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Tricia Gabany-Guerrero

Assistant Professor In Residence & Associate Director
Center for Latin American & Caribbean Studies
(Ph. D, State University of New York-Albany)




The University of Connecticut
843 Bolton Rd., Unit 1161
Storrs, CT 06269
Tel : 860-912-9172
E-mail: tricia.gabany-guerrero@uconn.edu

 

 

 

Area of Speciality:
Mesoamerica, Indigenous Peoples of the Americas, Political Economy, Ethnohistory of Colonial New Spain, Archaeology of Michoacán, México, Purépecha Colonial Studies, U.S.-Mexico Border, Mexican migration.

Biographical Note:
Tricia Gabany-Guerrero recieved her Ph.D from the State University of New York at Albany. She currently teaches courses realting to perspectives on Latin America, the Indigenous Peoples of Latin America, the Aztecs, and the US-Mexico Border. She has received two grants from the National Georgrahic Committee for Research and Exploration. Her key investigator for receving these grants has been, "Pre-Hispanic Cliff Paintings of Michoacan, Mexico."


Selected Publications:

2006 forthcoming
“Deportees and U.S.- Mexico Borderland Security: Liminality without Reintegration in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico.” In Martínez, Samuel (editor) National Security and International Migration:The Global Repercussions of US Policy.

2006 under review
“Late Archaic Burial in Highland Michoacán, Mexico,” Science (first author with Narcizo Guerrero-Murillo, Lisa Ely, Steven Hackenberger, Anthony Newton, James Chatters, Wendy Bohrson and Francisco Martínez González.

Manuscript ready for submission. Behind the Scenes in Mechuaca: Purépecha Scribes and the Transition to Colonial Rule.

Manuscript in preparation El Pindecuario de Parangaricutiro, Michoacán, Mexico – A Tarascan Chronology.
1999 Work cited in Guerrero Murillo, Narcizo

The Indian Community of the 21st Century: Sustainable Forest Management in the Tarascan Community of Nuevo San Juan Parangaricutiro, Michoacán, México. Master’s Thesis in Natural Resource Management. Central Washington University, Ellensburg, WA.

1999 Deciphering the Symbolic Heritage of the Tarascan Empire: Interpreting the Political Economy of the Pueblo-Hospital of Parangaricutiro, Michoacán. Doctoral Dissertation.

 

 

 

 

 

 
   
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