Faculty and Staff
November, 2007
JOSEPH L. LOVE
Curriculum Vitae
Education: A.B., Harvard, 1960 (economics, honors)
M.A., Stanford, 1963 (history)
Ph.D., Columbia, 1967 (history, distinction)
Employment: Professor Emeritus (with teaching privileges), 2003-
Instructor to Professor, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 1966-2003;
Research Professor, Institute of Communications Research, UIUC, since 2001;
Director, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, UIUC, 1993-1999 (Acting Director, 1975-76, 1984-85, 1988-89)
Visiting Professor, Pontifícia Universidade Católica (Rio de Janeiro), June-Aug., 1987
Publications:
Books:
Rio Grande do Sul and Brazilian Regionalism, 1882-1930 (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford U. Press, 1971), xvi, 311 pp.
Translated as O Regionalismo Gaúcho e as Origens da Revolução de 1930 (São Paulo: Editora Perspectiva, 1975), 282 pp.
Quantitative Social Science Research on Latin America, edited with Robert S. Byars. (Urbana, Ill.: U. of Illinois Press, 1973), 272 pp.
São Paulo in the Brazilian Federation, 1889-1937 (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford U. Press, 1980), xx, 398 pp.
Translated as A Locomotiva: São Paulo na Federação Brasileira (Rio de Janeiro: Editora Paz e Terra, 1982), viii, 471 pp.
Guiding the Invisible Hand: Economic Liberalism and the State in Latin American History, edited with Nils Jacobsen. (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1988), xii, 221 pp.
Crafting the Third World: Theorizing Underdevelopment in Rumania and Brazil (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford U. Press, 1996), xvi, 350 pp.
Translated as A Construção do Terceiro Mundo: Teorizando o Subdesenvolvimento na Romênia e no Brasil (Rio de Janeiro: Editora Paz e Terra, 1998), xii, 619 pp.
Translated as Făurirea Lumii a Treia: Teorii şi Teoreticieni ai Subdezvoltării în Romania şi Brazilia (Bucharest: Editura Univers, 2002), 420 pp.
Liberalization and its Consequences: A Comparative Perspective on Latin America and Eastern Europe, edited with Werner Baer (Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2000), x + 323 pp.
Articles and comments:
"Pôrto Alegre: [Historical] Research Opportunities," in Robert M. Levine, ed., Brazil: Field Research Guide in the Social Sciences (New York: Inst. of Latin American Studies, Columbia U., 1966), pp. 88-96.
"Sources for the Latin American Student Movement," in The Journal of Developing Areas, I (Jan., 1967), pp. 215-226.
"La Raza: Mexican-Americans in Rebellion," in Trans-action (later Society) 6, 4 (Feb., 1969), pp. 35-41. (A study of Reies Tijerina and the Alianza de Mercedes.)
Same, reprinted (condensed) in Social Progress: A Journal of Church and Society, 59, 5 (May-June, 1969), pp. 30-35.
Same, reprinted in John H. Burma, ed., Mexican-Americans in the United States: A Reader (Cambridge, Mass., Schenkman, 1970), pp. 459-473.
Same, reprinted in John R. Howard, ed., Awakening Minorities: American Indians, Mexican Americans, Puerto Ricans (N. p.: Aldine, 1970), pp. 105-122.
Same, reprinted in Robert H. Binstock and Katherine Ely, eds., The Politics of the Powerless (Cambridge, Mass.: Winthrop, 1971), pp. 221-231.
Same, reprinted in Joyce Gelb and Marian Lief Pailey, eds., The Politics of Social Change: A Reader for the Seventies (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1971), pp. 286-296.
Same, reprinted (condensed) in Bruce A. Glasrud and Alan M. Smith, eds., Promises to Keep: A Portrayal of Non-whites in the United States (Chicago: Rand McNally, 1972), pp. 354-363.
Same, reprinted in Edward Simmen, ed., Pain and Promise: The Chicano Today (New York: Mentor, 1972), pp. 271-286.
Same, reprinted in Warner Modular Publications, reprint 49, 1973, pp. 1-7.
"Commentary" on H. H. Keith's "The Nonviolent Tradition in Brazilian History," in Keith and S. F. Edwards, eds., Conflict and Continuity in Brazilian Society (Columbia, S.C.: U. of South Carolina Press, 1969), pp. 241-247.
Published in Portuguese as "Comentário," in Keith and Edwards, Conflito e Continuidade na Sociedade Brasileira (Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira, 1970), pp. 282-289.
"Indice cronológico dos Papéis de Antônio Augusto Borges de Medeiros: 1909-1932," in Revista do Instituto Histórico e Geográfico Brasileiro, 286 (Jan.-March, 1970), pp. 223-276.
"Political Participation in Brazil, 1881-1969," in Luso-Brazilian Review 7, 2 (Dec., 1970), pp. 3-24.
"Utopianism in Latin American Cultures," in David W. Plath, ed., Aware of Utopia (Urbana, Ill.: U. of Illinois Press, 1971), pp. 117-134.
"External Financing and Domestic Politics: The Case of São Paulo, Brazil, 1889-1937," in Robert E. Scott, ed., Latin American Modernization Problems (Urbana, Ill.: U. of Illinois Press, 1973), pp. 236-259.
