987.
23
69. Guest speaker on "Media in Mexico and the United States," Border Editors Conference,
University of Texas, El Paso, 1987.
70. Guest speaker on "The View of North American Academics on Mexican Politics, the Last
Decade," School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Mexico City, 1988.
71. Paper presented at the 14th National Latin American Studies Conference, New Orleans, 1988,
on "Intellectuals and Collective Biography."
72. Guest speaker on "Entrepreneurs and Politics in Mexico," Latin American Studies Center,
Hunter College, New York City, 1988.
73. Guest speaker on "Mexico's Political Future," Tenth Annual Editor's Conference, Woodrow
Wilson Center, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., 1988.
74. Guest speaker on "The Private Sector and Modernization in Mexico," Center for Developmental
Research, Mexico City, 1988.
75. Guest speaker on "Mexico's Political Future After Salinas," Colegio de México, Mexico City,
1988.
76. Guest speaker on "Mexico's 1988 Elections, a Turning Point for Its Political Development and
Foreign Relations," Bi-National Reflections, UCMEXUS and the MacArthur Foundation, Los
Angeles, 1988.
77. Guest speaker on "The Relation Between Public and Private Elites in Mexico," Symposium on
The Mexican Political System and The Possibility of Change, Association of Professional and Public
Administrators, Monterrey, Mexico, 1988.
78. Guest speaker on "Mexico: What is the Future?," Houston Seminar, Brown Auditorium,
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas, 1989.
79. Guest speaker on "Political Transition in Mexico, An Alternative View," Symposium on
Neighbors in Crisis, A Call for Joint Solutions, UCMEXUS and the MacArthur Foundation,
National Academy of Sciences, Irvine, California, 1989.
80. Guest speaker on "The Politics of The Catholic Church," Latin American Center, University of
Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, 1989.
81. Guest speaker on "Political Modernization in Mexico, The Salinas Years," Symposium on
Mexico's Chances, Latin American Studies Program, Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota,
1989.
82. Guest speaker on "Personalities in the Salinas Cabinet," Briefing for Ambassador John
Negroponte, Meridian House, Washington, D.C., 1989.
83. Keynote speaker on "Elites, Domestic Politics, and Mexico-United States Relations," Series of
Fulbright Conferences for Faculty, Department of Social and Political Sciences, Ibero American
University, Mexico City, 1989.
24
84. Guest speaker on "Political and Economic Modernization in Mexico, Roots and Consequences,"
Latin American Center, Tulane University, 1989.
85. Guest speaker on "New Power Relationships in Mexican Politics," Seminar on Salinas and
Modernization: The Future of Reform in Mexico, U.S. Department of State, Washington, D.C.,
1989.
86. Paper presented at the 15th National Latin American Studies Meeting, Miami, Florida, 1989, on
"Catholic Religious Elites, Some Preliminary Observations."
87. Guest speaker on "Latin American Militaries" and "Media in and about Mexico," Foreign
Service Institute, U.S. Department of State, Washington, D.C., 1990.
88. Guest speaker on "Political Modernization in Mexico, Democracy in the 1990's?" University of
Illinois, Chicago, 1990.
89. Guest speaker on "Political Modernization in Mexico, Through a Looking Glass," Colloquium
on the Evolution of the Mexican Political System, University of California, Irvine, 1990.
90. Guest speaker on "Liberalization in Mexico," Seminar on Mexican Politics, Department of
Political Science, University of California, Berkeley, 1990.
91. Guest speaker on "The Politics of Elites and Families in Mexico," Reeves Colloquia in
International Affairs, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, 1990.
92. Guest speaker on "The Magic Touch in Mexican Political Culture," Cluster Program, Wellesley
College, Wellesley, 1990.
93. Paper presented at the American Political Science Association Meeting, San Francisco, 1990, on
"Political Modernization in Mexico."
94. Paper presented at the 8th International Meeting of United States-Mexican Historians, San
Diego, 1990, on "Political Generations in Mexico, the Last One Hundred Years."
95. Guest speaker on "World Values Survey, the Case of Mexico," Autonomous Technological
Institute of Mexico, Mexico City, 1991.
96. Paper presented at the 16th National Latin American Studies Meeting, Washington, D.C., 1991,
on "What Kind of Relationship, the Military and Mexican Politics?"
97. Guest speaker on "Economic and Political Liberalization under Salinas," Grinnell College,
Grinnell, Iowa, 1991.
98. Paper presented at the American Political Science Association Meeting, Washington, D.C., 1991
on "Clerics, Religion, and Political Modernization in Mexico."
99. Paper presented at the Bildner Graduate Center, City University of New York, New York City,
1991 on "Political Generations in Mexico."
25
100. Guest speaker on "Mexican Political Transition," Binational Colloquium on Mexican Electoral
Reform, University of Texas, Austin, 1991.
101. Paper presented at School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University,
Washington D.C., 1991, on "Political Liberalization, the Last Key to Economic Modernization in
Mexico?"
102. Paper presented at the Rocky Mountain States Council of Latin Americanists, University of
Texas, El Paso, 1992, on "Age as a Variable in Political Analysis, the Case of Mexico."
103. Paper presented at the Conference on Opposition Government in Mexico: Past Experiences
and Future Opportunities, LBJ School of Public Affairs, University of Texas, Austin, 1992, on "The
Social Composition of Panista Government Officials: From Where do they Hail?"
104. Paper presented at the 17th National Latin American Studies Association, Los Angeles, 1992,
on "Age as a Variable in Political Analysis, the Case of Mexico."
105. Paper presented at Profmex, Mérida, Mexico, 1992, on "Education and Politics, Formation and
Recruitment of National Leaders."
106. Paper presented at the Conference on Deepening Democracy and Representation in Latin
America, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, 1993, on "Battling for the Voter, Elections, Parties,
and Democracy in Mexico."
107. Keynote speaker on, "The Future of Mexico, the Opposition, and the PRI," at Conference on
Mexico Toward the Turn of the Century, Latin American Studies Center, University of Arizona,
Tucson, 1993.
108. Paper presented at the Rocky Mountain States Conference of Latin American Studies,
Vancouver, British Columbia, 1993, on "The Role of Violence in the Formation of Mexican
Politicians."
109. Guest speaker on "Presidential Succession and Cabinet Personalities," Briefing for Ambassador
James Jones, Meridian House, Washington, D.C., 1993.
110. Guest speaker on "Democratization, Elections, and Economic Liberalization," Department of
Political Science, University of California, Berkeley, 1993.
111. Paper presented at the Southwestern Political Science Association, New Orleans, 1993, on
"Modernization and Recruitment, A Mexican Model."
112. Guest speaker on "The Methodology of Generational Studies, the Case of Mexican Elites,"
Mexican Studies Program and the Department of History, University of California, Los Angeles,
1993.
113. Guest speaker on "The Politics of Mexican Liberalization," School of Advanced International
Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, D.C., 1993.
26
114. Guest speaker on "The Political Implications of NAFTA," United States Senate, Joint
Committee of Congress, Washington, D.C., 1993.
115. Guest speaker on "The Current Situation in Mexico," Freedom House, Washington, D.C.,
1993.
116. Paper presented at the New England Council of Latin Americanists, Brown University,
Providence, 1993, on "The Cross in the Polling Booth, Religion and Partisanship under Salinas."
117. Guest speaker on "Opposition and Liberalization in Mexico," Symposium of Excélsior, Mexico
City, 1993.
118. Paper presented at the Inter-University Seminar on Armed Forces and Society, Baltimore,
1993, on "Mexico's Generals Marching to Political Tunes, A Change from the Past?"
119. Guest speaker on "Political Elites in Mexico," Graduate Seminar, Department of Political and
Social Sciences, University of Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Mexico, 1993.
120. Paper presented at Tinker Conference on Changing Political Traditions in Mexico;
Intergovernmental Relations and the Opposition, Tulane University, New Orleans, 1993, on
"Province Versus the Center, Democratizing Mexico's Political Culture."
121. Guest speaker on "Democracy and Elections in 1994," Department of Government, Smith
College, Northampton, 1993.
