Chair, UCLA Program on Mexico
Associate Director, UCLA Latin American Center
Chair, Latin American Studies &
Globalization
Editor, SALA - Statistical Abstract of Latin
America
& Analytical Publications
Co-Editor, Web Journal: Mexico and the World
Editor: Cycles and Trends Book Series on Mexican
Development
• NAFTA & MERCOSUR • EU-Eastern
Europe • Asia-Pacific
• Elitelore & Oral Interviews with
Leaders • NPPOsGLOBAL
CONTENTS
Page Category
2 Addresses, Birth, Education, University Positions, and Honors
3 Current Research Directorships
3 Previous Directorships
3 Professional Memberships and Specific Activities
6 Editorial Board Memberships
7 Visiting Scholars and Doctoral Students Directed at UCLA
9 Latin American Oral History Project: UCLA Regents' Lecturers
10 Interviews Granted (INT)
12 Writings by Section:
12 I Published
(A=Research Articles, B=Books, C=Edited
Books)
30 II Work Published Without Credit
30 III Research Reports (RR)
32 IV Completed Works Previously Listed as "In Progress"
32 V Works in Progress
35 VI General Editorship of Series
41 Major Critiques and Outgrowths of Above Works (C)
48 Seminars, Lectures, and Invitations (S)
68 UC and UCLA Service
68 Teaching Grants
68 Fellowships and Grants for Research
71 Research Programs and Research Meeting Grants
75 Professional Activity and Consulting
77 Research Travel
78 List of Abbreviations
wilkie@ucla.edu Cell (310) 720-6804 www.profmex.com
UCLA
Program on Mexico Office:
10353 Bunche Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1487
TEL (310) 206-8500, FAX 825-8421
PROFMEX Office:
Tel (310) 208-7914, FAX 208-4918
Home Office:
1242 Lachman Lane, Pacific Palisades,
California 90272
TEL (310) 454-8812, FAX 454-3109
PERSONAL: Born March 10, 1936, Idaho Falls, Idaho
EDUCATION: B.A. 1958 Social Science, Mexico City College, 1958.
M.A.
1959 History, University of
California, Berkeley.
Ph.D. 1966
History, University of California, Berkeley.
UNIVERSITY POSITIONS:
Assistant Professor of History, Ohio State
University, 1965-1967.
Associate Professor
of History, Ohio State University, 1967-1968.
Associate Professor
of History & Policy Studies, UCLA, 1968-1971.
Professor of History
& Policy Studies, UCLA, 1971--.
HONORS:
1958
B.A. magna cum laude
1960 University of California Honorary
Traveling Fellow.
1968 Bolton Prize for The Mexican
Revolution (1967).
1968 Ohio Academy of History
Award: Mexican Revolution (1967).
1981 Honors upon induction into the Instituto Mexicano de
Cultura
as
a corresponding member.
1982 Medal of the Academia de San
Carlos, Universidad Nacional
Autónoma de México (UNAM), "for having developed the concept
of elitelore."
1984 Medal of the University, UNAM, "for studies
in oral history and
public expenditure."
1985 Medal of 75 years of Autonomy of the Universidad
Nacional
Autónoma de México, “for
twenty years of innovative research."
1990 Distinguished Lectureship, UAM-A, Mexico City,
June 17-18.
2000 Distinguished Achievement Award, Nominee for Short
Documentary:
Producer of “Chan Ki’n Viejo: The
Last of the Mayans.”
CURRENT RESEARCH
DIRECTORSHIPS:
Latin American Oral
History Project, 1963--.
UCLA Project on
Statistical Measurement of Global Change, 1976--
UCLA Program on
Latin American and Globalization, 1996--.
PREVIOUS DIRECTORSHIPS:
Assistant Director,
Graduate Studies, Mexico City College, 1960.
Director, Oral
History Center for Latin America, Ohio State University,
1966-1968.
Associate Director,
UCLA, Latin American Center, 1970-1976; 2000--
Universitywide
Chair, UC Consortium on Mexico and the United States, 1981-1983
(Founding Chair.)
Chair, Socioeconomic
Studies, UCLA Latin American Center, 1987-1990.
PROFESSIONAL
MEMBERSHIPS AND SPECIFIC ACTIVITIES:
PROFMEX - Worldwide
Network for Mexico Policy Research
President, 1983--.
Chair,
PROFMEX-ANUIES International Conferences
(See
Resulting Publications, pp. 37-39)
III. Tijuana, October 23-25,
1983;
IV. Santa Fe, April 16-18,
1986;
V. Mexico City,
April 21-23, 1988;
VI. Mazatlán,
October, 2-7, 1990;
VII. Mérida, November 11-13, 1992;
VIII. Puerto Vallarta, November 13-17, 1994;
Chair, PROFMEX
Conferences on Mexico’s Cycles & Trends
(See
Resulting Publications, p. 40)
1.
