LACS Core Faculty
Simone Pinet
Professor, Romance Studies
Simone Pinet's teaching and research focus on medieval and early modern Spanish literatures and cultures, from the thirteenth through the sixteenth centuries, especially in relation to spatiality, economics, poetics, and translation.
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Edmundo Paz-Soldan
Distinguished Professor, Romance Studies
Edmundo Paz-Soldan is winner of the Bolivian National Book Award (1992 and 2003), and the Juan Rulfo Short Story Award (1997). He has published Alcides Arguedas y la narrativa de la nación enferma (Plural, 2003), and is the coeditor, with Debra Castillo, of the volume of critical essays Latin American Literature and Mass Media (Garland, 2000), and, with Alberto Fuguet, of the anthology of short stories Se habla español: Voces latinas en U.S.A. (Alfaguara, 2000).
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Cecilia Lawless
Senior Lecturer and Stephen H. Weiss Provost’s Teaching Fellow, Romance Studies
Cecelia Lawless teaches both language and literature/film courses as a senior lecturer. For several years, she was the faculty fellow for the Spanish Language House at Alice Cook. For five years, she helped to found and then serve as Director of the Foreign Language Across the Curriculum Program (FLAC) that offers Spanish language sections in conjunction with established courses in a variety of disciplines. Lawless has participated in and is now Director of the successful Summer Program in Madrid.
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John Henderson
Professor, Anthropology
John S. Henderson’s research interests center on early complex societies and how archaeology can explore the processes through which they develop. How do distinctions in status, wealth, and authority emerge within and between communities? Under what circumstances do these distinctions intensify into stratification? How does stratification relate to the centralization of political power, to the emergence of kings and states?
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Miguel Gómez
Associate Professor, Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics & Management
Miguel I. Gómez concentrates his research program on two interrelated areas under the umbrella of food marketing and distribution. The first is Food Value Chains Competitiveness and Sustainability. His work in this area involves multi-disciplinary collaborations for the development models to assess supply chain performance in multiple dimensions—economic, social and environmental. The second is Food Markets.
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Maria Cristina Garcia
Howard A. Newman Professor, History
Maria Cristina Garcia, a 2016 Andrew Carnegie Fellow, studies refugees, immigrants, and exiles. While Garcia considers herself primarily a historian of 20th-century U.S. history, her interest in displaced and mobile populations has increasingly blurred the geographic borders of her work.
Her most recent book, State of Disaster: The Failure of U.S. Migration Policy in an Age of Climate Change (University of North Carolina Press, 2022), was awarded an honorable mention in the Immigration and Ethnic History Society's Theodore Saloutos Book Prize.
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Gustavo Flores-Macías
Professor, Government and Public Policy
Gustavo Flores-Macías's research and teaching interests include topics related to political and economic development. His research focuses on the politics of economic reform, taxation and state capacity, and populism and the militarization of law enforcement.
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Alexander Flecker
Professor, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
The research in Alexander S. Flecker’s lab is at the interface between community and ecosystem ecology and aims to understand the functional significance of biodiversity. Much of the research focuses on stream ecosystems in both the tropics and temperate zone, addressing questions pertaining to the importance of species diversity and identity for ecosystem functioning. Flecker’s research team has found that species that engineer their physical and chemical environments can be particularly important drivers of ecosystem structure and function.
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Maria Fernandez
Associate Professor, History of Art and Visual Studies
María Fernández’s research and teaching concern three areas and their intersections: the history and theory of digital and new media art, postcolonial and gender studies and Latin American art and architecture.
Fernández has taught courses in the history and theory of digital art, Latin American art of various periods as well as feminist art in new media. Recent seminar topics include: Feminist Postumanisms, Latin American Modernisms and Technology, BioArt (with Angela Douglas, Depts. Entomology, Molecular Biology & Genetics) and Video Game Criticism.
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Timothy DeVoogd
Professor Emeritus, Psychology
Timothy Devoogd studies how the brains of birds encode learned behaviors like song or memory for food locations. Particular questions now being studied include the neural basis for female song discrimination, and the interplay between the hippocampus and other brain areas in spatial memory. He studies these questions in a variety of species in order to infer how these abilities evolved.
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Program
Role
- Faculty
- LACS Core Faculty
- LACS Professor Emeriti
- LACS Steering Committee
Contact
Email: tjd5@cornell.edu