122. Guest speaker on "Autobiography, a Novel Approach to Mexican Politics," Mexican Studies
Program, University of Texas, Austin, 1993.
123. Paper presented at the 18th National Latin American Studies Association, Atlanta, Georgia,
1994, on "Battling for the Voter, Religion, Politics and the Laity in Mexico."
124. Guest speaker on "Battling for the Voter, Mexico's Path to Democracy," Congressional
Research Service, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., 1994.
125. Guest speaker on "Democracy in Mexico: The Presidential Election," Trinity College,
Burlington, Vermont, 1994.
126. Guest speaker on "Elections and Democracy in Mexico," Foundation Cambio XXI, Mexico
City, 1994.
127. Guest speaker on "Leadership in the Mexican Military," U.S. Department of State,
Washington, D.C., 1994.
128. Guest speaker on "Mexico, Mexican Economic Development, and the United States," Graduate
School of Business and the Center for Latin American Studies, University of Chicago, 1994.
129. Guest speaker on "The Politics of Mexican Culture," Council on International Relations, Santa
Fe, New Mexico, 1994.
27
130. Paper presented at the Conference on Higher Education, University of California, Los Angeles,
Mexico City, 1994, on "Educating Mexico's Political Leadership, Patterns from the Past?"
131. Paper presented at the New England Council of Latin Americanists, Harvard University,
Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1994, on "Consequences of the 1994 Presidential Elections."
132. Paper presented at the Ibero-American University, Mexico City, 1994, on "Politics and
Religion in Mexico, the Role of Laity and Parties."
133. Paper presented at the 9th United States-Mexico Conference of Historians, Mexico City, 1994,
on "Schooling Mexico's Politicians, the Changing Role of Higher Education in a Century of
Leadership."
134. Guest speaker on "Political Development, Elections, and Democracy in Mexico," Department
of Government, Wellesley College, Wellesley, 1994.
135. Guest speaker on "Political Leadership in Mexico, the Current Generation," United States
Department of State, Washington, D.C., 1994.
136. Guest speaker on "Political Liberalization in Mexico, Mexico's Path for Change?," Mexican
Studies Center, University of Texas, Austin, 1994.
137. Guest speaker on "Battling for the Voter, Mexico's Presidential Elections, Latin American
Studies Center, University of California, Berkeley, 1994.
138. Guest speaker on "The Zedillo Team, Continuity or Change," Center for Strategic and
International Studies, Washington, D.C., 1995, televised on CNN.
139. Guest speaker on "Leadership, Decision-Making, and the Zedillo Cabinet," University of
Aguascalientes and the State Government of Aguascalientes, 1995.
140. Guest speaker on "Women and Men, Men and Women, Gender Patterns in Mexican Politics,"
Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas, Austin, 1995.
141. Guest speaker on "Leadership, Electoral Democracy, and Decision-Making, the Mexican
Dilemma," Council on International Relations, Santa Fe and Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1995.
142. Paper presented at the Southwestern Social Science Association and Borderlands Studies
Association, Oakland, California, 1995, on "The Role of Violence in the Formation of Mexican
Politicians."
143. Guest speaker on "Politics in Mexico, Presentation of La política en México," Siglo XXI,
Mexico City, 1995.
144. Presented paper at the 19th National Latin American Studies Association, Washington, D.C.,
1995, on "Mexican Bishops through Tinted Lenses, A View from Politicians."
145. Guest speaker on "Recent Changes in the Mexican Military," U.S. Department of State,
Meridian House, Washington, D.C., 1995.
28
146. Presented paper at the New England Council of Latin Americanists, Dartmouth College,
Hanover, New Hampshire, 1995, on "Mexican Democracy on the Run, the Zedillo Heritage."
147. Guest speaker on "Catholicism, Religion and Politics in Mexico," History Department, Texas
Christian University, Ft. Worth, Texas, 1996.
148. Guest speaker on "Political Transition and Turmoil in the Greater Caribbean, the Mexican
Case," Annual Journalists and Editors Workshop on Latin America and the Caribbean, Miami
Herald, Miami, Florida, 1996.
149. Guest speaker on "Mexico's Uncertain Path to Democracy," Latin American Studies Program,
Colgate University, Hamilton, New York, and Hamilton College, Clinton, New York, 1996.
150. Guest speaker on "Is Zedillo on the Path to Democracy, the First Year in Review?, Mexican
Students Association, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, 1996.
151. Paper presented at the Rocky Mountain States Council of Latin Americanists, Santa Fe, New
Mexico, 1996, on "Bishops and Politicians, Two Visions of Mexico's Political and Social Future."
152. Guest speaker on "Mexican Political Stability: To Be or Not to Be? United States Capitol
Building, Washington, D.C., 1996.
153. Guest speaker on "Challenges to Democracy in Mexico," Kellogg National Fellowship
Program International Seminar, Cuernavaca, Mexico, 1996.
154. Guest speaker on "Militarizing Mexico: Soldiers at the Palace Door?," Research Seminar on
Mexico and U.S.-Mexican Relations, University of California, San Diego, 1996.
155. Presented paper at the Military History Symposium, United States Air Force Academy,
Colorado Springs, Colorado, 1996, on "Education of Junior Officers in the Mexican Military."
156. Guest speaker on "Religion, Politics, and the Military in the Zedillo Years," Monterrey
Technological Institute of Higher Studies, Monterrey, Mexico, 1996.
157. Keynote speaker on "Where is Zedillo Taking Mexico?," Southern Conference of Latin
American Studies, University of Texas, Austin, Texas, 1997.
158. Presented paper at the 20th National Latin American Studies Association, Guadalajara,
Mexico, April, 1997, on "The Political Role of the Catholic Church, An Elite Perspective."
159. Chaired panel on "Catholic Social Action in Latin America" American Historical Association,
New York City, 1997.
160. Presented paper at the Rocky Mountain States and the Pacific Coast Council of Latin
Americanists, San Diego, California, 1997, on "Political Activists and Catholic Social Activists in
Mexico."
161. Presented paper at the American Political Science Association Annual Meeting, Washington,
29
D.C., 1997, on "Bishops and Politicians' Views on Religion and Political Activism in Mexico."
162. Guest speaker on "Mexico's Search for a Democratic Path," Department of Government,
Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1997.
163. Guest speaker on "Mexico at the Crossroads, Transition to Democracy," Latin American
Studies, Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vermont, 1997.
164. Guest speaker on "The Making of a Scholarly Detective, Hot on the Trail of Mexican
Politicians," Jones Hall Rededication, Tulane University, New Orleans, 1997.
165. Guest speaker on "Mexican Generals: Marching to a New Political Tune?," Council on Foreign
Relations, New York City, New York, 1997.
166. Presented paper at the Global Trends Project Country Study, Mexico 2005, Center for Strategic
and International Studies, Washington, D.C. 1998, on "A Test of Human Psychology, the Mexican
Case."
167. Guest speaker on "Presidential-Military Relations in Mexico," Conference on the Mexican
Armed Forces During an Era of Political Transition, National Defense University, Washington,
D.C., 1998.
168. Testified on "The Conflict in Chiapas," Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, Committee
on International Relations, U.S. Congress, Washington, D.C., 1998.
169. Presented paper at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, D.C., 1998,
on "A Middle Road Scenario for Mexico, 2001."
170. Presented paper at the 21st National Latin American Studies Association, Chicago, 1998, on
"Democracy and the Mexican Military, A View from the Officer Corps."
171. Guest speaker on "End game for the Zedillo Sexenio," Center for Strategic and International
Studies, Washington, D.C., 1998.
172. Guest speaker on "Democracy and Social Justice in Mexico, Bildner Center, Graduate School
of the City University of New York, New York, 1998.
173. Guest speaker on "Mexican Democracy in Transition, Implications for the Officer Corps," and
"A Comparison of the Catholic Church and the Armed Forces, Consequences of Civil-Military
Relations, National Defense College, Mexico City, 1998.
174. Guest speaker on "The Magic Touch in Mexican Politics, Is Democracy Around the Corner?,"
Claremont McKenna College, Claremont, 1998.
175. Guest speaker on "Democracy through Mexican Lenses," Committee on Foreign Relations,
Tucson, Arizona, 1999.
