UConn Faculty Updates

November 12, 2024

Two colleagues in El Instituto were recently included in two news articles.

Our new colleague Anna-Michelle McSorley was recently profiled in UConn Today, “From Policy to Action: Anna-Michelle McSorley Focuses on Health Equity for Latinos.” which details her work on addressing health inequities in relation to federal and local policies. To read the article visit UConn Today.

The Washington Post recently quoted Director Charles R. Venator-Santiago in “Puerto Rico governor’s race is upended by a third part for the first time in 70 years” which looks at the current election race for the Governor of Puerto Rico. To read the article visit NBC News .

New Perspectives in Latin American and Latine studies Conference

October 16, 2024

Contributed by Charles R. Venator Santiago

This academic year El Instituto will hold a graduate conference that explores New Perspectives in Latin American and Latine studies. Our understanding of new perspectives extends beyond contemporary regional matters; their grounding connects to its longstanding historical, political and economic challenges rooted thoroughly in Latin America and the Caribbean.  We welcome proposals for presentations from across disciplines in the natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, visual and plastic arts and sociocultural linguistics as well as from the fields of law, business, public policy, social work, public health, and education, among others in any media or format.

 

The conference welcomes proposals outside the specific theme, including those related to U.S. Latino/a/e communities. Papers and panel presentations may be in English, Spanish, and Portuguese.  We welcome complete panels, individual proposals, creative workshops, round tables, book discussions and accept individual and teamwork presentations. You can find more information in Eventbrite. For further questions about the conference, email elinstituto@uconn.edu.

ELIN sun logo

Seed Grant Lecture Series

Contributed by Charles R. Venator Santiago

UConn’s El Instituto (Institute of Latina/o, Caribbean, and Latin American Studies) awarded small seed grants to support faculty-led workshops, Seed grant presentation with people listening reading groups, or other research on any theme of relevance to Latine, Latin American, or Caribbean studies in the academic year 2023-2024. Please join us this fall semester in this 4 part series of events to hear about their research accomplishments.

Our first lecture, “Narrativas de Cambio: Latino Stories for Climate and Environmental Justice,” by Dr. Mayra I. Rodríguez Gonzalez, Assistant Extension Educator in Urban and Community Forestry at UConn, presented her research on October 15, 2024. In this presentation, Dr. Rodriguez explored three case studies from Latino communities in Connecticut (Hartford, Bridgeport, and Willimantic), highlighting diverse storytelling and community knowledge exchange processes that are being utilized to advance environmental and climate justice.

Most lectures will be held at the Dodd Center for Human Rights, Conference Room 162. For more information, please visit our events page at https://events.uconn.edu/el-instituto/month.

In Memoriam, Willie Matos

Contributed by Charles R. Venator Santiago

Panel discussion group picture
Albertus Magnus College Presents “Noche de Tertulia: 60 Years Later.” In picture: Wilfredo Matos, Dr. Madeline Negron, Rep. Geraldo Reyes, & Dr. Charles Venator Santiago

We are saddened to note that Wilfredo “Willie” Matos passed away on October 14, 2024, during a panel presentation at Albertus Magnus College in New Haven, Connecticut. Willie was sharing his thoughts and experiences in a panel addressing the 60th anniversary of the signing of the Civil Rights Act. Connecticut lost an important advocate for civil and human rights.

As he was known by friends and the communities he served, Willie was the founder and president of the Young Lords in Bridgeport, Connecticut. He led a whole life and was an indefatigable fighter for the civil rights of Puerto Ricans and others in Connecticut. I am honored to have met him and spent the last moments of his life with him.

A Profile of the Puerto Rican Studies Initiative

Contributed by Charles R. Venator Santiago

The University of Connecticut’s Puerto Rican Studies Initiative for Civic Engagement and Public Policy (UConnPRSI) was founded during the Summer of 2021. The UConnPRSI is a research initiative seeking to document and support Puerto Ricans’ vital economic, intellectual, and cultural contributions to Connecticut and provide research-based support for developing public policies addressing the needs of Puerto Ricans in the State of Connecticut. This initiative is currently housed in El Instituto. Anyone interested in more information can visit the UConnPRSI’s webpage at https://puertoricanstudies.clas.uconn.edu/

Since 2021, the UConn PRSI has focused on at least five areas of collaboration and research. The UConn PRSI has partnered with various community organizations to foster different civic and community engagement forms. Collaborations include working with the Hispanic Health Council, the City of Hartford, El Show de AnaLeh, Connecticut’s Puerto Rican and Latino Legislative Caucus, Women at the Table, the Center for Preparedness and Response, the National Puerto Rican Diaspora Museum (NPRDM), the State Education Resource Council (SERC) and host of other non-profits and community-based organizations.

The UConnPRSI has also worked closely with Puerto Rican and Latino elected officials in Connecticut to conduct research and policy briefs to address persistent inequalities affecting Puerto Ricans in Connecticut. We have produced research briefs and reports addressing a wide range of topics, including evaluating the impact of the Governor’s EV legislation, the Social Equity Council’s effect on Puerto Ricans and other Latinos, and the persistent inequalities of Latinas in Connecticut.

