Human
Rights in Transitions to Democracy:
Reflections on Post-Pinochet Chile
Samuel Valenzuela
University of Notre Dame
Monday, May 6, 4:00 PM
Room C-203
(Concourse Level)
The Graduate Center, City University of New York
365 Fifth Avenue @ 34th. st.
J. Samuel Valenzuela
is Professor of Sociology at the University of
Notre Dame. He has taught at Harvard and Yale Universities, and served
as Visiting Professor at the Institut dÉtudes Politiques in
Paris and
Visiting Fellow at St. Antonys College, Oxford University.
Valenzuelas
research has centered on the origins and development of
Chilean democracy and its party system since the nineteenth century, on
the formation of labor movements and their political roles in Europe and
the Americas, and on problems of transitions to democracy from recent
authoritarian rule, including the issue discussed in his Bildner presentation
institutionalizing human-rights policies in democratizing nations.
He has also written on comparative methodology and development theory.
The findings
in his Democratización via reforma: La expansión del
sufragio en Chile (1985, and soon to be published in a revised edition)
provided a major reassessment of Chiles nineteenth-century democratization,
demonstratingcontrary to previously accepted interpretations that
it was not only the rich that voted, that the
expanded electorate was not entirely captive of large landholders, and
that the dynamics of democratic competition served to make Chilean
Catholic activists and officials into supporters of, rather than conspirators
against, democratic institutions. The most recent of his
sixty-some academic articles in journals and in books is Class
Relations and Democratization: A Reassessment of Barrington Moores
Model, in Miguel Angel Centeno and Fernando López-Alves, The
Other
Mirror: Grand Theory Through the Lens of Latin America (Princeton
University Press, 2001).
J. Samuel Valenzuela
received his Ph.D. in Sociology from Columbia
University in 1979. He research has been supported by fellowships from the
National Endowment for the Humanities and the Guggenheim Foundation. More
information on J. Samuel Valenzuela may be found on his webpage at the University
of Notre Dame: www.nd.edu/~jvalenzu/
The webpage
includes a link to the text of his chapter, Macro
Comparisons without the Pitfalls: A Protocol for Comparative Research
(1998), and to his extended c.v.
To reserve, please send an e-mail to bildner@gc.cuny.edu OR call 212 817-2096.