176. Organizer and chair, "Democracy through Latin American Lenses," Hewlett Foundation
Project, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1999.
30
177. Guest speaker on "Democracy Through Latin American Lenses, Is Mexican Democracy Really
Around the Corner?," Council on Foreign Relations, New York City, New York, February, 1999.
178. "Guest speaker on "The Impact of Religious Values on Politics in Mexico," Mexico
Foundation, Tucson, Arizona, 1999.
179. "Guest speaker on "The Institutional Revolutionary Party, Origin and Future," Conference on
Mexico and Japan, Pacific Basin Institute, Pomona College, Claremont, California, 1999.
180. Guest speaker on "Democracy and Values in Mexico," United States-Mexico Studies Center,
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California, 1999.
181. Guest speaker on "The Mexican Military and Recent Changes in Civil-Military Relations,"
Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, D.C., 1999.
182. Presented paper on "The Mexican Military, Marching to a Democratic Tune?," United StatesMexico Studies Center, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California, 1999.
183. Organized joint conference on "Democracy Through Latin American Lenses, Citizen Views
from Costa Rica, Chile and Mexico," United States-Mexico Studies Center, University of California,
San Diego, La Jolla, California, 1999.
184. Presented paper on "Americanizing Mexico's Elite, The Role of Foreign Education," 10th
International Conference of United States Mexican Historians, Ft. Worth, Texas, 1999.
185. Guest speaker on "Democracy and Elections, Antecedents to 2000," Mexican Studies Center,
University of Texas, Austin, Texas, 1999.
186. Guest speaker on "Democratization in Mexico," National Institute of Public Administration,
Mexico City, 1999.
187. Guest speaker at "The Prospects and Prognoses of the July 2, 2000 Elections in Mexico," A
Research Workshop, LBJ School of Public Affairs, University of Texas, Austin, Texas, 2000.
188. Guest speaker at "Roundtable on the Mexican Presidential Elections," Pomona College,
Claremont, California, 2000.
189. Guest speaker on "Bi-national Democracy, A Comparison of Mexico and the United States,"
History Department, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California, 2000.
190. Guest speaker on "Democracy in Mexico, Fact or Fiction?," Department of Political Science,
University of California, Riverside, 2000.
191. Guest host, "Mexican Presidential Elections," Washington Journal, CSPAN, Washington, D.C.,
2000.
192. Guest speaker at "Roundtable of the Outcome of the Mexican Presidential Elections," Center
for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, D.C., 2000.
31
193. Guest speaker at "Mexico in the Face of Change, Financial, Economic and Social
Repercussions," Mexican Institute of Financial Executives, Mexico City, 2000.
194. Guest speaker at "Mexico's Political Transition and the Prospects for the 2000 Elections," LBJ
School of Public Affairs and the Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas, Austin,
April, 2000
195. Guest speaker on "The First 100 Days of the Fox Administration," at the conference on
"Mexico: A Democracy in Transition," College of Humanities, University of California, Riverside,
April, 2001.
196. Guest speaker on "An Update on the Mexican Military," at the conference on "Crouching
Monkey, Hidden Iguana: Drug Trafficking and Security in Colombia and Mexico," Department of
Political Science, University of San Diego, April, 2001.
197. Organizer and Guest Speaker, International Conference on "Democracy and Political Learning
in Mexico and the United States," Mexican Studies Center, University of Texas, Austin, April,
2001.
198. Presented a paper on “Learning Democracy in Mexico,” Joint Conference on Immigration and
Democracy, University of Indiana and the Kellogg Center, University of Notre Dame, June, 2001.
199. Organizer and Guest Speaker, Conference on “Learning Democracy and Ecology in Mexico,”
City University of New York, Custom’s House, New York City, June, 2001.
200. Organizer and Guest Speaker, Conference on “Learning Democracy in Mexico and the United
States, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, D.C., September, 2001.
201. Presented a paper on “Democratic Attitudes and the Fox Presidential Victory in 2000,” Latin
American Studies Association Meeting, Washington, D.C., September, 2001.
202. Organizer and presented a paper on “Learning Democracy in Mexico,” Latin American Studies
Association Meeting, Washington, D.C., September, 2001.
203. Guest Speaker, “The First 10 Months of the Fox Administration, A Mexicanologist’s View,”
Conference on Mexico in Transition 2001, University of California, Los Angeles, October, 2001.
204. Organizer and presented a paper at International Conference on “Learning Democracy in
Mexico and the United States,” Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies, University of California, San
Diego, La Jolla, California, November, 2001.
205. Guest Speaker, “Hemiscope,” UCSD Public Television and Cable,” University of California,
San Diego, La Jolla, California, December, 2001.
206. Guest Speaker, Mexico Public Radio, Mexico City, February, 2002.
207. Guest Speaker, Department of Political Science, Pomona College, on “Winning the Election,
Why Fox Won and What Does it Mean?,” April, 2002.
32
208. Guest Speaker, Department of History, Department of Political Science, and Latin American
Studies, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California, on “Why Fox Won the Presidential
Elections: What it Means for Mexican Politics in the New Millennium,” May, 2002.
209. Guest Speaker, Ambassadorial Briefing on Mexico for Anthony Garza, Meridian International
Center, U.S. Department of State, Washington, D.C., on “Political Institutions in Mexico,”
September, 2002.
210. Guest Speaker, Conference on Mexican Venture Capital, Drucker School for Management and
Anahuac University, Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California, on “Social and Political
Conditions in Mexico,” September, 2002.
211. Guest Speaker, Conference Series on U.S.-Mexico Relations, on “Democracy and the BiLateral Relationship,” Latin American Studies, University of California, Berkeley, October, 2002.
212. Guest Speaker, Symposium in Honor of Edward J. Williams, on “Learning Democracy Among
Mexicans, Mexican-Americans, and Americans,” Center for Latin American Studies, University of
Arizona November, 2002.
213. Presented a paper on “Technocrats, the Globalization of Ideas, and the Role of U.S. Education
on Policy-Making in Mexico,” at the Mellon Foundation Sawyer Seminar on “Crises, Choices and
Change: The Micro-Foundations of the Neo-Liberal Turn in Latin America,” Tulane University,
February, 2003.
214. Keynote speaker, PRI members of Congress, on “Walking the Democratic Line, Whose
Democratic Anyway? Puebla, Mexico, August, 2003.
215. Guest Speaker, Honors Course at the University of Vermont, on “Electoral Participation Today,
What Can the Congressional Elections Tell us About Mexico’s Democratic Future?,” October,
2003.
216. Guest Speaker, Latin American Civilization course, on “Democratic Consolidation in Mexican
Politics,” Central College, Pella, Iowa, November 2003.
217. Guest Speaker, Graduate Seminar in Politics, on “Mentoring Elites in Mexican Politics, the
Role of Networking,” Ibero-American University, Mexico City, November 2003.
218. Guest Speaker, Faculty and Graduate Students in Social Anthropology and Politics, on “Civil
Military Relations in Mexico,” Ibero-American University, Mexico City, November 2003.
219. Guest Speaker, Graduate Seminar in Politics, “The Relationship between the State and
Religious Organizations,” Ibero-American University, Mexico City, November 2003.
220. Guest Speaker, on “Mexico’s Political Transition: The Challenges of Democratic Governance,”
Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, D.C., March, 2003.
221. Guest Speaker, on ”Winding Through the Democratic Forest, Where are Mexican Voters
Going? Seminar on Mexico’s 2003 Mid-Term Elections: The Implications for the 59th Legislature
33
and for Future Consolidation of the Parties, Mexican Studies, University of Texas, Austin,
September, 2003.
222. Presented paper on “Does Gender Make a Difference, Attitudes Toward Democracy Among
Mexicans, Americans and Mexican-Americans,” at the New England Council of Latin Americanists,
Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, October, 2003.
223. Guest Speaker, Gould Lecture Series, “Citizens and Congress, What Does the Future Hold for
Mexican Democracy?,” University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont, October, 2003.
224. Presented paper on “Democracy Across Cultures, Does Gender Make a Difference?,”
Conference on Analyzing Citizenship in Latin American Democracies, Woodrow Wilson Center for
International Scholars, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., November, 2003.