"An Approach to Regionalism," in Richard Graham and Peter H. Smith, eds., New Approaches to Latin American History (Austin, Texas: U. of Texas Press, 1974), pp. 137-155.
Published in Spanish as "Una Aproximación al Regionalismo" (q. v.).
"Autonomia e Interdependência: São Paulo e a Federação Brasileira, 1889-1937," in Boris Fausto, ed., História Geral da Civilização Brasileira, tomo 3, vol. 1 (São Paulo: DIFEL, 1975), pp. 53-76.
"Rio Grande do Sul como Fator de Instabilidade na República Velha," in same volume, pp. 99-122.
"Comment" on A. J. R. Russell-Wood's "Technology and Society," in Journal of Economic History, 37, 1 (Mar., 1977), pp. 84-86.
"Centro-Periferia e Troca Desigual: Origens e Crescimento de uma Doutrina Econômica," in Dados, 19 (Nov., 1978), pp. 47-62.
"Third World: A Response to Prof. Worsley," Third World Quarterly 2, 2 (Apr., 1980), pp. 315-317.
Same, reprinted in Why Third World? (London, 1980) [Third World Foundation Monograph 7], pp. 33-35.
"Raúl Prebisch and the Origins of the Doctrine of Unequal Exchange," Latin American Research Review, 15, 3 (1980), pp. 45-72.
Same, reprinted (condensed) in James L. Dietz and James H. Street, Latin America's Economic Development: Institutionalist and Structuralist Perspectives (Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner, 1987), pp. 78-100.
Same, published in Spanish in the Revista Mexicana de Sociología, 42, 1 (1980), pp. 375-405.
"Um Segmento da Elite Política Brasileira em Perspectiva Comparada," in A Revolução de 30: Seminário Internacional (Brasília: Editora Universidade de Brasília, 1982), pp. 47-92.
"A Revolução de 30 e o Regionalismo Gaúcho," in Simpósio sobre a Revolução de 30 (Pôrto Alegre: ERUS, 1983), pp. 59-83.
"New Bibliographies on Brazilian History," Latin American Research Review, 20, 2 (1985), pp. 235-240.
"Manoilescu, Prebisch, and Unequal Exchange," Rumanian Studies, 5 (1986), pp. 125-133.
With Bert J. Barickman. "Rulers and Owners: A Brazilian Case Study in Comparative Perspective," Hispanic American Historical Review, 66, 4 (Nov., 1986), pp. 743-761.
"Raúl Prebisch (1901-1986): His Life and Ideas," in Abraham Lowenthal, ed., Latin American and Caribbean Record, vol. V: 1985-1986 (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1988), pp. A143-A150.
Same, published in Spanish as "Raúl Prebisch (1901-1986): Su vida y sus ideas," Comercio Exterior [Mexico], 37, 5 (May, 1987), pp. 361-365.
Same, published in Spanish in Diario del Caribe, 713 (Oct. 30, 1988), pp. 9-12.
"Theorizing Underdevelopment in Latin America and Romania, 1860-1950," Review [of the Fernand Braudel Center], ll, 4 (fall, 1988), pp. 453-496.
Same, reprinted in Estudos Avançados, 4, 8 (Jan.-Apr., 1990), pp. 62-95.
Same, condensed as "Structural Change and Conceptual Response in Latin America and Romania, 1860-1950," published in Love and Jacobsen, q. v., pp. 1-33.
With Bert J. Barickman. "Regional Elites," in Michael Conniff and Frank McCann, eds., Modern Brazil: Elites and Masses in Historical Perspective (U. of Nebraska Press, 1989; paper ed., 1991), pp. 3-22.
Published in Portuguese as “Elites regionais,” in Flávio M. Heinz, ed., Por outra história das elites (Rio: Editora FGV, 2006), pp. 77-97
"Modeling Internal Colonialism: History and Prospect," World Development, 17, 6 (June, 1989), pp. 905-922.
"Of Planters, Politics, and Development," Latin American Research Review, 24, 3 (fall, 1989), pp. 127-135.
"The Origins of Dependency Analysis," in Journal of Latin American Studies, 22, 1 (Feb., 1990), pp. 143-168.
Same, reprinted in David A. Baldwin, ed., Key Concepts in International Political Economy, vol. 2 (Aldershot, Eng.: Edward Elgar, 1993), pp. 181-206.
"Pinheiro Machado: Apogeu e Declínio," Revista do Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, 14 (1990), pp. 59-79.
"A República Fez Alguma Diferença?" [Did the Republic Make a Difference?], O Estado de S. Paulo, Feb. 23, 1991. [A revisionist Op Ed essay on the economic and social consequences of the regime change from Empire to Republic in Brazil.]
"Prebisch, Raúl," in Joel Krieger, ed., Oxford Companion to Politics of the World (New York: Oxford U. Press, 1993), pp. 741-742.
"Una Aproximación al Regionalismo" [tr. of "An Approach to Regionalism" (q.v.)] and "Entrevista" [on my views on regionalism in Latin American history] in CERES Monografías no. 5 (Universidad del Norte, Barranquilla, Colombia, 1993), 36 pp.
