The Find a Researcher database contains listings of University of Utah faculty and graduate students who are research topic experts and potential research collaborators.
You may search for people by entering names, research keywords, departments, international experience keywords and equipment.
For a more complete view of international research and activities, you can use the university's Global U Inventory site.
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Search Results - Displaying 1 - 10 of 131 results
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ECHO SMITH
Associate Instructor, World Languages and Cultures
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David De Micheli
Affiliated Faculty, University of Utah, Center for Latin American Studies
Assistant Professor, Political Science Department
Assistant Professor, University of Utah, Ethnic Studies
Research Summary: My research revolves around substantive interests in identity, inequality, and citizenship, with a regional focus on Latin America. Broadly, I am interested in the processes of identity politicization, the causes and consequences of inequality, and how these shape the quality and exercise of citizenship. In my published an on-going research, I rely on quantitative and qualitative methods to make theoretical and empirical contributions to these areas of study.
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Alejandro Quin
Director, University of Utah, Center for Latin American Studies
Associate Professor, World Languages and Cultures
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REBECCA HORN
Associate Professor, History
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ALEXIS M CHRISTENSEN
Associate Professor (Lecturer), World Languages and Cultures
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ELENA SHTROMBERG
Professor, Art/Art History
Research Summary: Video Art in Latin America, 2013-present
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BETTY M AGUIRRE-MAIER
Associate Instructor, World Languages and Cultures
Research Summary: My main area of study includes the analysis of the discourses of "the politics of the friendship" in the Latin American literature of the first decades of the XXth century; its political and literary relevance, which refers to innovative inter-personal and communal non-normative affiliation relationships, arising in the exchange of ideas and technologies characteristic of modernity.
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CLAUDIO A. HOLZNER
Chair, University of Utah, Political Science Department
Professor, Political Science Department
Research Summary: I am interested in understanding how and why individuals come to participate in political activities in the countries where they live. I am especially interested in understanding the institutional factors that lead to the inclusion or exclusion of marginal or vulnerable groups, such as immigrants, the poor, or, in certain contexts, women. I have explored these questions in the context of Mexico, cross-nationally in Latin America, and among undocumented immigrants in the U.S.
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Talía Dajes
Assistant Professor, University of Utah, World Languages and Cultures