225. Chair and discussant, panel on “Crime, Corruption and Support for Democracy,” Conference
on Challenges to Mexico’s Democratic Consolidation, American University, Washington, D.C.,
November, 2003.
226. Keynote Speaker, 60th Celebration of the Founding of Ibero-American University, Department
of Social Sciences and Anthropology, on “Political Recruitment, Governance and Leadership, Fox at
Mid-point,” Ibero-American University, Mexico City, November, 2003.
227. Guest Speaker and reading from my book Mexico’s Mandarins, Crafting a Power Elite for the
21st Century at Writers Reading, Geisler Library, Central University of Iowa, November 2003.
228. Guest speaker, “Governance and Leadership, Fox at the Midpoint, ”The North American Free
Trade Agreement,10th Anniversary Seminar and Luncheon, California State Polytechnic University,
Pomona, California, January, 2004.
229. Paper presented on “Does Gender Make a Difference, Mexicans, Mexican-Americans, and
Americans,” Rocky Mountain States Council of Latin Americanists, Annual Meeting, Santa Fe,
New Mexico, March 2004.
230. Keynote Speaker, C.H. Richard Lecture Series on National Identity and Nation-Building,
Department of Political Science, Wake Forest University, on “Democracy North and South of the
Border, Does National Identity Make a Difference?,” March, 2004.
231. Paper presented at the Conference on “Pathways to Power: Political Recruitment and Candidate
Selection in Latin America,” Wake Forest University and Duke University, on “Political
Recruitment, Governance, and Leadership, Has Democracy Made a Difference?,” March, 2004.
232. Guest Speaker, Joint Course on Politics and Culture in Mexico via television with the
University of Texas, Austin and the University of Dallas, Dallas, April, 2004.
233. Keynote speaker, “Reporting on the Neighbors, A Conference of Mexican and U.S.
Journalists,” Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C., April 2004.
234. Paper presented at the Conference on (Dis)Assembling the Present: Interdisciplinary
34
Symposium in Latin American Studies, University of California, Irvine, on “Governance and
Leadership, Has Democracy Made Difference in Mexico?,” April, 2004.
235. Paper presented at the Mexican Armed Forces Workshop, National Defense University, Ft.
McNair, Washington, D.C., on “Developments in the Military, Democratic Changes in Mexico,”
August, 2004.
236. Speaker at Series on Mexico and the United States, Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies,
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, on “Civil-Military Relations in Mexico after 2000,”
September, 2004.
237. Paper presented at the National Latin American Studies Meeting, Las Vegas, Nevada, on
“Democracy across Cultures, Does Gender Make a Difference?,” October, 2004.
238. Keynote speaker, “Democracy North and South of the Border, Does National Identity Make a
Difference,” Latin American & Caribbean Studies Program, Alleghany College, Meadville,
Pennsylvania, February, 2005.
239. Paper presented at the Rocky Mountain States Conference of Latin Americanists, Tucson,
Arizona, on “Mexico’s Changing Leadership, the Impact of Democracy on Political Recruitment,”
March, 2005.
240. Speaker on “The Role of the Mexican Armed Forces in a Democratic & Increasingly
Globalized Mexico,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, D.C., May, 2005.
241. Presentation of Mexico’s Military on the Democratic Stage, Center for Strategic and
International Studies, Washington, D.C., October, 2005.
242. Keynote lectures, “The Role of Influential Power Groups in Mexican Elections, The Case of
2006,” and “Mexican Voters in 2006, What Do Their Preferences Tell about the Election,”
University of the Americas and the University of California, Los Angeles, Mexico City, October,
2005.
243. Speaker on “Democracy Redux, Voter Attitudes and the 2006 Presidential Race,” University of
Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, January, 2006.
244. Paper presented on “Democracy and Mexican Voters, the Mexico Panel Survey and Voter
Preferences from 2000,” Institute of Latin American Studies and the Mexico Institute, University of
Texas, Austin, February, 2006.
245. Paper presented on “Civil-Military Relations Under Fox, the Impact of Mexican Democracy,”
Rocky Mountain States Conference on Latin America, Denver, February, 2006.
246. Paper presented on “Mexico’s Presidential Election, Will it Be a Horserace in 2006,?” Rocky
Mountain States Conference on Latin America, Denver, February, 2006.
247. Speaker on “Presidential Elections and the Mexican Race in 2006,” Latin American Studies
Program, University of California, Irvine, March, 2006.
35
248. Speaker on “Changing Military Missions, Implications and Consequences,” Higher Naval War
College, Mexico City, March, 2006.
249. Speaker on “Mexico’s Military on the Democratic Stage, Civil Military Relations under
Vicente Fox,” Higher Naval War College, Mexico City, March, 2006.
250. Speaker on “Mexico’s Presidential Elections in 2006, Who Will Win and Why,” Athenaeum,
Claremont McKenna College, March, 2006.
251. Keynote Address, South-East Conference of Latin Americanists, on “Mexico’s Elections,
Presidential Politics and Mexican Voters,” University of North Carolina, Charlotte, April, 2006.
252. Speaker on “Democratic Transformation and Civil-Military Relations in Mexico,” Department
of Political Science and the Latin American Studies Program, Wake Forest University, WinstonSalem, North Carolina, April, 2006.
253. Speaker on “Democracy’s Next Step, Mexico’s 2006 Presidential Elections,” Department of
Political Science and Latin American Studies Program, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, April,
2006.
254. Speaker on “Canada-Mexico Security and Defense Cooperation,” Fast Talk Conference of the
Canadian Ministry of Foreign Relations, August, 2006.
255.Speaker on “Presidential Campaign Effects, The Role of the Mexican Voter in 2006,” Latin
American Studies Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, September, 2006.
256. Speaker on “Political Leadership and Recruitment in Mexico, Does Democracy Make a
Difference,” Latin American Studies Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, September,
2006.
257. Speaker on “Mexico’s Presidential Race, Voters in a Consolidating Democracy,” Political
Science Department and Latin American Studies, University of Redlands, Redlands, California,
September, 2006.
258. Speaker on “Do Campaigns Matter? The Role of the Voter in Mexico’s 2006 Presidential
Race,” Department of Political Science, University of Vermont, Burlington, October, 2006.
259. Speaker on “Why Calderón Won, Mexican Voters and the 2006 Presidential Race,”
Department of Political Science, Whittier College, October, 2006.
260. Speaker on “Mexico’s Presidential Horserace, Voters, Campaigns, and Democratic
Transition,” Latin American Studies, St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota, October, 2006.
261. Keynote Address, North Central Council of Latin Americanists, on “Latin American Studies
and the Liberal Arts, Reflections of a Mexicanist,” 40th Anniversary Meeting, University of
Minnesota, Mankato, Minnesota, November, 2006.
262. Speaker on “Demographic Variables in Mexico’s Presidential Election, Did the Campaign
Make a Difference?” North Central Council of Latin Americanists, University of Minnesota,
36
Mankato, Minnesota, November, 2006.
263. Speaker on “Mexico’s Voters and Democracy, 2006 Panel Survey,” Weatherhead Center for
International Affairs, Harvard University, December, 2006.
264. “Why Calderón Won, Did the Presidential Campaign Make a Difference?,” Paper presented at
the Rocky Mountain States Conference of Latin American Studies, Santa Fe, New Mexico, January,
2007.
265. Speaker on “Mexico and the United States, Calderón’s Policies, the First 60 Days,” Great
Decision Series, Foreign Policy Association, Rancho Mirage, California, February, 2007.
266. Speaker on “Current Political Situation in Mexico,” Latin American Studies Program,
California State University, Los Angeles, March, 2007.
267. Speaker on ”Learning Democracy in Mexico: Origins, Expectations and Consequences,”
Context of Culture Latin American Series, Maricopa Community Colleges, Phoenix, March, 2007.
268. Speaker on ”Security and Democracy, Calderón and the Armed Forces,” The Mexican Political
System in Transition, The First One Hundred Days of the Calderón Administration, University of
Texas, Austin, April, 2007.