"Federalismo y regionalismo en Brasil, 1889-1937," in Marcello Carmagnani, ed., Federalismos latinoamericanos: Máxico/Brasil/Argentina (México: El Colegio de México, 1993), pp. 180-223.
Same, condensed in English as “Regionalism and Federalism in Brazil, 1889-1937,”in Scott Mainwaring and Arturo Valenzuela, eds., Politics, Society, and Democracy (Boulder, Colo.: Westview, 1997), pp. 207-236.
Same, slightly alterered, condensed as “Regionalism and Federalism in Brazil, 1889-1937,” in Maria Teresa Toríbio Brittes Lemos and Luiz Henrique Nunes Bahia, eds., Percursos da Memória: Construções do Imaginário Nacional (Rio: UERJ, 2000), pp. 233-254.
Port. version, condensed as “A república brasileira: Federalismo e regionalismo, 1889-1937,” in Carlos Guilherme Mota, ed., A viagem incompleta: A experiência brasileira 1500-2000 (São Paulo: Editora Senac, 2000), vol. 2: A grande transição, pp. 121-160.
"Nueva visión del entorno intelectual internacional de las décadas de los años treinta y cuarenta," in Enrique V. Iglesias, ed., El legado de Raúl Prebisch (Washington, D.C.: Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo, 1993), pp. 59-66.
Eng. version published as “A New Look at the International Intellectual Environment of the 1930s and 1940s” in Enrique V. Iglesias, The Legacy of Raúl Prebisch (Washington, D.C. : Inter-American Development Bank, 1994), pp. 55-62.
"Reflections on the Revolution of 1893" in Francisco das Neves Alves and Luiz Henrique Torres, eds., Pensar a Revolução Federalista (Rio Grande, RS: Fundação U. de Rio Grande, 1993), pp. 15-18.
"Economic Ideas and Ideologies in Latin America since 1930," in Leslie Bethell, ed., Cambridge History of Latin America (Cambridge U. Press, 1994), vol. 6, part I, pp. 393-460; "Bibliographical Essay," pp. 595-601, reprinted in vol. 11 (1995), pp. 873-878.
Same, reprinted in Bethell, ed., Ideas and Ideologies in Twentieth Century Latin America (Cambridge U. Press, paper ed., 1996), pp. 207-274; 371-377.
"Borges de Medeiros, Antônio Augusto," I, pp. 391-2; "Cardoso, Fernando Henrique," I, pp. 556-7; "Castilhos, Júlio de," II, p. 15; "Chibata, Revolta da," II, p. 92; "Collor, Lindolfo," II, pp. 194-5; "Faoro, Raymundo," II, p. 541; "Política dos Governadores," IV, p. 426; and "Salvacionismo," V, pp. 22-23, in Barbara Tenenbaum, ed., Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture (New York: Scribner's, 1996), 5 vols.
With Werner Baer. "The Roots of Latin America's Backwardness," in Derek H. Aldcroft and Ross E. Catterall, eds., Rich Nations--Poor Nations: The Long-Run Perspective (Cheltenham, Eng.: Edward Elgar, 1996), pp. 39-64.
Published in Spanish as “Las raíces del retraso económico en Latinoamérica,” Revista Paraguaya de Sociología, año 33, no. 95 (jan.-Apr. 1996), pp. 57-80.
"Las fuentes del estructuralismo latinoamericano," Desarrollo Económico, 36, 141 (Apr.-June, 1996), pp. 391-402.
Same, reprinted in Jorge Lora and Carlos Mallorquín, eds., Prebisch y Furtado: El estruc-turalismo latinoamericano (Puebla, Mex.: Inst. de Ciencias Sociales, U. de Puebla, 1999), pp. 17-32.
“Ideas and Action in Postwar Brazil,” Macalester International (vol. 5, fall 1997), pp. 3-38.
“Furtado, Social Science, and Historiography,” in Jeremy Adelman, ed., Colonial Legacies: The Problem of Persistence in Latin American History (New York: Routledge, 1998), pp. 209-222, 293-299.
Published in Spanish as “Furtado, las ciencias sociales y la historia,” Estudios Sociológicos de El Colegio de México 17, 49 (Jan.-April, 1999), pp. 3-21.
Same, reprinted in Jorge Lora and Carlos Mallorquín, eds., Prebisch y Furtado: El estructuralismo latinoamericano (U. de Puebla, 1999), pp. 136-155.
“Dependency Theories in Rumania before 1945,” in Jean Batou and Thomas David, eds., Uneven Development in Europe, 1918-1939 (Geneva: Droz, 1998), pp. 85-106.
“Latin America’s Path from Backwardness to Development,” Journal of North African Studies 3, 2 (1998), pp. 138-164.
Same, reprinted in George Joffé, ed., Perspectives on Development: The Euro-Mediterranean Partnership (London: Frank Cass, 1999), pp.138-164.
Review essay on História da vida privada no Brasil, 4: Contrastes da intimidade contemporánea [History of Private Life in Brazil: Contrasts of Contemporary Intimacy], vol.. 4, in Folha de S. Paulo, “Jornal de Resenhas,” Feb. 13, 1999, p. 1.
