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1999
Cuba Seminars: 1999
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Recent Publications on Cuba and Cuban-Americans:
A Panel and Book Party
Invited Authors
Yvonne M. Conde
Operation Pedro Pan (Routledge Press, 1999)
Ada Ferrer
Insurgent Cuba: Race, Nation, and Revolution, 1868-1898
University of North Carolina Press, 1999)
Peter Roman
People's Power: Cuba's Experience with Representative
Government (Westview Press, 1999)
Pamela Smorkaloff
Cuban Writers On and Off the Island:
Contemporary Narrative Fiction
(Twayne, World Literature Series, 1999)
Thursday
December 16, 1999
4:00 PM
9th Floor Conference Room (9204)
The Graduate Center
City University of New York
365 Fifth Avenue (@34th St.)
(Across from Empire State Bldg.)
Manhattan
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation and the Social Science Research Council.
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The
CUBA Seminar
Queens College and
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Transitions in Eastern Europe and the Ex-USSR: Implications
for Cuba
Ernesto Hernández-Catá
(Associate Director, IMF's African Department, past Deputy Director
of the European II and the Western Hemisphere Departments)
Rolando Castañeda
(Inter-American Development Bank, Senior Economist, co-author
of Arcos Principles)
Friday
November 12, 1999
4:00 P.M.
Room 6421 (Conference Room)
Graduate School and University Center
365 Fifth Avenue (@34th St.)
Manhattan
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation and the Social Science Research Council.
Ernesto Hernández-Catá
is Associate Director, IMF's African Department, and past Deputy
Director of the European II and the Western Hemisphere Departments
at the IMF. Born in Havana, he received a "License"
from the Graduate Institute of International Studies (Geneva,
Switzerland), and a Ph.D. in Economics from Yale University. Prior
to joining the IMF, he served as Economist in the Division of
International Finance of the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, and held teaching positions at American University
and the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins
University.
Rolando Castañeda is
Senior Economist at the Inter-American Development Bank and co-author
of the Arcos Principles. He has authored or co-authored numerous
works on Cuba.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Castañeda, Rolando (1999), "Cuba
y los Antiguos Países Socialistas de Europa: La Importancia
de los Aspectos Institucionales y de Economía Política
en la Transición del Socialismo a una Economía de
Mercado," Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy.
Hernández-Catá, Ernesto (1998),
"Adjustment and Reform in Cuba: A Critical Assessment,"
in Perspectives on Cuban Economic Reform (J.F. Perez-Lopez and
M.F. Travieso-Diaz, editors) Center for Latin American Studies,
Arizona State University Press.
Hernández-Catá, Ernesto (1997),
"Liberalization and the Behavior of Output During the Transition
from Plan to Market," IMF Staff Paper (December).
Hernández-Catá, Ernesto (1995),
"Russia and the IMF: The Political Economy of Macro-Stabilization,"
Problems of Post-Communism, May, pp.19-26. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
CUBA: New Trends in the Arts
Victor Casaus
Director, Centro Cultural Pedro de la Torriente Brau
Victor Casaus, poet, cineaste,
narrator and journalist, received his licenciate in Hispanic Language
and Literature from the University of Havana. His poetry first
became known in the 1960s as part of the generation that founded
the periodical El Caiman Barbudo, the most influential arts journal
of the period.
Wednesday
November 10, 1999
7:30 P.M.
Hunter College
West Building, Room 217
68th Street & Lexington Avenue, Manhattan
[This talk will be in Spanish]
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation and the Social Science Research Council. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Lengua y Literatura en Cuba
Dr. Nuria Gregori Torada
Director, Instituto de Literatura y Linguística
and Vice-President, Sociedad Económica de Amigos del País
Havana
Thursday
November 4, 1999
11:00 A.M.
Kissena Hall 224 (Conference Room)
Sociology Department
Queens College
64-19 Kissena Blvd
Flushing, New York
[This talk will be in Spanish]
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation and the Social Science Research Council. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
International Cuba Policy
Series
Cuba Policy in the United States
By Charles S. Shapiro
Director, Office of Cuban Affairs,
U.S. Department of State.