269. “Roundtable, State of the Relationship,” The United States and Mexico: Strategic Partners or
Distant Neighbors?,” Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center, Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C., June, 2007.
270. Speaker on “Democracy and the 2006 Presidential Election in Mexico,” Latin American
Studies and the Department of Political Science, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana,
September, 2007.
271. Keynote Address, “Leadership in Mexico, Has Democracy Make a Difference?,” Pacific Coast
Conference of Latin Americanists, Claremont McKenna College, November, 2007.
272. “Exercising Political Influence, Religion, Democracy, and the Mexican 2006 Presidential
Race,” Paper presented at the Pacific Coast Council of Latin Americanists, Claremont McKenna
College, November, 2007.
273. Keynote Address, “Mexico’s Changing Leadership,” International Conference on Trends in
Political Science, 50th Anniversary, University of Baja California, Mexicali, Baja California,
November, 2007.
274. Speaker on “Democracy and Leadership, Leadership and Democracy, the Mexican Case,”
International Conference, University of California, Los Angeles, November, 2007.
275. Speaker on “Current Research, The Relationship Between Leadership and Change in Mexico,”
Center for Research and Economic Development, Mexico City, December, 2007.
276. Keynote Address, “Mexican Democracy, Mexican Leadership, Has Democracy Made a
Difference?,” Missouri River Valley Historical Conference, University of Nebraska, Omaha,
37
Nebraska, March, 2008.
277. Speaker on “Democratic Leadership in Mexico, Has it Changed,?” Latin American Studies
and Sociology, Occidental College, Eagle Rock, California, April, 2008.
278. Presented paper on “Exercising Political Influence, Religion and the 2006 Presidential Race in
Mexico,” Memorial Panel for Michael Meyer, Rocky Mountain States Conference on Latin
America, Flagstaff, Arizona, April, 2008.
279. Speaker on “Military to Military Cooperation, Potential Consequences for Mexico and the
United States,” The Merida Initiative and U.S.-Mexico Security Cooperation, United States Capitol
Building, Washington, D.C., May, 2008.
280. Speaker on “Mexico’s Leadership, A Product of Democracy,?” Department of Political
Science, University of California, Riverside, May, 2008.
281. Expert Resource Participant, Bi-Lateral Inter-Parliamentary Discussions and Pandemic
Influenza Exercise, Mexico and the United States, National Defense University, U. S. Department of
Defense, San Diego, California, May, 2008.
282. Speaker on “What the 2008 Presidential Elections Mean for Mexico,” Panel on US-Mexican
Elections, Mexico Program, Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, D.C., June, 2008.
283. Speaker on “All Politics is Local, Party Politics and Democracy in Mexico,” Political Science
Department, University of Vermont, Burlington, September, 2008.
284. Speaker on “Partisanship and Democratic Leadership in Mexico,” Political Science
Department, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts, October, 2008.
285. Speaker on “Democracy and Leadership, Leadership and Democracy, the Mexican Case,”
New England Council of Latin Americanists, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, October,
2008.
286. Speaker on “A View of Mexican Bi-Lateral Relations,” Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson
Center for International Scholars, Mexico City, December, 2008.
287. Speaker on “What Colonial History Has to Tell Us About Mexico’s Political Development,”
Conference on Hispanic Political Theory and Practice, XVI-XIX Centuries,” University of
California, Irvine, January, 2009.
288. Presented paper on “Local Careers and National Political Elites in Mexico,” Rocky Mountain
States Conference of Latin Americanists, Santa Fe, New Mexico, March, 2009.
289. Speaker on “The Evolution of the Armed Forces Anti-Drug Mission in Mexico,” U.S.
Department of Defense, Washington, D.C., March, 2009.
290. Speaker “Collaboration between the United States and Mexican Militaries,” U.S. Department
of Defense, Washington, D.C., March 2009.
38
291. Speaker on “Democracy and Mexican National Leadership,” Mexico Institute, Woodrow
Wilson Center for International Scholars, Washington, D.C., March 2009.
292. Testimony, “Political Asylum Case” United States Federal Immigration Court, Reno, Nevada,
February and April, 2009.
293. Speaker on “Local Politics, National Leadership, and Democracy in Mexico,” Mexico Institute,
Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, Smithsonian Institution, March, 2009.
294. Speaker on, “Governors, the New Leadership in Democratic Mexico,?” US-Mexico Studies
Center, UCSD, La Jolla, California, May, 2009.
295. Panelist, “Renewing the Partnership between the United States and Mexico: Shared
Responsibility and Shared Strategies,” Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson International Center for
Scholars, Smithsonian Institution, June, 2009.
296.Speaaker on “Violence and Democracy, Which Produces Elite Change in Mexico?,” Conference
on the Role of Elites in Economic Development, World Institute for Development Economics
Research, United Nations University, Helsinki, Finland, June, 2009.
297. Chair, “Panel on Elites and Political Change,” Conference on the Role of Elites in Economic
Development, World Institute for Development Economics Research, United Nations University,
Helsinki, Finland, June, 2009.
298. Roundtable, “The Future of Elite Research,” Plenary Session, Conference on the Role of Elites
in Economic Development, World Institute for Development Economics Research, United Nations
University, Helsinki, Finland, June, 2009
299. “Drugs, Guns and Violence, Mexico’s Path to National Security,” Presentation at the
Athenaeum, Claremont McKenna College, September, 2009
300. Speaker on "Democracy versus Violence, Which Produced the Greatest Change among
Political Elites? Latin American Studies Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, September,
2009
301. Convocation Address, Honorary Doctorate, “The Making of a Scholarly Detective, Hot on the
Trail of Mexican Politicians,” St Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota, October, 2009.
302. Speaker on, “Leadership in Mexico, Has Democracy Made a Difference?,” Presentation at St
Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota, October, 2009.
303. Speaker on “Latin American Studies and the Liberal Arts, Reflections of a Mexicanist,”
Presentation, St Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota, October, 2009.
304. Presented a paper on “Military Cooperation, the Catholic Church, and Public Opinion: Drug
Trafficking in Mexico,” Workshop, Smith Richardson project on Mexican National Security,
Woodrow Wilson Center, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., November 30, 2009.
305. Speaker on “Violence and Democracy, Which Produces Elite Changes in Mexico,?” Center for
39
Interdisciplinary Research, National University of Mexico, Mexico City, December, 2009
306. Speaker on “Violence and Drugs, Mexico’s National Security and Democracy,” University of
Northern Arizona, Flagstaff, February, 2010.
307. Speaker on “Violence and Democracy, Which Altered Mexican Leadership Most?,” Stone
Center for Latin American Studies, Tulane University, March, 2010.
308. Presentation of paper on “Will Governors be the Future Leaders of a Democratic Mexico,”
Rocky Mountain States Conference of Latin Americanists, Boulder, Colorado, April, 2010.
309. Speaker on “Are Drugs and Violence in Mexico a Threat to U.S. National Security,?”
“Obama’s Foreign Policy in an Era of American Declinism,” Keck Institute and the Human Rights
Institute, Claremont McKenna College, May, 2010.
310. Speaker on “Violence, Security and Democracy for Mexico,” National Intelligence Council
Study Group: Prospects for Democracy in Latin American to 2015, US Department of State and the
National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., May, 2010.
311. “Security Cooperation between Mexico and the United States; the Armed Forces,” Roundtable,
Challenges in U.S.-Mexico Relations, Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center for International
Scholars, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., June, 2010.
312. Participant, “Scenario on Mexico,” National Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., July,
2010.
313. Presentation of “The Metamorphosis of Leadership in a Democratic Mexico, LBJ School,
University of Texas, Austin, October, 2010.
314. Keynote Address, International Week, on “Violence, Security and Democracy, Can Mexico
Win its War on Drugs?,” Elon University, Elon, North Carolina, November, 2010.
315. Speaker on “Military, Drug War and Public Opinion in Mexico,” Latin American Studies
Institute, University of Arizona, February, 2011.
316. Speaker on “Interviewing Elites, Anecdotes from Mexican Politicians in the 20 th Century,”
Latin American Studies Institute, University of Arizona, February, 2011.