Mazatlán, Sinaloa Conference on Industry & Labor, March 16-20, 1988,
Co-sponsored by UCLA;
2.
Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, Conference on Industria,
Oct, 6-11, 1988,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA;
3.
Mérida, Yucatán, Conference on Labor
& Industry, January 26-30, 1989,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA;
4.
Acapulco, Cycles and Trends Research Conference, July 1-4, 1989,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA;
5.
San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas Conference, Feb. 4-6, 1990,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA;
7.
Oaxaca and Mexico City Philanthropy Conferences, Jan. 25-Feb. 1, 1991,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA and
U.S.
Council on Foundations;
8. Cuetzalan & Cholula, Puebla Conferences, June 12-13 and 13-16, 1991,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA &
Univ.
of the Americas;
9. Cabo San Lucas, Baja California Sur Conference, March
6-9, 1992,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA & UAM-A;
10. Guadalajara, Jalisco Conference, Aug. 1992,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA & Univ. of Guadalajara;
11. Zacatecas, Conference on Cycles and
Trends, Feb. 1993,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA and UAM-A;
12. Mexico City Conference on Mexican
Agrarian Issues.
August 3-7, 1993,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA and UAM-A;
13l Ciudad Juárez-El Paso Conference
on
“Managing Cross-Border
Government,”
Sept. 17-18, 1993,
Co-sponsored by UCLA, ANUIES, and
El
Paso Community Foundation;
Co-sponsored
by U.S. Embassy, UTEP,
Mexican
Secretary of Treasury,
El Paso Community Foundation;
15. Mexico City Conference on "Mexico's
Development
Process Seen from the World," July 28-29. 1994;
Co-sponsored
by UCLA and CONACYT;
16. San Diego Conference on Tijuana Housing
Policy Sept.
9, 1994,
Problems,
Co-sponsored
by ANUIES & San Diego State U.
17. Kyoto, Conference, “Mexico and
Japan,”
August 25-31, 1995,
Co-sponsored
by Doshisha University & UCLA;
18. San Diego Conference on “Border
Realities & Border
Opportunities, August
8, 1996,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA & San Diego State Univ.
19. Beijing Conference on China,
Japan, and Mexico, October 3, 1996,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA and
Chinese
Academy of Sciences;
20. Beijing Conference on Mexico and
Asia,
October 4, 1996,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA, , and Kyoto’s Doshisha
University
& People’s University of China
21. Guanajauto Conference: Innovative
Development Ideas,
Apr. 15-17, 1999,
Co-Sponsored
by Gov. Vicente Fox;
2001 Puerto Vallarta, Univ. of Guadalajara Conference
on
Cycles and Trends, Dec 16-23, 1999,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA;
23. Tepic Conference on Globalization and
Social Security,
May 29, 2000,
Co-sponsored by
Univ. Autónoma de Nayarit;
24. Puerto Vallarta, Univ. of
Guadalajara-UCLA
Conference on “Mundializacion,” June 1-3, 2000;
25. Morelia Public Policy Conference, Sept. 18-23,
2000,
Co-sponsored
by UCLA School of Public
Policy,
UCLA Program on Mexico, & Michoacán
Gov.
Víctor Manuel Tinoco Rubí.
Organizer, PROFMEX
Seminars:
Cabo
San Lucas, Baja California Sur, May 20-23, 1982.
Marina
del Rey, California, July 22, 1983; June 29, 1985;
July
26, 1986.
Mexico
City, November 8-9, 1983.
Puerto
Vallarta, Jalisco, March 24, 1984;
Sept.
11-14, 1998; Aug 21-25, 1999
Cozumel,
Quintana Roo, July 27-28, 1984.
Cancún,
Quintana Roo, March 3-14, 1997.
Santa
Fe, New Mexico, April 19, 1986.
Hacienda
Cocoyoc, Morelos, Mexico, September 29, 1986.
Copper
Canyon, Chihuahua, Sept. 21-27, 1988,
Budapest,
Hungary, September 5, 1992
Moscow,
Russia, June 21-25, 1993
Bucharest,
Romania, May 31, 1994; September 14, 1995
Zurich,
Switzerland, June 28-July 1, 1994,
Budapest,
Hungary, September 19-20, 1995
Brussels, Belgium, September 21-22, 1995
Mamaia,
Black Sea, Romania, June 14-19, 1996
Delphi,
Greece, June 30-July 2, 1996
Singapore,
October 1, 1996
Hong
Kong & Shenzhen, China, October 11, 1996
Bombay,
India, October 12, 1996
Istanbul,
July 30-31, 2000
United States-Mexico
Bilateral Cultural Commission, 1984-1987
Latin American Studies
Association:
Chair,
VI International Meeting, Atlanta, March 24-28, 1976.