Charles S. Shapiro served as
Deputy Chief of Mission in Santiago, Chile (1995-1998); Deputy
Chief of Mission in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago (1991-1994);
Political Counselor in San Salvador, El Salvador (1985-1988);
and Political Officer in Copenhagen, Denmark (1979-1981). Mr.
Shapiro joined the Department of State in 1977. Other Washington
assignments include Executive Assistant to the Assistant Secretary
for Inter-American Affairs, Division Chief for South America in
the Bureau of International Narcotics Matters, Deputy Director
in the Office of Andean Affairs, and Desk Officer for El Salvador
(1983-1985).
Wednesday
October 27, 1999
12:30 P.M.
19th Floor Conference Room
Queens College Extension Service
25 West 43 St. (between 5th and 6th)
Manhattan
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation and the Social Science Research Council. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Gender and Race in Cuba
Julio César González Pajes
Professor of History, University of Havana
&
Leonardo Tur Broche
Cuban Historian
Julio César González Pajes
has been Visiting Scholar and Invited Guest Lecturer at several
universities in the United States and Latin America. President
of the NGO "Gender and Peace Commission.
Leonardo Tur Broche has published
several articles and is completing a book-length manuscript on
the First Cuban Women's National Congress (1923, 1925).
Friday
October 22, 1999
4:00 P.M.
19th Floor Conference Room
QC Labor Resource Center
25 West 43rd St. (Between 5th and 6th)
Manhattan
[This talk will be in Spanish]
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation and the Social Science Research Council. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
US Cuba Policy Today:
How We Got There, Where We Should Be
By Richard Nuccio
Richard Nuccio served as President
Clinton's special adviser for Cuba from 1995-1996. He was also
coordinator for the Guatemalan peace process and a senior policy
adviser in the Bureau of Inter-American Affairs of the State Department
(1993-1997). He worked as a staff member of the House Committee
on Foreign Affairs (1991-1993) and as senior policy adviser to
Senator Robert G. Torricelli (D-NJ). He is currently an adjunct
professor at Georgetown University.
Friday
September 17, 1999
4:00 P.M.
19th Floor Conference Room
Labor Resource Center/QC Extension Service
25 West 43 Street,
Manhattan
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation and the Social Science Research Council. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Cuban Society in Perspective:
Trends in Cuban Social Research
A special summer colloquium with:
Aurelio Alonso
Mayra Espina
Ernel González Mastrapa
Juan Luís Martín
And local Cuba specialists
Aurelio Alonso and Mayra Espina
are senior researchers at the Center for Psychological and Social
Research (CIPS). Dr. Alonso will talk about religion in Cuba.
Dr. Espina will discuss research on changes in social structure.
Dr. Gonzalez Mastrapa, chair of the department of sociology at
the University of Havana, will present findings from his research
on the Cuban countryside. Lic. Juan Luís Martín,
director of CIPS, will focus on the development of social science
in Cuba.
Aurelio Alonso is Senior Researcher at Center
for Psychological and Social Research (CIPS, Havana). Dr. Alonso
will discuss his work on religion and society in the 1990s. A
Spanish-language summary of his talk reads: En la década
de los años noventa confluyen la recuperación propia
de los mecanismos de reproducción religiosa y los efectos
de la sacudida económico-social provocada por el derrumbe
socialista. En estas coordenadas se observa una intensificación
apreciable de la espiritualidad religiosa en toda la extensión
de sus manifestaciones, el avance institucional de las iglesias
y las organizaciones religiosas, la revisión de políticas
y dispositivos relacionales y, de conjunto, el redimensionamiento
del hecho religioso en el seno de las relaciones sociales. La
exposición intentará integrar un balance del cuadro
sociorreligioso actual del país, su realidad y sus perspectivas
visibles.
Mayra Espina is Senior Researcher
at CIPS. She will focus on changes in social structure: Uno de
los efectos más evidentes y sentidos que la crisis y la
reforma económica han tenido sobre la sociedad cubana de
los 90, que expresa con mucha fuerza el entrelazamiento de los
procesos macrosociales, la vida cotidiana y los destinos personales,
es el ensanchamiento brusco de las brechas de desigualdad, asociado
a una acelerada reestratificación. En este texto se ofrece
una síntesis de los aportes más importantes de la
sociología cubana en los últimos años en
el campo de los estudios socioestructurales y de la interpretación
que desde esta disciplina se ha elaborado sobre el proceso actual
de reestratificación y sus consecuencias.