This initiative also began an oral histories project to document the impact of Puerto Rican leaders in various areas, including civic and community engagement, the history of the Puerto Rican Day Parades in Connecticut, Small Business owners, and many other areas. The goal is to collect the oral histories of key Puerto Rican leaders in Connecticut and create a public repository of stories that can help guide future generations of students, community leaders, public officials, and others.

Public archives are also central to UConn’s Puerto Rican Studies Initiative. We are currently building a series of web pages containing primary documents for studying Puerto Rico’s territorial status, citizenship, and political history. These web pages also contain valuable dashboards that allow users to navigate and calculate complex information. Unlike the traditional cultural center approach, we want to promote a historical understanding of the Puerto Rican political landscape.

Our data hub provides simple and accessible data on Puerto Ricans in Connecticut. We aim to create a public archive/repository of data to help users better understand the inequalities that Puerto Rican residents of Connecticut experience. In addition to creating various data tools, we are creating helpful data sheets summarizing our findings.

The UConnPRSI is also committed to organizing summits, workshops, and other public events designed to help Puerto Ricans in Connecticut organize and demand that the state redress some of the inequalities they experience. Our next summit, Puerto Rico, Puerto Ricans|Connecticut: Creating a Collective Agenda, will be held in the Connecticut Legislative Office Building on Saturday, 11 January 2025. This event is free and open to the public. Anyone interested can register here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/947260380297?aff=oddtdtcreator

For more information on UConn’s Puerto Rican Studies Initiative, please visit us at https://puertoricanstudies.clas.uconn.edu/.

PRSI Wordmark

Welcome New Faculty

Contributed by Charles R. Venator Santiago

Vidal-Ortiz,-Salvador HeadshotEl Instituto is also happy to welcome Professor Salvador Vidal-Ortiz, who has a senior joint appointment with the Department of Sociology. Professor Vidal-Ortiz will be joining us during the Fall of 2025. Dr. Vidal-Ortiz’s scholarship cuts across racialization, sexuality, gender, migration, and religion; his work is interdisciplinary. He co-edited two award-winning books: The Sexuality of Migration, and Queer Brown Voices, co-authored a book with two former students, Brandon Andrew Robinson and Cristina Khan, titled Race and Sexuality, and is completing a book manuscript about race, gender, and sexuality in Santería (an Afro-Cuban religious-cultural practice).

Within the American Sociological Association (ASA), he was elected Chair of the Latina/o Sociology section; in the past, he has served as convener (and first non-elected Chair) of the Sociology of the Body and Embodiment section, is Past Chair of the Sexualities Section, and served as inaugural editorial board member for Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, from the Race and Ethnic Minorities section (where he was a Council member as well). In 2018, he served as tri-chair for ASA’s Sexualities Section Pre-conference: Sexualities, Race, and Empire: Resistance in an Uncertain Time. Outside of the discipline, he was an inaugural editorial board member for TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly; he also coedited a special issue of GLQ: Gay and Lesbian Studies Quarterly, on CuirAméricas as part of the Feminist and Cuir/Queer Américas Working Group. In DC, he has supported community-based groups such as Different Avenues -see related essay on Public Sociology– and the Latino GLBT History Project.

He continues Fulbright-based research on displacement and LGBT people in Bogotá, Colombia. With Juliana Martínez, he edited Travar el Saber: Educación de Personas Trans y Travestis en la Argentina (loosely translated as Trans-ing knowledge: trans* people’s education in Argentina) – based on narratives from students and teachers that show the challenges and opportunities of trans-inclusion in three public education sites in the greater Buenos Aires province. He has taught sociology of race and ethnicity at the University of Colorado – Boulder; in Colombia, a qualitative research methods course for the graduate social sciences program at Universidad de Los Andes; one on migration, gender, and sexuality for the Masters in cultural studies at Universidad Javeriana, also in Colombia; and in Brazil, a course on race, gender and sexuality inclusion in education for the Masters in Education at Universidade Federal Do Amapá.

He has received a few important honors and fellowships recently: In the Fall of 2019, he held a Distinguished Scholar in Residence position in the Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Program at the College of the Holy Cross; for the Spring of 2022, he was the Stephen O. Murray Inaugural Scholar in Residence at Michigan State University; and during AY 2023-24, he was a Distinguished Visiting Scholar at University at Buffalo.