317. Convocation Address, Mark and Kay De Cook Leadership Lecture Series, “Violence, Security
and Crime: Mexico’s War on Drugs,” Central College, Pella, Iowa, March, 2011.
318. Speaker on “National Security, Violence, and Drugs in Mexico,” Rocky Mountain States
Conference of Latin Americanists, Santa Fe, New Mexico, April, 2011.
319. Speaker on “Consequences of Drug War Violence on Mexican Security and Sovereignty and
US-Mexican Relations,” Cosmopolitan Club, Santa Barbara, California, May, 2011.
320. Speaker on “Four Decades of Interviewing Elites in Mexico,” Honors Program, University of
Vermont, Burlington, Vermont, October, 2011.
40
321. Speaker on “Institutional Reform in the Armed Forces, Implications for Mexico,” National
Intelligence Council, Washington, D.C., November, 2011.
322. Speaker on “Democracy and Elections, the 2012 Presidential Race,” Mexico at a Crossroads:
Learning from History, Facing the Future, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, November,
2011.
323. Speaker on “A Discussion of Politics in Mexico, Presentation of Three Recent Books on
Mexico,” Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, Smithsonian
Institution and the Hispanic Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., January, 2012.
324. Speaker on “Mexico’s Presidential Elections, What Lies in the Future,” Department of History
and Center for Latin American Studies, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, February, 2012.
325. Speaker on “Mexico’s Presidential Campaign, Will it Make a Difference,?” National
Intelligence Council, Conference on Mexico, San Diego, California, February, 2012.
326. Speaker on “Can PRI Make a Comeback, the Election of 2012,?” Rocky Mountain States
Conference of Latin American Studies, Park City, Utah, March, 2012.
327. Speaker on “Mexico’s Presidential Election, Will PRI Return to Power?,” Athenaeum,
Claremont McKenna College, April, 2012.
328. Speaker on “Mexico’s Presidential Election, Will PRI Return to Power?,” University of Texas,
El Paso, May, 2012.
329. Panel on Mexican Politics, Presidential Election of 2012, National Latin American Studies
Association, San Francisco, May, 2012.
330. Panel on the Mexican Elections of 2012, Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center,
Washington, D.C., June, 2012.
331. Speaker on “Political Leadership with the Return of PRI; Who Are the New Politicians,” Latin
American Studies Center, University of Texas, Austin, Texas, September, 2012.
332. “Media Roundtable on the New Peña Nieto Administration,” Trans-border Institute, University
of San Diego, San Diego, California, January, 2013.
333. Speaker on, “The 2012 Presidential Election in Mexico and What it Means to Mexican
Voters,” History Department and Latin American Studies, University of Arizona, Tucson, February,
2013.
334. Speaker on “Peña Nieto, the Security Situation, and the Pact for Mexico,” Monitor 360, San
Antonio, Texas, March, 2013.
335. Speaker on “Peña Nieto and the Future of PRI in Mexico,” Latin American Studies Center,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, April, 2013.
41
336. Presentation of paper on “Mexico’s 2012 Presidential Election, the Future of Democratic
Consolidation,” Rocky Mountain States Conference of Latin Americanists, Santa Fe, New Mexico,
April, 2013.
337. Speaker on “What Americans Can Learn from Mexico, Peña Nieto and the Pact for Mexico,”
Washington, D.C. Program, Claremont McKenna College, Washington, D.C., May, 2013.
338. Chair, Panel on “A New Social Contract with Women? Gender Equality and Democratization
in Mexico and Beyond,” Latin American Studies Association, Washington, D.C., May 2013.
339. Guest Speaker, on “Public Opinion and Political Attitudes in Mexico,” Americas Regional
Seminar, U.S. Department of Defense, Washington, D.C., August, 2014.
340. Guest Speaker, on “Mexico’s Political Transition in Comparative Perspective, 1982-2014,”
Americas Regional Seminar, U.S. Department of Defense, Washington, D.C., August, 2014.
341. Guest Speaker, on “Mexican Pragmatism and the Democratic Consolidation in 2014,”
Americas Regional Seminar, U.S. Department of Defense, Washington, D.C., August, 2014.
342. Guest Speaker, on “From Authoritarianism to Democracy, How Did Leaders and Citizens
Achieve Mexico’s Transformation,?” Global Citizenship Series, Central College, Pella, Iowa,
September, 2014.
343. Guest Speaker, on “Pragmatism in Mexican Politics, Something New or Something Old,”
North Central Council of Latin Americanists, St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota, September,
2014.
344. Guest Speaker, on “The State of Democracy in Mexico and its Implications for the United
States,” John G. Tower Center, Southern Methodist University, Ft. Worth, Texas, October, 2014.
345. Guest Speaker, on “Violence, Trust, and Change, Mexico’s Difficult Path to a Consolidated
Democracy,” Rocky Mountain States Conference of Latin Americanists, Tucson, April, 2015.
346. Guest Speaker, Santa Fe Council on International Relations, on “The Democratic Paradox in
Mexico,” May, 2015.
347. Guest Speaker, Mexico Consul General, Los Angeles, California, on “The Role of Democracy
in Mexico’s Development Strategy, Where Will it Lead?,” September, 2015.
348. Formal Interview, President Felipe Calderón, video-taped for digital recording in Oxford
Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History, Grant from Oxford University Press and the
Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center, Smithsonian Institution, Mexico City, October, 2015.
http://latinamericanhistory.oxfordre.com/page/videos/. Published on
Oxford YouTube, July, 2016, https://youtu.be/qGVFJR5kJlQ.
349. Guest Speaker, on “The Future of Mexico’s Democratic Development,” Global Security
Seminar, Physicians for Social Responsibility, UCLA Faculty Club, Los Angeles, October, 2015.
350. Presentation of paper on “The Democratic Paradox in Mexico: Increasing Governability and
42
Declining Trust in Democratic Institutions,” New England Council of Latin Americanists, Tufts
University, Boston, October, 2015.
351. Formal Interview, three-time presidential candidate and first elected governor of Federal
District, Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, video-taped for edited digital recording in the Oxford Research
Encyclopedia of Latin American History, editor, Bill Beezley, Grant from Oxford University
Press and the Mexico Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center, Smithsonian Institution, Mexico City,
January, 2016. http://latinamericanhistory.oxfordre.com/page/videos/. Published on
Oxford YouTube, July, 2016, https://youtu.be/qGVFJR5kJlQ.
352. Guest Speaker, on “Mexico, Declining Confidence and Consequences for Democratic
Consolidation,” Resident Fellows, Center for U.S.-Mexican-Studies, University of California, San
Diego, La Jolla, May, 2016.
353. Guest Speaker, on “What Happened to Mexican Democracy,” Keck Center for International
and Strategic Studies, Claremont McKenna College, March, 2016.
354. Presentation of paper on “Crime and Violence, Civil-Military Relations, and Democracy in
Mexico,” Latin American Studies Association, New York, May, 2016.
Book, Film, Cassette and Bibliographic Reviews
1. Yearbook on Latin American Communist Affairs (Stanford: Hoover Institute, 1971) in the Marine
Corps Gazette (February, 1973), p. 11.
2. Carlos Marighela, For the Liberation of Brazil (New York: Penguin Books, 1971) in the Marine
Corps Gazette (August, 1972), p. 14.
3. Kenneth F. Johnson, Mexican Democracy: A Critical View (Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1971) in
Revista InterAmerican Review (Winter, 1974), pp. 404-405.
4. "Artists and Politics in Mexico, Siqueiros and Paz," Cassette recordings of "David Alfaro
Siqueiros: An Interview with a Founder in the Mexican Muralist Movement," and "Focus on Octavio
Paz: The Great Mexican Poet Talks About His Life and Work," Latin American Research Review
43
(Summer, 1975), pp. 225-227.
5. James Wilkie, Elitelore (Los Angeles: University of California, 1973) in The New Scholar (Fall,
1975), pp. 198-200.
6. Eduardo Villaseñor, Memorias-Testimonio (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1974) in the
Hispanic American Historical Review (November, 1975), pp. 789-90.
7. "Salvador Allende; Chile, 1973; The Philosophy of Che Guevara and The Press Questions Cuban
Revolutionary, Fidel Castro," Audio cassettes Hispanic American Historical Review (August,
1976), pp. 653-654.