With David Pollock and Daniel Kerner, “Raúl Prebisch on CEPAL’s Achievements and Deficiencies: An Unpublished Interview” in CEPAL Review, 75 (Dec., 2001), pp. 9-22.
Published in Spanish as “Entrevista inédita a Prebisch: Logros y deficiencias de la CEPAL,” Revista de la CEPAL, 75 (Dec., 2001), pp. 9-23.
“Furtado e o estruturalismo” in Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira and José Márcio Rego, eds., A grande esperança em Celso Furtado (São Paulo: Editora 34, 2001), pp. 221-252.
With David Pollock and Daniel Kerner, “Aquellos viejos tiempos: la formación teórica y práctica de Raúl Prebisch en Argentina. Una entrevista realizada por David Pollock,” Desarrollo Económico, vol. 41, no. 164 (Jan-Mar., 2002), pp. 531-553.
“Mihail Manoilescu în Peninsula Iberică şi în America Latină,” Oeconomică XI, 2 (2002), pp. 273-287.
“Flux şi Reflux: Teoriile Structuraliste ale Dezvoltării din Perioada Interbelică şi Cea Postbelică în România şi America Latină,” Oeconomica, XI, 3 (2002), pp. 269-283.
Publishedin English as “Flux and Reflux: Interwar and Postwar Structuralist Theories of Development in Romania and Latin America.” in Helga Schultz and Eduard Kubu, eds., History and Culture of Economic Nationalism in East Central Europe (Berlin: Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, 2006) pp. 71-86.
“Resisting Liberalism: Theorizing Backwardness and Development in Rumania before 1914” in Michalis Psalidopoulos and Maria Eugénia Mata, eds., Economic Thought and Policy in Less Developed Europe: The Nineteenth Century (London: Routledge, 2002), pp. 105-128.
“Entrevista com Joseph L. Love” [conducted by Flávio Madureira Heinz], Estudos Históricos, no. 32 (2003), pp. 165-177.
“Structuralism and Dependency in Peripheral Europe: Latin American Ideas in Spain and Portugal,” Latin American Research Review, 39, 2 (June, 2004), pp. 114-139.
“Acotaciones a la influencia de las ideas económicas de Mihail Manoilescu en Portugal y España,” Empresas Políticas, 2, 3 (2nd semester, 2003), pp. 101-105.
“Retrospectiva do golpe,” Zero Hora (Porto Alegre), March 27, 2004, Caderno Cultura, p. 6 [interview on the historiography of the Brazilian military coup of 1964 and its consequences].
“Institutional Foundations of Economic Ideas in Latin America, 1914-1950,” in Rosemary Thorp and Valpy Fitzgerald, eds., Economic Doctrines in Latin America: Origins, Embedding and Evolution (Houndmills, UK: Palgrave, 2005), pp. 142-156.
“The Rise and Fall of Structuralism,” in Ibid., pp. 157-181.
“O sistema de Castilhos 100 anos depois: A perspectiva de um comparativista,” in Gunter Axt et al., Júlio de Castilhos e o paradoxo republicano (Porto Alegre: Nova Prova, 2005), pp. 71-84.
“The Rise and Decline of Economic Structuralism in Latin America: New Dimensions,” Latin American Research Review, 40, 3 (Oct., 2005), pp. 100-125.
With David Pollock and Daniel Kerner, “Prebisch at UNCTAD,” in Edgar J. Dosman, ed., Raúl Prebisch: Power, Principle and The Ethics of Development (Buenos Aires: Instituto para la Integración de América Latina y El Caribe, 2006), pp. 37-63.
Same, published in Spanish as “Prebisch en la UNCTAD” in Dosman, ed., Raúl Prebisch: El poder, los principios y la ética del desarrollo (Bs.As., INTAL, 2006), pp. 39-65. Online version at: http://www.iadb.org/intal/aplicaciones/uploads/publicaciones/e_INTALITD_IE_2006_Prebisch.pdf
“Marinheiros negros em águas internacionais” [Black Sailors in International Waters] in Revista de História da Biblioteca Nacional [Rio de Janeiro], 1, 9 (Apr., 2006), pp. 30-32.
“The Latin American Contribution to Center-Periphery Perspectives: History and Prospect,” 33 pp. typescript, to appear in a volume in honor of Professor Ivan Berend. (Provisional version online, 2007, at The Other Canon, http://hum.ttu.ee/wp/paper10.pdf)
With Maria Eugénia Mata, “A Reversal in the Historical Role of Tariffs in Economic Growth? The Cases of Brazil and Portugal,” to be published in Estudos Econômicos, 2008, 49 pp typescript. “Latin America, UNCTAD, and the Postwar Trading System,” to be published in "Economic Development in Latin America: A Conference in Honor of Werner Baer," edited by Hadi Salehi
Esfahani, Giovanni Facchini, and Geoffrey Hewings. 19 pp. typescript.
Reviews of books:
Furtado, Celso, Diagnosis of the Brazilian Crisis, in Studies on the Left, 6, 4 (July-Aug., 1966), pp. 94-104.