Ernel González Mastrapa
is chair of the department of sociology at the University of Havana.
As sketched in this summary, his presentation will discuss recent
agrarian transformations: En la década del 90 la sociedad
cubana enfrenta una profunda crisis económica que planteó
la necesidad de reformas en la economía y la sociedad.
El sector agropecuario fue particularmente afectado por la crisis.
Después de varios experimentos dentro del modelo de planifiación
central estatal se optó en 1993 por la transformación
del sector agrario estatal en un sector cooperativo. El proceso
de desestatalización de la economía cubana y la
conformación de nuevos actores cooperativos ha planteado
una serie de interrogantes que la investigación social
ha pretendido recoger a través del acompañamiento
de este proceso y el correspondiente análisis crítico
de los resultados obtenidos. En su desarrollo el proceso de cooperativización
ha enfrentado dificultades relacionadas con la autonomía
de los agroproductores, la integración horizontal y cambios
tecnológicos y el desarrollo local. Estos temas son expuestos
en la ponencia.
Juan Luis Martín is Director,
CIPS. He will present recent work on the social sciences in Cuba.
La situación de las Ciencias Sociales en Cuba puede subdividirse
en dos conjunto de rasgos: Aquellos que parecen ser comunes a
este campo disciplinario a escala mundial y en su expresión
local cubana adoptan solo ligeros matices específicos.
Aquellos que se aprecian como problemas particulares derivados
de las especificidades de la historia y cultura nacionales y regionales
así como de su sistema social. La ponencia propone una
identificación en orden jerárquico de los dos conjuntos
y evalúa su significado.
Wednesday
August 11, 1999
3:00 P.M. - 5:30 P.M.
[This discussion will be partly in Spanish, with summary translation]
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation and the Social Science Research Council. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Picking Up the Pieces:
The Demise of Cuba's Nuclear Ambition and Prospects for the Future
Jonathan Benjamin-Alvarado
University of Georgia
Jonathan Benjamin-Alvarado
is a Senior Research Associate at the University of Georgia's
Center for International Trade and Security. He is currently conducting
research on Cuba's efforts to develop a nuclear energy capability
and broader infrastructure and energy development issues. Since
1992, he has visited Cuba six times for field research on the
nuclear energy development program and has conducted interviews
with a number of senior government officials in Cuba's nuclear
and related agencies. He has published several articles on the
subject and is finishing a book titled, Power to the People: The
Cuban Nuclear Energy Program (Routledge, 1999, forthcoming). Dr.
Benjamin-Alvarado has received research and travel grants form
the Amos Foundation, The MacArthur Foundation, The Ford Foundation,
The Johns Hopkins University Cuba Exchange Program, and the University
of Georgia for his work on Cuba. He is Principal Investigator
of "Energy Options for a Developing Cuba: Implications for
the United States," a collaborative study between the University
of Georgia and the Atlantic Council of the U.S. He received his
M.A. in International Policy Studies at the Monterey Institute
of International Studies, and a Ph.D. in Political Science from
the University of Georgia.
Tuesday May 18, 1999
4:00 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.
19th Floor, 25 W. 43 Street (Conference Room)
(Queens College Extension Service: Labor Resource Center)
City University of New York
Manhattan
Refreshments served
Material for this seminar is available at the CUBA Project's
website as
occasional papers
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation and the Social Science Research Council. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Comparing the Cuban and Mexican Revolutions
Santiago Pérez Benítez
Professor of Inter-American Relations
Instituto Superior de Relaciones Internacionales (Havana)
Doctoral Candidate at UNAM (Mexico)
Friday May 14, 1999
4:00 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.
Room 1500, Grace Bldg.
Entrance Adjacent to 33 West 42 Street
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Manhattan
(Should you need directions, ask guard at 33 West 42 Street)
Refreshments served
Pre-registration is required:
Phone 718 997-2846 or Send Email to:
cubaproject@gc.cuny.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project,
with support from the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds
Foundation. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Queens College and
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
and
REFORMA
National Association to Promote Library Services to the
Spanish-Speaking
Northeast Chapter
Conversatorio
Children's Literature in Cuba
Alicia Abascal
Universidad Pedagógica de La Habana, Profesora de Literatura
Infantil. Asesora Docente de la Oficina del Historiador de la
Ciudad.