8. Franz A. von Sauer, The Alienated "Loyal" Opposition (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico
Press, 1975) in The Americas (April, 1976), pp. 653-654.
9. Michael Manley, The Politics of Change: A Jamaican Testament (Washington, D. C.: Howard
University Press, 1975) in Perspective (December, 1975), pp. 259-60.
10. Manuel L. Carlos, Politics and Development in Rural Mexico: A Study of Socio-Economic
Modernization (New York: Praeger, 1974) in the Journal of Developing Areas (January, 1975), pp.
303-04.
11. Roger Bartra, et al, Caciquismo y poder político en el México rural (Mexico: UNAM, 1975) in
the Hispanic American Historical Review (November, 1976), pp. 682-683.
12. Michael Manley, A Voice at the Work Place (London: Andre Deutsch, 1975), in the Journal of
Developing Areas (July, 1976), pp. 513-514.
13. Daniel Cosío Villegas, El estilo personal de gobernar (Mexico: Editorial Joaquín Mortíz, 1974)
in The New Scholar (Fall, 1977), pp. 418-420.
14. Ernest Duff and John McCamant, Violence and Repression in Latin America (New York: Free
Press, 1976) in the Western Political Quarterly (December, 1976), p. 660.
15. Vincent Padgett, The Mexican Political System, 2nd Edition. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co.,
1976) in the Hispanic American Historical Review (February, 1977), p. 183.
16. Rafael Segovia, La politización del niño mexicano, (Mexico: El Colegio de México, 1976) in
the Journal of Politics (February, 1977), p. 273.
17. Miguel Alemán, Miguel Alemán Contesta (Austin: Institute of Latin American Studies,
University of Texas, 1975) in The New Scholar (January, 1977), pp. 277-78.
18. Rodney D. Anderson, Outcasts in Their Own Land, Mexican Industrial Workers, 1906-11
(DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press, 1976) in the Journal of Developing Areas (January,
1977), pp. 277-278.
19. Robert H. Swansbrough, The Embattled Colossus, Economic Nationalism and United States
Investors in Latin America (Gainesville: University Presses of Florida, 1976) in Perspective
44
(January-February, 1977), p. 14.
20. Lawrence C. Mayer and John H. Burnett, Politics in Industrial Societies, A Comparative
Perspective (New York: Wiley, 1977) in Perspective (July-August, 1977), pp. 112-113.
21. Pedro-Pablo Kuczynski, Peruvian Democracy Under Economic Stress: An Account of the
Belaunde Administration, 1963-1968 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1977) in the American
Political Science Review (December, 1978), pp. 1473-74.
22. Víctor Manuel Villaseñor, Memorias de un hombre de izquierda, II Vols, (Mexico: Editorial
Grijalbo, 1976), in the Journal of Developing Areas (January, 1978), pp. 250-51.
23. Merilee Grindle, Bureaucrats, Politicians and Peasants in Mexico (Berkeley: University of
California Press, in the Journal of Politics (August, 1978).
24. Review of Centro de Estudios Internacionales, Lecturas de política mexicana (Mexico: El
Colegio de México, 1977), and Centro de Estudios Internacionales, Las crisis en al sistema político
mexicano, 1928-1977 (Mexico: El Colegio de México, 1977), Hispanic American Historical
Review (November, 1978), pp. 760-761.
25. Fernando Benítez, Lázaro Cárdenas y la Revolución Mexicana, Vol. 1 El Porfirismo, Vol. II El
Caudillismo (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1977), in Inter-American Review of
Bibliography (No. 3, 1978), pp. 313-14.
26. Bill Stewart, Change and Bureaucracy: Public Administration in Venezuela (Chapel Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1978), in Library Journal (August, 1978), p. 1, 518.
27. Eduardo Frei, Latin America: The Hopeful Option (New York: Orbis Books, 1978), in Library
Journal (September 15, 1978), p. 1, 754.
28. Christopher Mitchell, The Legacy of Populism in Bolivia (New York: Praeger, 1977), in
Perspective (July-August, 1978), pp. 115-116.
29. Desmond Stewart, T. E. Lawrence (New York: Harper and Row, 1977), in the Marine Corps
Gazette (March, 1979).
30. Nadav Safran, Israel: The Embattled Ally (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1978) in the
Marine Corps Gazette (May, 1979), pp. 85-86.
31. Joseph Hansen, Dynamics of the Cuban Revolution: The Trotskyist View (New York: Pathfinder
Press, 1978), in Perspective (November, 1978), p. 164.
32. Robert J. Alexander, The Tragedy of Chile (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1979), in Library
Journal (November 1, 1978) pp. 45-46.
33. Gary Wynia, The Politics of Latin American Development (New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1978), in the Journal of Developing Areas (October, 1978), pp. 95-96.
34. Enrique Baloyra and John D. Martz, Political Attitudes in Venezuela: Societal Cleavages and
45
Political Opinion (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1979) in Library Journal (February 15,
1979), p. 496.
35. Martin Weinsten, ed. Revolutionary Cuba in the World Arena (New York: ISHS, 1979), in
Library Journal (July 1, 1979), p. 1262.
36. Charles D. Ameringer, Don Pepe: A Political Biography of José Figueres of Costa Rica
(Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1979) in Library Journal (May 1, 1979), p. 1048.
37. Douglas H. Carlisle, Venezuelan Foreign Policy: Its Organization and Beginning (Washington,
D.C.: University Press of America, 1979), in Perspective (July-August, 1979), p. 116.
38. Gabriel Smirnow, The Revolution Disarmed: Chile 1970-1973 (New York: Monthly Review
Press, 1979), in Library Journal (October 15, 1979), p. 2220.
39. John Davidson, The Long Road North (Doubleday & Co., 1979), in Library Journal (October
15, 1979) p. 2229.
40. César Caviedes, The Politics of Chile: A Sociogeographical Assessment (Boulder: Westview
Press, 1979) in Perspective (January-February, 1980), p. 30.
41. David Barkin and Gustavo Esteva, Inflación y democracia: El caso de México (Mexico: Siglo
XXI, 1978), in Hispanic American Historic Review, (May, 1980), pp. 355-56.
42. John Dorschner and Roberto Fabricio, The Winds of December: Cuba: 1958 (Coward, McCann
and Geoghegan, in Library Journal (April 15, 1980), p. 985.
43. Robert A. Potash, The Army and Politics in Argentina, 1945-1962 (Stanford: Stanford
University Press, 1980), in Library Journal (May 15, 1980), p. 1164.
44. Jorge Palacios, Chile: An Attempt at "Historic Compromise" (Banner Press, 1979), in Library
Journal (December 1, 1979), p. 2576.
45. Ricardo Zinn, Argentina: a Nation at the Crossroads of Myth and Reality (Speller, 1979), in
Library Journal (June 15, 1979), p. 1343.
46. Carlos Franqui, Diary of the Cuban Revolution (New York: Viking Press, 1986), in Library
Journal (June 1. 1980) p. 1298.
47. Emile G. McAnany, ed. Communications in the Rural Third World (New York: Praeger, 1980),
in Perspective (July-August, 1980), p. 116.
48. Carlos Vejar Lacave, José Vasconcelos, semblanza y pasión otoñal (Mexico: Costa-Amic,
1975, Aztlan, (Spring, 1979), pp. 135-36.
49. Milton Vanger, The Model Country, José Batlle y Ordóñez of Uruguay, 1907-1915 (University
Press of New England, in Library Journal (Sept. 15, 1980), p. 1853.
50. E. Bradford Burns, The Poverty of Progress, Latin America in the Nineteenth Century
46
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1980) in Library Journal (Nov. 1, 1980), p. 2325.
51. Juan Ramón García, Operation Wetback (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1980) in Library
Journal (November 15, 1980) p. 2408.
52. Paul Sigmund, Multinationals in Latin America, The Politics of Nationalization (Madison:
University.of Wisconsin Press, 1980) in Library Journal (December 1, 1980) p. 2503.
53. George Grayson, The Politics of Mexican Oil (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1980)
in Library Journal (January 15, 1981) p. 134.