Chair,
Committee on Scholarly Resources, 1978-1980
American Historical
Association
Conference
(Association) on Latin American History Committees:
Activities
and Projects, 1968-1973
Robertson
Prize, 1968
Program,
III International Congress of Mexican Studies, Nov 4-7, 1969
Distinguished
Service Award Committee, 1970
Elected
Chair, Committee on Mexican Studies, 1973
Chair,
IV International Congress of Mexican Studies, Oct 17-21, 1973
Chair,
Historical Statistics, 1974-1982
General
(Policy) Committee, 1976 and 1977
Historical Research & the Future, President, 1968--.
Social Science Research Council and
American Council of Learned Societies,
Joint Committee on Latin American Studies
Dissertation Fellowships New
York City, 1975-1978.
Advisory Board, San Juan, 1984 and1985
American Association
of University Professors, UCLA Chapter:
Vice
President, 1977-1978
President,
1978-1979; 1979-1980
Past
President, 1980-1981
Treasurer,
1981-1983
Chair,
1983--
Faculty Association
at UCLA: Board of Directors,
1985-1993.
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERSHIPS:
Mexico
and the World, Web Journal, 1996--.
(Editor) www.profmex.com
Journal
of Latin American Lore, 1975--.
Journal
of Mexican Studies, 1986-1993.
Hispanic
American Historical Review, 1976-1981.
University
of California Press, 1974-1978.
Northern
Illinois University Press, "Modern Mexico Series,” 1973-83.
UCLA Latin
American Center Publications, 1972-1989.
PROFMEX
Monograph Series Editorial Board, 1984--.
VISITING SCHOLARS & STUDENTS DIRECTED:
Doctoral Recipient (Ph.D.), Post-Doctoral (Post-Doc) Fellow, Post-Graduate (Post-Grad)
Fellow; Candidate in Philosophy
(C.Phil.)
Rodney Alvarez, Ph.D., 2000, Assistant
Professor,
University
of Central Florida;
Fausto Alzati, UCLA Visiting Scholar, 1999-2000,
Former President of
Mexico’s
National Council on Science and Technology;
Jesús Arroyo Alejandre, UCLA Visiting
Scholar, 2000-2002, Professor of
Economics;
and Former Dean, School of Management,
University
of Guadalajara;
Richard Beesen, UCLA Post-Grad Fellow,
1980-1981, Vice President—Russia and
Eastern
Europe, Deutsche Bank, Berlin, Moscow, Prague;
Juan Benítez, C.Phil., 1998, Assistant
Professor, Cal State Long Beach
Phillip P. Boucher, Ph.D., 1979, Director of
Global Strategic Planning,
Arrow
Electronics, Geneva, Switzerland;
Margaret Carrol-Boardman, Ph.D. , 1999-2000,
Post-Doc &
Visiting
Assistant Professor, UCLA;
Carlos Contreras Macías (C.Phil.,
1998), Assistant Professor,
Saddleback
College, California;
Alejandro Dabat-Latrubesse, UCLA Visiting
Scholar, 2000-2001,
UNAM Professor of
Economics
Sergio
de la Peña, UCLA Visiting Fellow, 1988, UNAM;
Miles
Freychette, UCLA Post-Grad Fellow, 1972, U.S. Ambassador to Colombia;
Alfonso
Galindo, UCLA Post-Grad Fellow, 1996-1999, Universidad de Guanajuato;
Javier
García Bresó, UCLA Post-Doc, 1995-1996, University of Madrid;
Manuel
García y Griego, Ph.D., 1988, Asst. Prof., Political Science,
University
of Texas at Arlington;
Carlos
B. Gil, Ph.D., 1975, Prof., History, Univ. of Washington, Seattle;
Arturo
Grunstein, Ph.D., 1994, Professor of Historical Sociology, UAM-A,
Mexico
City;
Ivan
Gutiérrez, Ph.D., 2000, Research Administrator, California Employment
Development
Department;
Stephen
Haber, Ph.D., 1985, Professor of
History, Stanford University;
John
Mason Hart, Ph.D., 1970
(Co-Directed);
Hongzhu Huang, UCLA Post-Grad Fellow, 1995-1996,
Director of Financial
Research, Latin American Institute, Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing;
María
Herrera-Sobek, Ph.D. (co-directed), 1975, Luis Leal Chair of
Chicano
Studies, UC Santa Barbara;
Kristin
L. Johnson, UCLA Post-Doctoral Fellow, 1996-1997, Stanford University;
VISITING SCHOLARS & STUDENTS DIRECTED:
Doctoral Recipient (Ph.D.), Post-Doctoral (Post-Doc) Fellow, Post-Graduate
(Post-Grad) Fellow; Candidate in
Philosophy (C.Phil.)