Kleiner, Bernardo. 20 años del movimiento estudiantil reformista: 1943-1963, in Hispanic American Historical Review, 47, 2 (May, 1967), pp. 297-298.
Graham, Richard. Britain and the Onset of Modernization in Brazil, 1850-1914; and Momsen, Richard P., Jr., Brazil: A Giant Stirs, in HAHR, 49, 3 (Aug., 1969), pp. 590-592.
Azevedo, Aroldo de. Arnolfo Azevedo: Parlamentar da Primeira República, 1868-1942, in HAHR, 52, 2 (May, 1972), pp. 319-320.
Shirley, Robert W. The End of a Tradition: Culture Change and Development in the Município of Cunha, São Paulo, Brazil, in American Historical Review, 77, 4 (Oct., 1972), pp. 1189-1190.
Carone, Edgard. A República Velha, I: Instituições e classes sociais; II: Evolução Política, in HAHR, 53, 1 (Feb., 1973), pp. 146-148.
Colloques Internationaux du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. L'histoire quantitative du Brésil de 1800 a 1930, in HAHR, 55, 3 (Aug., 1975), pp. 535-537.
Maxwell, Kenneth. Conflicts and Conspiracies: Brazil and Portugal 1750-1808, in Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 5, 3 (winter, 1975), pp. 518-520.
With Vernon Burton. Gutman, Herbert. The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, in Journal of Social History, 11, 3 (March, 1978), pp. 430-432.
Faoro, Raymundo. Machado de Assis, a Pirâmide e o Trapézio, in HAHR, 58, 4 (Nov., 1978), pp. 753-755.
Erickson, Kenneth. The Brazilian Corporative State and Working-Class Politics, in Labor History, 21, 1 (winter, 1979-80), pp. 133-135.
Cortés Conde, Roberto, and Stanley J. Stein, eds. Latin America: A Guide to Economic History 1830-1930, in Journal of Social History, 13, 4 (1980), pp. 664-666.
Barreto, Abeillard. Bibliografia sul-riograndense: A contribuição portuguesa e estrangeira, 2 vols., in HAHR, 60, 1 (Feb., 1980), p. 181.
Pacheco Borges, Vavy. Getúlio Vargas e a oligarquia paulista, in HAHR, 61, 3 (Aug., 1981), pp. 563-564.
Amado, Janaína. Conflito social no Brasil: A revolta dos "Mucker," Rio Grande do Sul, 1868-1898, in AHR, 86, 4 (Oct., 1981), pp. 959-960.
Flynn, Peter. Brazil: A Political Analysis, in Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 11, 3 (winter, 1981), pp. 576-578.
Lang, James. Portuguese Brazil: The King's Plantation, in Journal of Developing Areas, 16, 1 (Oct., 1981), pp. 135-136.
Foweraker, Joe. The Struggle for Land: A Political Economy of the Pioneer Frontier in Brazil from 1930 to the Present Day, in Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 13, 3 (winter, 1983), pp. 584-586.
Borba de Moraes, Rubens. Bibliographia Brasiliana 2 vols., in Journal of Social History, 18, 3 (spring, 1985), pp. 509-510.
Weinstein, Barbara. The Amazon Rubber Boom: 1850-1920, in Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 16, 1 (summer, 1985), pp. 161-162.
Leff, Nathaniel. Underdevelopment and Development in Brazil, I: Economic Structure and Change, 1822-1947; II: Reassessing the Obstacles to Economic Development, in International History Review, 7, 4 (Nov., 1985), pp. 667-670.
Anglade, Christian, and Carlos Fortín, eds. The State and Capital Accumulation in Latin America, I: Brazil, Chile, Mexico, in Luso-Brazilian Review, 24, 1 (summer, 1987), pp. 91-93.
Dulles, J. W. F. The São Paulo Law School and the Anti-Vargas Resistance, 1938-1945, in AHR, 92, 3 (June, 1987), pp. 780-781.
Ludwig, Armin K. Brazil: A Handbook of Historical Statistics, in HAHR, 67, 3 (Aug., 1987), p. 547.
Karasch, Mary C. Slave Life in Rio de Janeiro: 1808-1850, in Journal of Social History, 22, 3, (1989), pp. 577-579.
Pang, Eul-Soo. In Pursuit of Honor and Power, in HAHR, 69, 3 (Aug., 1989), p. 609.
Hahner, June. Poverty and Politics in Brazil: 1870-1920, in AHR, 94, 4 (Oct., 1989), p. 1213.
Lehmann, David. Democracy and Development in Latin America: Economics, Politics and Religion in the Postwar Period, in Journal of Latin American Studies, 23, 3 (Oct., 1991), pp. 665-667.
Eakin, Marshall. British Enterprise in Brazil, in AHR, 96, 5 (Dec., 1991), pp. 1646-1647.
Font, Mauricio. Coffee, Contention, and Change in the Making of Modern Brazil, in Luso-Brazilian Review, 29, 1 (summer, 1992), pp. 124-126.
Andrews, George Reid. Blacks and Whites in São Paulo, Brazil: 1888-1988, in HAHR, 73, 1 (Feb., 1993), pp. 167-168.
