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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
DRCLAS awards certificates, prizesShalini Ananthanarayanan, social studies, "Effective Abortion Rights for Victims of Rape in Mexico City: A Case Study of Policy Implementation" Leah Aylward, environmental science and public policy, "Higher Education and Sustainable Development: A Model Toward Change" Martha Isabel Casillas, social studies, "La Virgen Xicana: How a Traditional Image Reflects and Affects the Re-Newed Mestiza Consciousness" Mariella Chilmaza, government, "A Movement of Opposites: The Emergence and Development of the Relationship between the Catholic Church and the Left in Pinochet's Chile" Megan Crowley, government, "Civil Society and Political Participation: Catalysts for Human Rights Policy Transformation in Contemporary Argentina" Melissa Dell, economics, "Widening the Border: The Impact of NAFTA on Female Labor Force Participation in Mexico" Maria Domanskis, history, "Misperceptions and Missed Opportunities: Nicaragua, the United States, and the United Nations, 1983-1984" Miranda Dugi, government, "The Most Successful Failure: How the FMLN in El Salvador Turned a Failed Revolution into Political Triumph" Katherine Ferrari, Romance languages and literatures, "En el pais del no me acuerdo: Film and Memory After the Argentine 'Dirty War'" Diana Fridberg, anthropology/archaeology, "The Role of Peccaries in Ancient Maya Economy, Ideology, and Iconography" Claudia García, Romance languages and literatures, "New Latin American Cultural Agents of Modernity: The Case of Mexico's Musical Starmaker Reality Television Show, 'La Academia'" Michelle Garza, social anthropology/women's studies, "Por la Vida, la Coca y la Soberanía Nacional: For Life, Coca, and National Sovereignty" Rocío Garza, Romance languages and literatures, "Intricate Routes and Networks: Women Artists Transcending Boundaries in Contemporary Mexico" Christina Givey, anthropology, "Truth, Reconciliation, and Justice? The Aftermath of the Guatemalan Truth Commissions" Caroline Gross, history and science, "Deconstructing the Panama Canal: Management, Sovereignty, and the Making of an Imperial Project" Adriana Lafaille, Romance languages and literatures, "(Paving) Local Roads to Democratic Nations: Communities and Decision Making in Two Areas of Greater São Paulo" Flora Lindsay-Herrera, history, "Ya No Creemos en la Politica": Rock Nacional and Politics in Argentina, 1976-1983" Savanna Lyons '06, environmental science and public policy, "MST/Socialist Ideology and Inflow of Technology in Brazil" Ayla Matanock, social studies, "Legitimating Terrorism: Material and Ideational Factors That Affect the Tactical Decision to Use Terror in Case Studies of Sendero Luminoso and the EZLN" Thomas Sean McKean, government, "Party System Change in Post-Authoritarian Chile: An Evaluation of the Impact of Authoritarian Legacies on Social Cleavage Structure" Aaron Mihaly, government, "The Dynamics of an Ouster: Explaining the October 2003 Forced Resignation of Bolivian President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada" Jeslyn Miller, social studies/religion, "How Shall We Sing the Lord's Song in a Foreign Land? The Practice of Regla Ocha among Cuban Immigrants in Greater New York" Mika Morse, social studies, "Teaching a Man to Fish Takes More Than Just a Fishing Pole. The Value of Bundling Nonfinancial Services and Microcredit for Alleviating Poverty. A Case Study of Nicaragua" Ryan Michael Rappa, history of science, "Physics, Argentina, and Einstein: The Nature of International Physics and the Reception of the Theory of Relativity During the Early 20th Century" Alexis Ritvo, anthropology, "Ser en Confianza: Participatory Development, Public Health, and Moral Engagement in a Highland Honduran Community" Henry Michael Rosenberg, social studies, "Dreams, Denim, and Destiny: Competitive Responses in the Blue Jeans Maquiladoras of Mexico's La Laguna Region" Senovio Shish, environmental science and public policy, "Don't Drink the Water: The Politics of Water Supply Programs in Rural El Salvador" Lewis Smith, government, "Doomed from the Start: The First Popular Regimes and Political Instability in Ghana and Argentina" Richard Theodore Tieken, social studies, "Debt, Social Spending, Morality, and Economics: An Integrated Approach to Explaining Levels of Social Spending in Ecuador" Andrés Alberto Vivas, history/economics, "Argentina's Capital Crisis Following the First World War: How Government Financial Diplomacy Failed" Manuela Silverstein Zoninsein, social studies, "The Paradox of Rio's Carnaval: An Ethnographic Snapshot of Non-Participation." In addition, DRCLAS has announced its thesis prize recipients. The James and Isabel Hammond Thesis Prize in Latin American Studies goes to Shalini Ananthanarayanan '05; the Inter-Faculty Committee on Latino Studies (IFCLAS) Latino Studies Thesis Prize has been awarded to Martha Casillas '05 and to Jeslyn Miller '05; and the Kenneth Maxwell Thesis Prize in Brazilian Studies goes to Adriana Lafaille '04.
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