Olga M. Lazin, Ph.D., 2001, UCLA Post-Doc,
2001-2002,
PROFMEX
Director of Globalization Studies;
Betsy L. Link, Ph.D., 1989, Curator of Legal
Research, California
Historical
Society;
David
E. Lorey, Ph.D., 1990, Program Officer for Latin America,
Hewlett
Foundation;
Chipasha
C. Luchembe, Ph.D. (co-directed), 1982, Universities of Botswana &
Zambia;
David Maciel, UCLA Visiting Scholar, 1999-2000,
Prof. History,
Cal
State Dominguez Hills;
Oscar
J. Martínez, Ph.D., 1975, Distinguished Professor of History,
University
of Arizona;
Salvador
Martínez della Rocco, UCLA Visiting Scholar,1989,
Professor
of Political Science, UNAM;
Jacqueline R. Miller, Ph.D., 1979,
Director, Historical Document
Restoration,
University of Virginia;
Thomas
M. Millington, UCLA Post-Doc, 1983, Chair and Professor of
Political
Science, Hobart and William Smith Colleges;
Esteban
Moctezuma Barragán, UCLA Visiting Scholar 2001-2002,
Mexico’s
Former Minister of Social Development;
Juan
Moreno-Pérez, Ph.D., 1997
Director
of Public Administration, Delegación Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City;
Aída
Mostkoff, Ph.D.. 1999, Assistant Professor, Santa Monica College;
Alejandro Mungaray-Lagarda, UCLA Post-Doc,
1998-1999, Professor of Economics,
Universidad
Autónoma de Baja California;
Enrique E. Ochoa, Ph.D., 1993, Associate Professor of History, and
Director of
Latin
American Studies, Cal State Los Angeles;
Alvaro
Ochoa-Serrano, Ph.D, 1998, Professor of History,
El Colegio de Michoacán, Zamora, Mexico;
Koobyoung
Park, Ph.D., 2000, Post-Doc, UCSD;
Adam
Perkal, C.Phil., 1984, President, European Banking Advisors, Mallorca, Spain;
Thurber Proffitt III, Ph.D., 1988, Visiting
Assistant Professor, SDSU;
James Platler, UCLA Visiting Scholar, 1998-1999,
Professor of Political Science,
Pepperdine
University, Malibu;
Peter L. Reich, Ph.D., 1991, Professor of Law,
Whittier School of Law, L.A.;
Miguel Angel Rivera Ríos, UCLA Visiting
Scholar, 1998-1999, 2001-2002
Professor
of Economics, UNAM;
Linda A. Rodríguez, Ph.D., 1981,
Associate Director,
UCLA
Latin American Center;
VISITING SCHOLARS & STUDENTS DIRECTED:
Doctoral Recipient (Ph.D.), Post-Doctoral (Post-Doc) Fellow, Post-Graduate
(Post-Grad) Fellow; Candidate in
Philosophy (C.Phil.)
Viejo
Sampovaara, UCLA Post-Grad Fellow, 1993-1994, Undersecretary of Trade, Foreign
Ministry of Finland, Helsinki;
Yuma
Sato, UCLA Post-Grad Fellow, 1996-1997, Doshisha University, Kyoto;
Samuel Schmidt, UCLA Post-Doc, 1982, Prof.,
Political Sci, Universidad
Autómoma
de Ciudad Juárez;
Eric Schantz, C.Phil., 1994, Border Research
Scholar;
Stanley
Shadle, Ph.D. (co-directed UCSB dissertation), 1990, Assistant
Professor
of History, Misericordia College;
Nadina
Simón Domínguez, UCLA Visiting Scholar, 2001-2002,
UNAM
Professor of Public Policy and Accountancy,
Former
President of Federación de Universidades Mexicanas;
Estela
Suárez-Aguilar Vergara, UCLA Visiting Scholar, 2000-2001,
Professor of Economics, UNAM;
José
Manuel Suárez Cors, UCLA Post-Grad Fellow, 1996-1997, Universidad
Anahuac,
Mexico City;
Charles
J. Theisen, C.Phil, 1998, Foreign Relations Director, Young Presidents
Association,
President, Mercedes Auto Exports, Phoenix;
Paul
R. Turovsky, Doctoral Research Fellow in Bolivia, 1977, Vice
President
for Finance, Bankers Trust,
Chicago;
Rosario
Varo-Berra, Ph.D., 1999, PROFMEX Book Review Editor;
Xiang
Wee, UCLA Post-Grad Fellow, 1995, University of Singapore;
Sergio
Zermeño, UCLA Visiting Fellow, 1988, UNAM;
Sengen
Zhang, UCLA Post-Grad Fellow, 1985-1986, Director, Latin American
Institute,
Beijing, China.
