Peter H. Smith

Peter Hopkinson Smith (born January 17, 1940) is a scholar of Latin American history, politics, economics, and diplomacy. He is a distinguished Professor Emeritus of Political Science and the Simon Bolivar Professor of Latin American Studies at University of California in San Diego.[1] He previously served as a professor of history and Department chairman at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and as professor and dean at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

He has been president of the Latin American Studies Association and has also been director of the Center for Iberian and Latin American Studies (1989–2001) and director of Latin American Studies (1994–2001) at UCSD.[1]

Education

Smith obtained his Ph.D. in Comparative Politics, Latin America from Columbia University in 1966.

Publications

His books have appeared in numerous editions and have been translated into Spanish, Portuguese, Korean, and Chinese. Some of his publications include:[1]

  • Politics and Beef in Argentina: Patterns of Conflict and Change (1969)
  • Argentina and the Failure of Democracy: Conflict among Political Elites, 1904-1955 (1974)
  • Labyrinths of Power: Political Recruitment in Twentieth-Century Mexico (1979)
  • Talons of the Eagle: Dynamics of U.S.-Latin American Relations (1996; 2nd edition, 2000)
  • Democracy in Latin America: Political Change in Comparative Perspective (2005)
  • Modern Latin America, co-authored (1984), now in its ninth edition (2018)
  • Drug Policy in the Americas, edited (1992)
  • Latin America in Comparative Perspective: New Approaches to Methods and Analysis, edited (1995)
  • NAFTA in the New Millennium, edited (2002)
  • East Asia and Latin America: The Unlikely Alliance, edited (2003)
  • Promises of Empowerment: Women in Asia and Latin America, edited (2004)

Smith's major studies regarding politics, democracy and globalization have been subjects of review essays in leading journals.[2][3][4]

Organizations

Smith has been the president of the Latin American Studies Association as well as being the consultant to the Ford Foundation and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.[5] Smith received a lifetime achievement award from the Latin American Studies Association in 2013.

gollark: Although I actually wrote the regex as```pythonWHITESPACE = r"[\t\n ]*"NUMBER = r"\-?(?:0|[1-9][0-9]*)(?:\.[0-9]+)?(?:[eE][+-]?[0-9]+)?"ARRAY = f"(?:\[{WHITESPACE}(?:|(?R)|(?R)(?:,{WHITESPACE}(?R){WHITESPACE})*){WHITESPACE}])"STRING = r'"(?:[^"\\\n]|\\["\\/bfnrt]|\\u[0-9a-fA-F]{4})*"'TERMINAL = f"(?:true|false|null|{NUMBER}|{STRING})"PAIR = f"(?:{WHITESPACE}{STRING}{WHITESPACE}:{WHITESPACE}(?R){WHITESPACE})"OBJECT = f"(?:{{(?:{WHITESPACE}|{PAIR}|(?:{PAIR}(?:,{PAIR})*))}})"VALUE = f"{WHITESPACE}(?:{ARRAY}|{OBJECT}|{TERMINAL}){WHITESPACE}"```which is much easier.
gollark: Regex is kind of like the APL of string pattern matching, in that it's very terse and expressive but incomprehensible.
gollark: Well, the regex engine is fine with it.
gollark: It's actually a recursive regex, so it can generate infinitely deep problems with a finite... regex.
gollark: (from an esoteric programming languages discussion group)

References

  1. "Peter H. Smith". Retrieved 27 June 2019.
  2. Derek Hershberg, "Democracy in Latin America: a review of recent literature." Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies 34.68 (2009): 195-208.
  3. Steve Ellner, "Globalization, macroeconomic policies, and Latin American democracy." Latin American Politics & Society 48.1 (2006): 175-187.
  4. Wil Pansters, et al. "Interpreting Contemporary Mexican Politics: Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose?." European Review of Latin American & Caribbean Studies (1991): 119-135.
  5. "Peter H. Smith". UC San Diego. Archived from the original on 8 March 2013. Retrieved 13 March 2013.


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