We would also like to welcome Professor Ana-Michelle McSorley, who teaches in the Department of Allied Health Sciences. Anna-Michelle completed Anna Michelle McSorley headshother two-year postdoctoral position at New York University (NYU) School of Global Public Health in the Department of Public Health Policy and Management and the Center for Anti-racism, Social Justice, and Public Health. She received her PhD (2022) and MPH (2018) in Community Health Sciences from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Fielding School of Public Health. As part of her graduate training, she completed a minor in Race, Ethnicity, and Politics within the Department of Political Science at UCLA. As a funded Policy Fellow with the UCLA Public Health Training Program on Population Health Advocacy, she gained community-based policy advocacy expertise.  Her research focuses on health inequities among Latino/a/e groups and identifies opportunities for solidarity across populations that experience similar structures of exclusion and injustice that contribute to health and healthcare inequities. At UConn Waterbury, she seeks to build upon her Latino/a/e population health research agenda and work to meet the needs of the expanding Latina/o/e communities in Connecticut – now representing nearly 1/5 of the state’s population. For more information on Professor McSorley, please visit her sites: https://alliedhealth.uconn.edu/person/anna-michelle-mcsorley-phd/ and https://www.amcsorley.com/

 

Graduate Student Luis Palomino Research Project Update

April 24, 2024

Contributed by Luis Palomino

Luis Palomino, M.A. '22“COVID-19 and internal migration in Peru”

My research seeks to analyze the effects of lockdown policies on internal migration. This study also aims to determine if the effects of lockdown and remote work policies on the new patterns of the spatial distribution of the population are short-term, medium-term, or long-term, especially in developing countries. Therefore, I propose two research goals. First, show how the lockdown and remote work policies impacted internal migration. Second, study the spatial distribution patterns of the population due to lockdown policies in Peru: Which regions have new migration patterns in the short, medium, or long term? I will achieve the research goals by exploiting three databases: (1) Internal migration, (2) Lockdown policies, and (3) Socioeconomic indicators from censuses and surveys.

Graduate Student Menglu Chen Research Project Update

April 23, 2024

Contributed by Menglu Chen

An image of two enslaved workers tapping into a rubber tree. A third person, wearing a suit, leans against a structure holding up the rubber tree and looks at the camera.
Kleingrothe, C.J. – Medan – Tapping of a 23-year-old rubber tree on a plantain in Malaysia – circa 1910

My research project aims to delve deeper into transnational narratives by exploring the interconnections between Latin America and Asia. Through an analysis of works such as José Eustasio Rivera’s La Vorágine, where the protagonist encounters the dreadful conditions of those coerced or misled into tapping rubber trees, my study tracks the colonial trajectory of the rubber tree from the Amazon to Southeast Asia. This migration of the rubber tree, witnessed by generations of Southeast Asian writers whose forebears tapped these trees, has become a significant theme in Southeast Asian literature. It serves as a lens through which writers reflect on their postcolonial history and reinterpret the narrative of the Amazonian rubber boom. This aspect of collective memory and historical reflection emphasizes how transnational exchanges can influence and shape cultural and literary dialogues, offering a richer understanding of global interconnectivity. The project aims to contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the Latin American literary tradition within global literature, fostering complex dialogues about ethnicity, identity, and memory across the Global South.

Graduate Student Melissa Pérez Peña Research Project Update

April 22, 2024

Contributed by Melissa Pérez Peña

 

La criatura de isla trasciende siempre al mar que la rodea y al que no la rodea

– Dulce María Loynaz, Cuban Poet

 

Image of Melissa Pérez Peña
Melissa Pérez Peña

Although islands contribute minimally to the emission of CO2 into the atmosphere, they are the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, such as rising sea levels, water acidification, and scarcity of drinking water. Continued environmental degradation threatens human communities residing on land and endangers the survival of the diverse non-human life forms that depend on these ecosystems. This deterioration results from excessive and unsustainable production and a hierarchical relationship between humans and nature and deeply increased by over-construction in the coastal zone to meet the demands of tourism.

Faced with these imaginaries and as a response to the colonizing view that has predominated in the West towards the ocean and bodies of water, a demand emerges from the island regions to address these ecosystems from a more holistic perspective. This call for attention is linked with a field of studies called “Blue Humanities,” where the relationship between humanity and aquatic ecosystems is conceived as a fundamental collaboration instead of unilateral domination. This involves reconsidering the relationship between humanity and nature, overcoming the traditional hierarchy, and understanding ourselves as part of a tight symbiotic network where we are deeply connected to the environment.

This interdisciplinary approach presents literature as an opportunity to explore the symbolic and metaphorical representations of the climatic emergency created by different artists. The reflection is linked to the symbolic construction of the ocean and coastal environments as a pillar for Caribbean literature. This exploration delves not only into the complexities of the human condition with nature but also poses a sharp criticism towards the forms of consumption and self-destruction rooted in our contemporary societies.

 

Graduate Student Maria Isabel Palacio-Cano Research Project Update

Contributed by Maria Isabel Palacio-Cano

Image of Maria Isabel Palacio-Cano
Maria Isabel Palacio-Cano

My research project examines the training of the Colombian Armed Forces during the period between 2002-2008. The overall objective is to conduct a critical analysis of the professionalization of the Colombian armed forces. This analysis will assess the extent to which increased capacity and an offensive posture created the conditions that allowed for an increase in extrajudicial executions. The analysis employs a critical approach to examine the interactions between increased training, new forces, doctrine, and human rights education with dehumanizing narratives and U.S. interventionism. Critical analysis of the discourse employed in this study reveals the power dynamics that facilitate systematic rights violations within the military, despite claims of professionalization. The research questions the normalization of violence against perceived “enemies within” through imposed security frameworks.