UCLA
Regents' Lecturers
Víctor
Paz Estenssoro (Bolivia), 1977
José
Figueres (Costa Rica), 1978
Benjamín
Núñez (Costa Rica), 1979
Rafael
Caldera (Venezuela), 1980
Fernando
Belaúnde Terry (Peru), 1985
Carlos
Serrate Reich (Bolivia), 1986
Romeo
Flores Caballero (Mexico), 1990
INTERVIEWS GRANTED BY WILKIE:
INT-1
1988 "Wilkie
on Wilkie," El Colegio de Economistas, Mexico City,
December 3 (seminar):
INT-2
1989
“Wilkie Entrevistado por Alberto Dallal," Radio UNAM, Mexico
City, May
17 (one-hour interview).
INT-3 1990a "'El
PRI, Reformable, Pero No de Un Solo Golpe' . . . Afirma
James
W. Wilkie," El Nacional (Mexico City), January 29, p. 7.
INT-4 1990b “El
ALC (Area de Libre Comercio No Debe Dar Dar Motivo a EU
(Estados
Unidos) Injerencias en México,” El Nacional (Mexico City),
November
15, p. 1.
INT-5
1990c "El
TLC Se Verá Influido por la Crisis del Golfo Pérsico: James
Wilkie," Interview
by Alicia Ortiz Rivera, Comercio Exterior Suplemento de El Economista
(Mexico City), November 27, p. vi.
INT-6
1991 "'El
TLC Tendrá Impacto en la Vida de México,' Afirma James
Wilkie,"
Excélsior
(Mexico City), June 13, p. 1.
INT-7
1994 "James
Wilkie, Mexico Studies and Current Border Issues," Interview
by Susannah Glusker, Voices of Mexico 26 (January),
pp.
58-60.
INT-8
1996a “Wilkie
Entrevistado por Miguel Angel Granados Chapa Sobre 17 Protagonistas
de la Epoca Constructiva de la Revolución Mexicana,”
Radio
UNAM, Mexico City, January 25 (half-hour interview.)
INT-9
1996b “Poner
en Manos de Entidades Privadas la Política Social, Propone James
Wilkie,” Headline News Article by Claudia Fernández,
El
Universal (Mexico City), November 25, 1996, p. 1.
1NT-10 1997 “Michoacán,
Modelo Político Plural y Ejemplo Nacional, [Reconoce
Wilkie],”
La Voz de Michoacán (Morelia), April 29, 1997, p. 1.
INT-11
1999a “Podría
Celace Ser Puente de Partidos—James Wilkie,” A.M.
(Guanajuato),
January 12, 1999), p. B3
INT-12
1999b “Perdidos en
Estados Unidos [Fondos del Seguro Social—Wilkie”]
El
Economista, January 26, 1999, p. 1.
Interviews Granted By Wilkie (Continued)
INT-13
1999c “Preparan
Foro de Ideas Innovadoras . . . Guanajuato Será Sede del
14 al 17 de Abril, del Evento que Dirige [James Wilkie, Presidente de]
la
Organización Mundial de Investigación sobre México—PROFMEX,
A.M. (Guanajuato), March 9, 1999, p. 1
INT-14 1999d “Exigen
Reactivar Préstamos. . . James Wilkie, de la UCLA, Advirtió que
si la Banca Sigue Sin Prestar, No Se Reactivará la Economía, Reforma
(Mexico City), April 14, 1999.
INT-15 1999e “Publicará
James Wilkie Biografía de Porfirio, A.M. (Guanajuato),
April
18.
INT-16 1999f “GRUMA, Líder en Revolución
de Alimentos: UCLA; Mejor Nutrición
con
Supertortilla: James Wilkie,”
UnoMásUno, May 15, 1999, p. 1.
INT-17 1999g “Trabajadores
Migrantes No Han Recuperado 350 Billones
de
Dólares que Dieron al Seguro [Social] de Estados
Unidos—-James
Wilkie,” UnoMásUno, May 29, 1999, p. 1.
