source: Wikimedia Commons/Archivo General de la Nación Argentina, Italian Immigrants Arrive in Buenos Aires Port, 1907
(website updated 9/23/19)
September 25, 2019 (3rd annual)
South Lakes High School, Reston (VA)
Agenda
Presenters’ Bios
Jo-Marie Burt (George Mason University)
John Polga-Hecimovich (U.S. Naval Academy)
Marie Price (George Washington University)
September 26, 2018 (2nd annual)
South Lakes High School, Reston (VA)
Agenda
Presenters’ Bios
Eric Gettig (Georgetown University)
Bryan McCann (Georgetown University)
John Tutino (Georgetown University)
Podcasts
Summaries and Key Concepts
John Tutino, The Mexican Revolution (14:23)
Eric Gettig, The Cold War in Latin America (4:51)
Bryan McCann, 20th Century Democratization in Latin America (16:54)
Full presentation
John Tutino, The Mexican Revolution (49:38)
Suggested Resources
September 20, 2017 (1st annual)
The Fred W. Smith Library for
the Study of George Washington, Mount Vernon
Agenda
Presenters’ Bios
Paula Alonso (George Washington University)
Bryan McCann (Georgetown University)
John Tutino (Georgetown University)
Presentations
“Revolutions and Independence in the Americas, 1770-1825: New Understandings” (John Tutino)
“Forging Political Democracies in Late Nineteenth-Early Twentieth Century Argentina” (Paula Alonso)
“Urbanization and Popular Politics in 20th Century Brazil: From the Cold War to Globalization” (Bryan McCann)
Resources
Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, UW-Milwaukee
Stone Center for Latin American Studies, Tulane University
Center for Latin American Studies, Vanderbilt University
Center for Latin American Studies, Georgetown University
Consortium of Latin American Studies Programs (CLASP)
Latin American & Caribbean Digital Primary Sources
Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials (SALALM)
CLACS 2015 Summer Institute: Essential Themes in Latin American History for Teaching World History
U.S. History in a Global Context (by Craig Perrier, with support from the Longview Foundation)
Sponsors
Co-sponsored by IB Mid-Atlantic and the national Consortium of Latin American Studies Programs (CLASP), and organized with FCPS by the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, a Title VI National Resource Center with funding from the U.S. Department of Education