Szlajfer, Henryk, ed. Economic Nationalism in East-Central Europe and South America: 1918-1939; and Jean Batou, Cent ans de résistance au sous-développement: L'industrialisation de l'Amérique latine et du Moyen-Orient face au défi européen: 1770-1870, in J. of Latin American Studies, 25, 1 (1993), pp. 206-208.
Packenham, Robert A. The Dependency Movement: Scholarship and Politics in Development Studies, in AHR, 98, 3 (June, 1993), pp. 983-984.
Gootenberg, Paul. Imagining Development: Economic Ideas in Peru's "Fictitious Prosperity" of Guano, 1840-1880, in The Americas 52, 1 (July, 1995), pp. 97-99.
Chasteen, John Charles. Heroes on Horseback: A Life and Times of the Last Gaúcho Caudillos, in The Americas, 53, 3 (January, 1997), pp. 565-567.Haber, Stephen.
How Latin America Fell Behind: Essays on the Economic Histories of Brazil and Mexico, 1800-1914, in The Americas, 55, 4 (Apr. 1999), pp. 655-658.
Bell, Stephen. Campanha Gaúcha: A Brazilian Ranching System, 1850-1920, Luso-Brazilian Review, 36, 2 (winter, 1999), pp. 135-136.
Popescu, Oreste. Studies in the History of Latin American Economic Thought, in Economic Journal, 110, 461 (Feb., 2000), pp. F238-F239.
Adelman, Jeremy. Republic of Capital: Buenos Aires and the Legal Transformation of the Atlantic World, in Journal of Social History, 25, 3 (Oct., 2000), pp. 389-391.
Walker, Thomas W., and Agnadlo de Sousa Barbosa. Dos coronéis à metrópole: Fios e tramas da sociedade e da política em Ribeirão Preto no século XX, 3 pp. typescript, to appear in HAHR.
Triner, Gail D. Banking and Economic Development: Brazil, 1889-1930, in Latin American Politics and Society, 44, 2 (2002), pp. 149-152.
Centeno, Miguel Angel, and Fernando Lopes-Alves, eds. The Other Mirror: Grand Theory through the Lens of Latin America, HAHR, 83:1 (Feb., 2003), pp. 158-160.
Bieber, Judy. Power, Patronage, and Political Violence: State Building on a Brazilian Frontier, 1822-1889, in AHR (Dec., 2003), pp. 1497-1498.
Summerhill, William R. Order against Progress: Government, Foreign Investment,
and Railroads in Brazil, 1854-1913, Histoire Sociale/Social History, 75 (May, 2005), p.195-197.
Hentschke, Jens R., ed. Vargas and Brazil: New Perspectives, 4 pp. typescript, to appear in Journal of Latin American Studies, 2008.
Field experience: Have made some twenty-five trips to Brazil, residing a total of four years in that country on research projects. Have researched three years in Europe, principally in Rumania, Britain, Portugal, and Spain. Have traveled to all Latin American countries and most of those in Europe.
Languages: Fluent Portuguese and Spanish; reading knowledge of these (excellent), plus French (excellent), German (good), Rumanian (good), and Italian (fair).
Honors, Fellowships, Papers:
Commendation of "Distinction" on dissertation at Columbia University, 1967.
Conference Prize, CLAH (1971) for article, "Political Participation."
Honorable mention (2d place) for Bolton Prize (1972) for Rio Grande do Sul.
Prize for best paper in Latin American history, Southwest Social Science Assn. (1977), for "Against the Tide: Liberal Politics in São Paulo, 1930-1937."
Cited on UIUC list of "excellent teachers."
Grant from UIUC program for Faculty Study in a Second Discipline, fall, 1978, and fall, 1985. Subject of study: economics and statistics.
Research Associate, St. Antony's College, Oxford University, Mar.-Aug., 1982.
Undergraduate Instructional Award, UIUC, Summer, 1983.
Mobil Award for outstanding Instructional Project (see previous item).
Visiting Fellow, Instituto de Estudos Avançados (Inst. for Advanced Study), U. de São Paulo, 1989-90.
Arnold O. Beckman Research Award, UIUC, 1990, 1993, 1996.
Senior University Scholar, UIUC, 1993 (with research funds).
Visiting Fellow, Instituto Ortega y Gasset, and Visiting Associate, Fundación Juan March, Madrid, 1995-96.
Listed in Who's Who in America, 1995-.
Named “Distinguished Brazilian Studies Scholar” by Brazilian Embassy, Washington, D.C., 2002.
Visiting Scholar, University of Leuven (Louvain), April-May 2004 (Leuven-UIUC exchange).
Visiting Scholar, Department of Economics, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, 2004-05.
Fellowships: Woodrow Wilson, Foreign Area (Ford), SSRC (twice), U. of Ill., Fulbright-Hays Research Grants (twice), NEH Senior Research Fellowship (twice), IREX, Hewlett, Guggenheim.
Invited to be candidate for fellowship at Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral and Social Sciences, Palo Alto, California.
Delivered annual UIUC Humanities Lecture, Sept., 2000: “Ideas and Institutions: A View from the Periphery.”