INT-18 2000a “Wilkie
Entrevistado por Pedro Ferriz de Con, Mexico City TV/Radio
Simulcast
Interview Broadcast Nationwide, September 12.
INT-19 2000b “Apertura de Fronteras Sujeta a
Protección de Migrantes—[Wilkie],”
Voz de Michoacán
(Morelia), September 20.
INT-20 2000c “Sergio Villarreal Guajardo
Recibió Premio de PROFMEX,”
La Voz de Michoacán,
September 22.
INT-21 2000d “Acuerdan Protección a la
Seguridad Social y Fiscal de los
Migrantes—[Wilkie],” La
Voz de Michoacán, September 24.
WRITINGS:
Section I. Published Work
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No.; E=
Edited Book No.; N= News
Article No.; I= Introduction
No.; R= Review No.
For list of other abbreviations, see last page
1 R-1 "Review of San
Cristóbal de las Casas ,
by Sidney D. Markman, Sevilla:
Escuela
de Estudios Hispano-Americanos, 1963,” Hispanic American
Historical
Review 46:1 (1966), pp. 112.
2 A-1 "The Meaning of the
Cristero Religious War Against the Mexican
Revolution,"
Journal of Church and State 8:2 (Spring 1966), pp. 214-233.
3 R-2 "Review of Religion,
Revolution, and Reform: New Forces
for Change
in
Latin America, edited by
William V. D'Antonio and Frederick B. Pike,
New
York: Praeger, 1964," Journal
of Church and State 8:2 (1966),
pp. 274-277.
4 A-2 "Postulates of the Oral
History Center for Latin America," Journal of
Library
History 2:1 (January 1967), pp. 45-55.
5a B-1 The Mexican
Revolution: Federal Expenditure
and Social Change Since
1910. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967.
5b Item
5a, 2nd ed., revised, 1970.
5c "El
México Moderno," in
Cutberto Díaz Gómez (ed.), México: Sus
Necesidades,
Sus Recursos.
México, D.F.:
Editora Técnica, 1970,
pp.
62-72. Translation of "Conclusion" to item 5a, above.
5d "How
to Measure the Mexican Revolution," in Lewis Hanke (ed.), History
of
Latin American Civilization.
Boston: Little, Brown,
1973, II, pp.
469-481. Reprinted from pp. 35-39, 204-207,
276-285 in item 5b, above.
5e "How
Money was Allotted to the Faithful in the 'Revolutionary Family'
in
Mexico," in Lewis Hanke (ed.), History of Latin American
Civilization. Boston: Little, Brown, 1973.
II, pp. 639-641.
Reprinted
from pp. 8-9 in item 5b, above.
5f "How
to Measure the Mexican Revolution,"
in Lewis Hanke (ed.), Latin
America: A Historical Reader. Boston: Little, Brown, 1974, Chapter
65. Reprinted from item 5d, above.
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No.; E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
5g Item
5b translated into Spanish in published in item 41a, below.
6a E-1 Revolution in Mexico: Years of Upheaval, 1910-1940. New York: Knopf,
1969. (Coedited by James W. Wilkie and Albert
L. Michaels.)
6b Item
6a, 2d ed., (Tucson: University of
Arizona Press, 1984).
7 E-2 John Reed's Insurgent
Mexico. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1969.
(Coedited
by Albert L. Michaels and James W. Wilkie.) With a new Preface and
Bibliography Essay.
8a B-2 México Visto el
Siglo XX: Entrevistas de Historia
Oral: Ramón
Beteta,
Marte R. Gómez, Manuel Gómez Morín, Vicente Lombardo
Toledano,
Miguel Palomar y Vizcarra, Emilio Portes Gil, Jesús Silva Herzog. México,
D.F.: Distributed by Cuadernos
Americanos for the
Instituto
Mexicano de Investigaciones Económicas, 1969. (Co-authored
by James W. Wilkie and Edna Monzón
de Wilkie.)
8b "Ramón
Beteta, Político y Hacendista," Novedades, October 5, 1970.
Reprint
from Chapter 1, item 8a, above.
8c México
Visto en el Siglo XX: Entrevistas
con Manuel Gómez Morín.
México
D.F.: Editorial Jus, 1978. Reprint of Chapter 3, item 8a,
above.
8d Item
8c reprinted in 1989.
8e México
Visto en el Siglo XX: Entrevistas
con Vicente Lombardo
Toledano. México, D.F.: Partido Popular Socialista, 1982. Reprint of
Chapter
4, Item 8a, above.
8f Item
8e reprinted in 1994
8g "Lombardo
Toledano on Strikes and Strikers," in W. D. Raat, and W.H.
