Elizabeth
Lira
"Reflections on Pain and Memories"
Psychologist, Centro de Etica, Universidad Alberto Hurtado, Chile.
Friday, September 22, 2-3 PM
CLAS Conference Room, 2334 Bowditch Street
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Elizabeth
Lira (left) & Professor of Geography and Ethnic Studies,
Beatriz Manz (right)
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Professor
Elizabeth Lira is a psychologist and researcher in the Center
of Ethics at Universidad Jesuita Alberto Hurtado in Santiago,
Chile. Her current research is on Chilean reconciliation
and resistance of memory.
Professor Lira's main activity from 1977 has been in the field of mental health
and human rights in clinical services, psychosocial research and national and
international advocacy. She is currently the supervisor of clinical teams working
in domestic violence and abuse and victims of human rights violations for the
PRAIS Program (Public Health and Mental Health Program for victims of human
rights violations during the dictatorship).
Professor Lira has co-authored two books on political reconciliation with San
Diego State University Professor Brian Loveman, and written other books related
to therapy and memory of victims of human rights violations.
Elizabeth
Jelin, Charles Hale, and Tani Adams
Saturday November 11, 2000
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Professor
Charles Hale, Professor Beatriz Manz and Professor Elizabeth
Jelin
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Elizabeth Jelin is a professor and senior researcher
at the Institute of Social Research, Universidad de Buenos
Aires, and at the National Council of Scientific Research,
Argentina (CONICET). Her teaching and research interests
encompass human rights and historical memory of repression,
the family, citizenship and social movements. Her most recent
publication was Pan y Afecto: La Transformacićn de las Familias
(1998) (Bread and Affection: Family Transitions).
Charles Hale is an Associate Professor in the Anthropology department
of the University of Texas. Prof. Hale, a Stanford PhD, is also Associate
Director of the Institute of Latin American Studies at UT. His current
research is on ethnic and racial politics, mestizo/ladino identities
and ideologies of mestizaje with particular focus on Central America,
Guatemala, and Nicaragua. His book Resistance and contradiction: Miskitu
Indians and the Nicaraguan State, 1894-1987 was widely acclaimed.
Tani Adams works with CIRMA, the Center for Regional Research
on Mesoamerica.
Analysis
and commentary for this event
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