Monday May 10, 1999
6:00 P.M. - 8:00 P.M.
19th Floor, 25 W. 43 Street
Conference Room
(Queens College Extension Service
Labor Resource Center)
Manhattan
Refreshments served
This special edition of the Cuba Seminar will be in Spanish
Space is limited. Reserve at 718-997-2846
or Send Email to: font@soc1.soc.qc.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project, with support from
the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds Foundation. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
"Elite Hispano-Cubana en el Siglo XIX: Autonomismo
y el Desastre del '98"
Mariano Esteban de Vega
Universidad de Salamanca, Spain
José Cayuela Fernández
Universidad de Castilla-la Mancha, Spain
Discussant:
Alfonso W. Quiroz
GSUC and Baruch College, City University of New York
Friday April 30, 1999
4:00 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.
19th Floor, 25 W. 43 Street Conference Room
(Queens College Extension Service:
Labor Resource Center)
City University of New York
Manhattan
Refreshments served
Space is limited. Reserve at 718-997-2846
or Send Email to: font@soc1.soc.qc.edu
Reconocidos historiadores jovenes especializados
en historia cubana y española. José Cayuela (Profesor,
Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha) tiene publicado, junto con
Angel Bahamonde, el libro Hacer las Americas. Las elites coloniales
españolas en el siglo XIX (Madrid: Alianza Editorial, 1992);
es autor además de Bahía de Ultramar. España
y Cuba en el siglo XIX: el control de las relaciones coloniales
(Madrid: Editorial Siglo XXI, 1993) entre otras muchas publicaciones.
Mariano Esteban de Vega (Profesor, Universidad de Salamanca),
es coeditor de La historia contemporánea en España
(Salamanca: Ed. Universidad de Salamanca, 1996), entre otras publicaciones
y "El régimen autonómico español en
Cuba" en la obra en varios volúmenes Los 98 Ibéricos
y el mar (Madrid: Comisaría General de España, Expo
Lisboa '98, 1998) co-editada por Estaban y Cayuela, entre otros.
This event is organized by the Cuba Project, with support from
the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds Foundation. |
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Baseball and History in Cuba
Roberto González-Echevarría
Sterling Professor, Yale University
Author of:
The Pride of Havana: A History of Baseball in Cuba
(Oxford University Press)
Friday April 16, 1999
5:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.
19th Floor, 25 W. 43 Street ( Conference Room)
(Queens College Extension Service:
Labor Resource Center)
City University of New York
Manhattan
Refreshments served
Space is limited. Reserve at 718-997-2846
or Send Email to: font@soc1.soc.qc.edu
Roberto Gonzalez Echevarria is a Sterling Professor
at Yale University, where he also chairs the Department of Spanish
and Portuguese. He has authored several books and over a hundred
articles. His latest works include: The Pride of Havana: A History
of Cuban Baseball (Oxford University Press); En un Lugar de la
Mancha: Homenaje a Manuel Duran (co-edited with Georgina Dopico-Black);
and a Spanish version of his 1990 award-winning book Myth and
Archive: A Theory of Latin American Narrative (Cambridge University
Press). Gonzalez-Echevarria is primarily interested in Spanish,
Latin American, French and Italian literatures, and is currently
working on a book on Cervantes. He is also active in critical
theory, and serves on the board of several scholarly journals.
This event is organized by the Cuba Project, with support from
the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds Foundation.
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The
CUBA Seminar
Graduate School and University Center
City University of New York
Political Disaffection: Cuba's Revolution and Exodus
Silvia Pedraza
Department of Sociology, University of Michigan
Friday February 26, 1999
4:00 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.
19th Floor, 25 W. 43 Street ( Room "D")
(Queens College Extension Service:
Labor Resource Center)
City University of New York
Manhattan
Refreshments served
Space is limited. Reserve at 718-997-2809
or Send Email to: font@soc1.soc.qc.edu
This event is organized by the Cuba Project, with support from
the Ford Foundation and the Christopher Reynolds Foundation. |
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