Beezely,
eds., Twentieth-Century Mexico
(Lincoln: University of
Nebraska
Press, 1986), pp. 181-184. Reprint from item 8a, pp. 311-315.
9 B-3 The Bolivian Revolution
and U.S. Aid Since 1952. Los
Angeles: UCLA
Latin
American Center Publications, 1969.
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No.; E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
10a A-3 "Statistical Indicators
of the Impact of National Revolution on the
Catholic
Church in Mexico, 1910-1967,"
Journal of Church and State
12:1
(Winter 1970), pp. 89-106.
10b Item
10a reprinted in item 24, below, pp. 55-63.
11 A-4 "On Methodology and the
Use of Historical Statistics," Latin American
Research
Review 5:1 (Spring 1970), pp. 87-91.
12a A-5 "La Ciudad de
México como Imán de la Población Económicamente
Activa,
1930-1965,"
in Bernardo García el al.
(eds.), Historia y Sociedad en
el
Mundo de Habla Española:
Homenaje a José Miranda. México, D.F.: El
Colegio
de México, 1970, pp. 379-395.
12b "Mexico
City as a Magnet for Mexico's Economically Active Population
1930-1965,"
translated in item 24, below, pp. 41- 51.
13a A-6 "Public Expenditure
Since 1952," in James M. Malloy and Richard S.
Thorn
(eds.), Beyond the Revolution:
Bolivia Since 1952. Pittsburgh:
University
of Pittsburgh Press, 1971, pp. 217-231.
13b Item
13a reprinted in item 24, below, pp. 89-97.
14a A-7 Bolivian Foreign
Trade: Historical Problems and MNR
Revolutionary
Policy,
1952-1964. Buffalo: Special Study No. 6, Council on
International
Studies, State University of New York, 1971.
14b Item
14a reprinted in item 24, below, pp. 67-86.
15 A-8 "New Approaches in
Contemporary Mexican Historical Research," in
Investigaciones
Contemporáneas Sobre Historia de México. México, D.F.:
UNAM,
El Colegio de México, UT Austin, 1971, pp. 637-648.
16a A-9 "New Hypotheses for
Statistical Research in Recent Mexican History,"
Latin
American Research Review 6:2 (Summer 1971), pp. 3-17.
16b Item
16a reprinted in item 24, below, pp. 27-37.
17
A-10 "Recent
United States-Mexican Relations:
Problems Old and New," in
Robert
H. Bremner, John Braeman, David Brody (eds.), Twentieth-Century
American
Foreign Policy. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1971,
pp.
378-419. (Co-authored by Lyle C.
Brown and James W. Wilkie.)
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No.; E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
18 R-3 "Review of Power and
Conflict in a Mexican Community: Ensenada, by
Antonio
Ugalde (Albuquerque: University of
New Mexico Press, 1970),"
Hispanic
American Historical Review 52:2 (1972), pp. 309- 312.
19a B-4 Elitelore. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center Publications,
1973.
19b Elitelore. Spanish-language translation: Jorge Balán (ed.), Las
Historias
de Vida en Ciencias Sociales:
Teoría y Técnica, Buenos
Aires: Nueva Visión, 1974, Segunda
Parte.
20 A-11 "Alternative
Views in History: (1) Historical
Statistics and (2) Oral
History,"
in Richard E. Greenleaf and Michael C. Meyer (eds.), Research
in
Mexican History. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1973, pp.
49-62.
21a
A-12 "Recentralization:
The Budgetary Dilemma in the Economic Development
of
Mexico, Bolivia, and Costa Rica," in David T. Geithman (ed.), Fiscal
Policy
for Industrialization and Development in Latin America.
Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1974, pp.
200- 247.
21b Item
21a reprinted in item 24, below, pp. 101-131.
21c "Recentralización: El Dilema Presupuestario en el
Desarrollo Económico
de
México, Bolivia y Costa Rica." Translated as Appendix I in item
41a,
below.
22 A-13 "El
Complejo Militar-Industrial en México durante la Década de 1930:
Diálogo
con el General Juan Andreu Almazán," Revista Mexicana de
Ciencia
Política 20:77 (1974),
pp. 59-65.
23 B-5 Measuring Land Reform: Bolivia, Venezuela, and Latin America. Los
Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center
Publications, 1974.
24 B-6 Statistics and National
Policy. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American
Center
Publications, 1974.
[Original research in
Parts I and III;
Part II includes reprints
of items 10, 12, 13, 14, 16, 21.]
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No.; E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
25
A-14 "On
Quantitative History: The Poverty
Index for Mexico," Latin
American
Research Review 10:1 (Spring 1975), pp. 63-75.