54. Arturo Warman, "We Come to Object": The Peasants of Morelos and the National State
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981) in Library Journal (January 1, 1981), pp. 69-70.
55. Maurice Halperin, The Taming of Fidel Castro (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1981),
in Library Journal, (February 15, 1981), p. 449.
56. Lorrin Philipson and Rafael Llerena, Freedom Flights: Cuban Refugees Talk About Life Under
Castro and How They Fled His Regime (New York: Random, 1981) in Library Journal (April 1,
1981), p. 779.
57. Shifra Goldman, Contemporary Mexican Painting in a Time of Change (Austin: University of
Texas Press, 1981) in Library Journal (June 15, 1981), pp. 1298-1299.
58. Susan Meiselas, Nicaragua: June 1978-July 1979 (New York: Pantheon, 1981) in Library
Journal (July, 1981) p. 1419.
59. James Petras, Class, State, and Power in the Third World (New York: Allanheld, 1981) in
Library Journal (April 1, 1981), p. 800.
60. Antonio Navarro, Tocayo, A Cuban Resistance Leader's Story (New York: Sandown, 1981) in
Library Journal (May 1, 1981), p. 969.
61.Jacobo Timerman, Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number (New York: Knopf, 1981)
in Library Journal (May 15, 1981)) P. 1070.
62. Richard Elam, Cocktails at Somoza's (Cambridge: Applewood Books, 1981) in Library Journal
(May 1, 1981), p. 968.
63. W. Dirk Raat, Revoltosos, Mexico's Rebels in the United States (College Station: Texas A & M
Press, 1981) in Library Journal (July, 1981) p. 1419.
64. Bernard Diederich, Somoza, American-Made Dictator (New York: Putnam, 1981), in Library
Journal (September 1981), p. 1626.
65. James R. Whelan, Allende: Death of a Marxist Dream (Arlington: Arlington House, 1981) in
Library Journal (October 15, 1981), p. 2027.
66. Willard L. Beaulac, The Fractured Continent, Latin America in Close-Up (Stanford: Hoover
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Institution, 1980) in Journal of Politics (February, 1982), p. 291-292.
67. Gregorio Selser, Sandino (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1981), in Library Journal
(January 15, 1982), p. 171.
68. Lars Schoultz, Human Rights and United States Policy Toward Latin America (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1981) in Library Journal (November 1, 1981), p. 2126.
69. Sylvia Ann Hewlett and Richard S. Weinert, eds., Brazil and Mexico, Patterns in Late
Development (Philadelphia: Institute for Study of Human Issues, 1992) in Library Journal
(February 15, 1982), p. 462.
70. Pablo González Casanova, El estado y los partidos políticos en México (Mexico: ERA, 1981) in
Hispanic American Historical Review, (August, 1982), pp. 501-02.
71. Tommie Sue Montgomery, ed., Mexico Today (Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of Human
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72. Thomas Walker, Nicaragua (Boulder: Westview, 1982), in Library Journal (April 1, 1982), p.
717.
73. Stephen Rabe, The Road to OPEC, United States Relations with Venezuela, 1919-1976 (Austin:
University of Texas Press, in Library Journal (May 15, 1982), pp. 992-993.
74. Andrew Graham-Yooll, A Matter of Fear, Portrait of an Argentine Exile (New York: Lawrence
Hill, 1982) in Library Journal (May 15, 1982), p. 987.
75. Thomas Walker, ed., Nicaragua in Revolution (New York: Praeger, 1982), in Library Journal,
(June 1, 1982), p. 1083.
76. Samuel Chavkin. The Murder of Chile (New York: Everest House, 1982) in Library Journal
(June 1, 1982), p. 1100.
77. Miguel Basáñez, La lucha por la hegemonía en México (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 1982) in Hispanic
American Historical Review (November, 1982), pp. 697-698.
78. Marvin Alisky, Latin American Media: Guidance and Censorship (Ames: Iowa State
University, 1982), Perspective (September, 1982), p. 153.
79. José Marti, On Art and Literature (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1982) in Library Journal
(September 1, 1982), p. 1661.
80. Cynthia Arnson, El Salvador, A Revolution Confronts the United States (Washington, D.C.:
Institute for Policy Studies, 1982) in Library Journal (September 15, 1982), p. 1742.
81. Tommie Sue Montgomery, Revolution in El Salvador (Boulder: Westview Press, 1982) in
Library Journal (November 1, 1982), p. 2100.
48
82. William Fifield, In Search of Genius (New York: Morrow, 1982) in Library Journal
(November, 15, 1982), p. 2167.
83. Enrique Baloyra, El Salvador in Transition (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,
1982) in Library Journal (November 15, 1982), p. 2179.
84. Jacques Lassaigne, Rufino Tamayo (New York: Rizzoli, 1982) in Library Journal (January,
1983), p. 43.
85. John A. Booth, The End and the Beginning: The Nicaraguan Revolution (Boulder: Westview
Press, 1962) in Library Journal (January 1, 1983) p. 54.
86. Frances Moore Lappe and Joseph Collins, Now We Can Speak: A Journey Through the New
Nicaragua (San Francisco: Institute for Food and Development Policy, 1983) and Joseph Collins,
What Difference Could a Revolution Make, Food and Farming in the New Nicaragua (San
Francisco: Institute for Food and Development Policy, 1983) in Library Journal (January 15, 1983),
p. 136.
87. Joan Dideon, Salvador (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1983) in Library Journal (March 1,
1983), p. 487.
88. Donald J. Mabry, The Mexican University and the State: Student Conflicts, 1910-1971 (College
Station: Texas A and M University Press, 1982) and Daniel C. Levy, University and Government in
Mexico: Autonomy in an Authoritarian System (New
York, Praeger, 1980) in the Hispanic American Historical Review Vol. 63 (August, 1983), pp. 609612.
89. Nora Hamilton, The Limits of State Autonomy, Post-Revolutionary Mexico (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1982) in the Hispanic American Historical Review Vol. 63 (June, 1983), p. 780.
90. Robert J. Alexander, Bolivia: Past, Present and Future of Its Politics (New York: Praeger,
1782) in Perspective (April, 1983), pp. 57-58.
91. Jorge Alonso, ed., El Estado Mexicano (Mexico: Nueva Imágen, 1982) in the Hispanic
American Historical Review, Vol. 63 (May, 1983), pp. 410-11.
92. Jonathan L. Fried, et. al., eds., Guatemala in Rebellion: Unfinished History (New York: Grove
Press, 1983) in Library Journal (June, 1983), p. 1262.
93. Joseph Page, Peron, A Biography (New York: Random House, 1983) in Library Journal
(August, 1983), p. 1476.
94. Richard Fagen and Olga Pellicer, eds., The Future of Central America (Stanford: Stanford
University Press, 1983) in Library Journal (July, 1983), p. 1367.
95. Clark W. Reynolds and Carlos Tello, eds., U.S.-Mexico Relations, Economic and Social Aspects
(Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1983) in Library Journal (October 1, 1983), p. 1868.
49
96. Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, Orozco (Oxford: Universe, 1983) in Library Journal
(November 1, 1983), p. 2076.
97. Martin Diskin, ed., Trouble in Our Backyard: Central America and the U.S. in the 80's (New
York: Pantheon, 1984) in Library Journal (December 1, 1983), p. 2255.
98. Daniel Levy and Gabriel Szekely, Mexico, Paradoxes of Stability and Change (Boulder:
Westview Press, 1983) in Journal of Developing Areas (January, 1984), pp. 263-64.
99. Ankle M. M. Hoogvelt, The Third World in Global Development (Atlantic: Humanities Press,
1982) in Perspective (March, 1984), p. 46.
100. Thomas E. Skidmore and Peter H. Smith, Modern Latin America (New York: Oxford, 1984)
in Library Journal (February 1, 1984), p. 180.
101. Shirley L. Hirshon, And Also Teach Them to Read (Boston: Lawrence Hill, 1983), in Library
Journal (January,1984), p. 108.
102. Carlos Franqui, Family Portrait With Fidel: A Memoir (New York: Random House, 1984) in
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