Papers presented at 14th International Economic History Congress, Helsinki (2006) and at pre-session, Colegio de Mexico (2006); seminar on economic history of East Central Europe, Frankfurt-Oder, 2005; featured session of Latin American Studies Assn., Las Vegas, 2004; Portuguese Economic and Social History Assn (APHES), Lisbon, 2004; Centenary of Death of Julio de Castilhos, Porto Alegre, 2003 (keynote speech); 13th Intl. Ec. History Congress, Buenos Aires (2002), Centro Cultural Banco do Brasil, Rio de Janeiro (2002); U.N. Economic Commission for Latin America, Santiago, Chile (2001); Conference on History of Economic Doctrines in Latin America, St. Antony’s College, Oxford U. (2000); 50th Congress of Americanists, Warsaw, Poland, 2000; Congress of European Society for the History of Economic Ideas, Valencia, Spain (1999); Seminar on Mihail Manoilescu at Romanian National Bank, Bucharest (1999); 12th Intl. Ec. History Congress, pre-session, Athens, Greece (1998); Conference on Politics of Identity in Modern Romania, Bucharest, Romania (1998); Conference on Impoverished European Nations, 1918-1945, U. Lausanne, Switz., (1996); 11th Intl. Ec. History Congress, Milan, Italy (1994); ACLS/SSRC conferences on Eastern Europe at Bellagio, Italy (1985), and at Rackeve, Hungary (1988); Colegio de México Seminar on Latin American Federalism (1992); SSRC Seminar on Coffee before 1930 at Bogotá, Colombia (1988); SSRC-sponsored planning conference on Latin America in the 1940s, UC, Santa Barbara (1987); SSRC-sponsored Seminar on History of Development Theory, Emory U. (1993); Seminars on the Revolution of 1930 in Rio de Janeiro and Pôrto Alegre (1980); Seminar on the Revolution of 1893 in Rio Grande, RGS, Brazil (1993); Brazilian Social Science Assn. (ANPOCS), São Paulo (1988); Université de Toulouse-Mirail; Royal Inst. of Intl. Affairs, London; Inter-American Development Bank; U. Nova de Lisboa (Portugal); Leuven (Louvain) University; U. of Washington (Seattle); Washington U. (St. Louis); U. de Buenos Aires; U.C.L.A.; Macalester College; Stanford U.; Instituto Ortega y Gasset (Madrid); U. de Salamanca; Indiana U.; Columbia U.; U. of Texas; U. of Notre Dame; Ill. State U.; U. de São Paulo; INESP (São Paulo); UNISINOS (Rio Grande do Sul); U. de Minas Gerais; U. de Pernambuco; IUPERJ; Casa Rui Barbosa; Yale U.; U. of Chicago; Oxford U.; U. of London; U. Calif., San Diego; Inst. for Policy Studies; Woodrow Wilson Ctr.; U. of Pittsburgh; Illinois Wesleyan U.; U. of Wisconsin-Madison; U. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; U. Bielefeld (Germany); American Historical Assn.; Southeast Conf. on Latin American Sts. (banquet speaker); Latin American Studies Assn.; Southwest Social Science Assn. Comments at AHA, LASA, Economic History Assn.
Courses taught: Surveys of colonial and national periods of Latin American history; history of Brazil; history of Mexico; slavery and race relations in Latin America; history of Spain and Portugal; social science approaches to Latin American issues; emergence of the Third World; Four Latin American ideas: structuralism, dependency, liberation theology, and pedagogy of the oppressed; modern Cuban history; graduate seminar and problems courses; "Economic Growth, the State, and Ideology in Latin America: 1880-1980" (NEH Seminar for College Teachers, 1984); undergraduate seminars for U. of Illinois students in Mexico City (the Mexican Revolution), June, 1995, Havana, Cuba (Cuba and the United States), June, 2000, and Madrid, Spain (Spanish Civil War), June 2002; graduate courses on economic history of the world since 1945 (2004); recent historiography of Brazil (2006).
Principal administrative experience:
Research Director, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS), 1970-72. Organized and wrote proposal for an internal research seminar on regional integration in Latin America, for which funds were provided by a Ford Foundation grant to the University; the program involved eleven faculty members from nine departments. In same period, directed a graduate training seminar on the uses of quantitative data in social science research on Latin America. Six scholars from different institutions participated, representing six disciplines. Co-edited a book which resulted from the seminar, entitled Quantitative Social Science Research on Latin America. In addition, headed a fellowship and research committee to judge NDFL and Fulbright applications, as well as requests for travel grants from faculty members and graduate students.
Acting Director, CLACS, 1975-76. Organized consortium with the University of Chicago and wrote successful NDEA Title VI Graduate Center proposal for Illinois (contractor) and the University of Chicago (subcontractor) for three-year cycle. UI-UC proposal was ranked second in national competition, after not being funded in previous cycle. Also wrote NDFL proposal, for which six UI fellowships were awarded.
Research Director, same unit, 1976-77. Headed grants committees and coordinated U. of Illinois-U. of Chicago joint seminar on State and Society in Latin America, 1977.
Director, NEH Summer Seminar for College Teachers, 1984.
Acting Director, CLACS, U. of Illinois, 1984-85, and Acting Director, Joint Center, U. of Illinois-U. of Chicago Consortium. Wrote proposal for UI-UC consortium in E.D.'s National Resource Centers competition (three-year cycle). The UI-UC proposal was ranked first in the country. Six FLAS fellowships were awarded to UI. Also wrote successful proposal for three-year cycle of Tinker Foundation Field Research Awards, and co-authored successful application to USIA for three-year faculty exchange grant between UIUC and Pontifícia Universidade Católica, Rio de Janeiro.
Organized national seminar at UIUC on "The Apogee and Decline of Economic Liberalism in Latin America," April, 1987. Thirteen scholars from nine institutions participated.
Acting Director, CLACS, and Joint UI-UC Center, 1988-89. Wrote proposals and reports for continuing National Resource Center grant and USIA UI-PUC exchange. Co-authored successful proposal to Tinker Foundation for a conference bringing together Latin Americanist debt experts and Midwest corporation executives with Latin American interests. Drew up M. A. program in Latin American Studies and awarded seven FLAS fellowships, plus fourteen student summer research grants.
Organized seminar at Woodrow Wilson Center, July, 1993, on "A World Bibliography on Raúl Prebisch and the Structuralist School of Economics."
Director, CLACS, and Joint UI-UC Center, 1993-1999. Co-authored successful proposal for National Resource Center grant, 1993.
Wrote successful 3-year NRC grant and 3-year Tinker Summer Field Research Grant, 1996 for 1997-2000. Obtained endowment grant for CLACS for research on Brazil ($33,688), yielding an annual disposable income of $1,600.
In spring, 1999, obtained additional $34,000 endowment grant for CLACS.
In October, 1999, with Werner Baer, wrote successful proposal to Hewlett Foundation for scholarly exchange grant between UIUC and Brazilian institutions of our choosing in economics, history, political science, and regional science. Grant for two years provided $100,000 per year for UIUC and same for Brazilian institutions, totaling $400,000 over two years. Wrote successful renewal proposal to Hewlett Foundation for $400,000 in January, 2002.
Member, national advisory board, Cooperating Programs in the Americas (COPA), a study abroad program with headquarters at Butler University, 1999-present.
Arranged funding for filming of Raúl Prebisch archive in Santiago, Chile, 2003.
Major Committee Experience:
UIUC: Member, executive committee, Center for Latin American
and Caribbean Studies, 1968-2000.
Member, executive committee, Dept. of History, 1972-73, 1986-88, 1991-93.
Chair, governance committee, Dept. of History, 1972-73.
Member, policy and development committee, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 1974-76.
Liaison officer, exchange agreement between UI and Universidade Estadual de Londrina (Paraná, Brazil), 1976-82.
Member, faculty appeals committee, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 1980-81.
Member, executive committee, College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences (30 departments), 1983-85.
Chair, medievalist search committee, Dept. of History, 1983-84.
Member, advisory committee, International Programs and Studies, 1984-85.
Member, headship search committee, Spanish Dept., 1984-85.
Chair, U.S. intellectual and cultural search committee, Dept. of History, 1991-92.
Liaison officer and director, USIA exchange agreement between UI and Catholic University, Quito, Ecuador, 1993-1997.
Member, campus Fulbright screening committee, 1990-1999.
Member, Graduate College Fellowships Committee, and Chair, Humanities Subcommittee, 2000-2002.
National and International: Chair, Brazilian Studies Committee, Conference on Latin American History (CLAH -- Division of American Historical Association), 1972-73.
Member, Bolton Prize Committee, CLAH, 1973 (for 1972 books).
Member, board of editors, Latin American Research Review, 1974-78.
Member, historical statistics committee, CLAH, 1977-1982.
Member, program committee, CLAH, 1978, 1981, 1986.
Member, nominating committee, Latin American Studies
Association, 1978.
Chair, Conference Prize committee, CLAH, 1980.
Member, general (executive) committee, CLAH, 1981-83.
Member, board of editors, Hispanic American Historical Review, 1984-89.
Member, Bolton Prize Committee, CLAH, 1984 (for 1983 books).
National panelist, NEH summer fellowship competition, Dec., 1986.
Member, LASA committee to establish a book prize, 1987-88.
Member, nominating committee, CLAH, 1988.
Member, Conference Prize Committee, CLAH, 1993.
Member, Advisory Board, Luso-Brazilian Review, 1995-1998.
Senior Editor (editorial board), The Americas, 1995-98.
Chair, Warren Dean Prize Committee, CLAH, 2003 (for best book in English on Brazilian history published in 2001 and 2002).
Advisory Board, Revista Brasileira de Política Internacional, 2006-.
Professional memberships: Conference on Latin American History (life member), Latin American Studies Association, American Historical Association (life member).
Office Address: Dept. of History, U. of Illinois 309 Gregory Hall
810 S. Wright St.
Urbana, IL 61801
Tel.: (217) 333-1155
Fax: (217) 333-2297
e-mail: j-love2@uiuc.edu
Home Address: 922 W. Armory
Champaign, IL 61821
Tel.: (217) 359-0603