26 Latin
American Studies at UCLA: A Guide
to Degree Programs and
Participating
Faculty. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center
Publications,
1975.
27
A-15 "Dimensions
of Elitelore: An Oral History
Questionnaire," Journal of
Latin
American Lore 1:1 (1975), pp. 79-101.
(Co-authored by Edna Monzón
de
Wilkie.)
28 Abstracts: Sixth National Meeting, Atlanta,
Georgia, March 24-28, 1976.
Gainesville: Latin American Studies Association,
1976. (Edited volume).
29 E-3 Contemporary Mexico: Papers of the IV International Congress
of
Mexican
History. Berkeley and
México, D.F.: University of
California
Press
and El Colegio de México, 1976.
(Coedited by James W. Wilkie,
Michael
C. Meyer, and Edna Monzón de Wilkie.)
30 E-4 Statistical Abstract of
Latin America 17 (1976).
(Coedited by P. Turovsky.)
31 "Final
Report, Program Committee, Sixth National Meeting, Atlanta,
March
24-28, 1976," Latin
American Studies Association Newsletter,
September
1976, pp. 40-60.
32
A-16 "Mexico: Permanent 'Revolution,' Permanent
'Crisis,'" Los Angeles
Times,
December 5, 1976, p. VIII-17.
33a
A-17 "Pulling,
Hauling Mark Mexico's Land Reform,"
Los Angeles Times,
December
26, 1976, p. VI-3.
33b "Pulling,
Hauling Mark Mexico's Land Reform," Ag World, February 1977.
Reprint
of item 33a, above.
34
A-18 "Cinemalore: 'State of Siege' as a Case
Study," Journal of Latin
American
Lore 2:2 (1976), pp. 221-238.
(Co-authored by Daniel Geffner,
and
James W. Wilkie.)
35 E-5 Quantitative Latin
American Studies: Methods and
Findings. Los
Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center
Publications, 1977. (Coedited by
James
W. Wilkie and Kenneth Ruddle.)
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No.; E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
36
A-19 "Projecting
the HEC (Health, Education, and Communication) Index for
Latin
America Back to 1940," Chapter 4 in item 35 (Co- authored by
James
W. Wilkie and Maj-Britt Nielsson.)
37 E-6 Money and Politics in
Latin America. Los
Angeles: UCLA Latin American
Center
Publications, 1977.
38 E-7 Statistical Abstract of
Latin America 18 (1977).
(Coedited by James W.
Wilkie
and Peter Reich.)
39
A-20 "A
Social Census Questionnaire for Latin American Nations," Chapter 33,
in
item 38, above. (Co-authored by
James W. Wilkie, John C. Super and
Edna
Monzón de Wilkie.)
40
A-21 "Testimony
on Recent Developments in Mexico and Their Economic
Implications
for the United States,"
Hearings Before the Subcommittee
on
Inter-American Relationships of the Joint Economic Committee of the
Congress
of the United States, January 17, 1977, Washington, D.C.:
Government
Printing Office, 1977, pp. 3-17 and 67-84.
41a B-7 La Revolución
Mexicana (1910-1976): Gasto
Federal y Cambio Social.
México,
D.F.: Fondo de Cultura
Económica, 1978.
[Original research covering 1964-1976;
translation of research on
period up to 1963 presented in item 5b, above;
Appendix A is reprint of
item 21c]
41b Item
41a, reprinted, 1988.
42
A-22 "The
Status of Quantitative Research on Latin America," Latin American
Review
13:1 (1978), pp. 288-294.
43
N-1 "Report
of the Committee on Historical Statistics," Newsletter,
Conference
on Latin American History 14:1 (1978), pp. 19-22.
44a E-8 Statistical Abstract of
Latin America 19 (1978) (Coedited by James W.
Wilkie
and Peter Reich.)
44b "On
the Accuracy of Statistics and Time-Series Data," Preface in item 44a.
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No.; E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
45
A-23 "Elitelore
and Folklore: Theory and a Test
Case in 'One Hundred Years
of
Solitude,'" Journal of Latin American Lore 4:2 (1978), pp. 183-223.
(Co-authored
by James W. Wilkie, María Herrera-Sobek and Edna Monzón de
Wilkie.)
46 I-1 "Introduction,"
in María Herrera-Sobek, The Bracero Experience:
Elitelore
versus Folklore (Los Angeles:
UCLA Latin American Center
Publications,
1979), pp. 1-9.
47 R-4 "Review of Authoritarianism
in Mexico, edited by
José Luis Reyna and
Richard
S. Weinert (Philadelphia:
Institute for the Study of Human
Issues,
1977)," Hispanic American Historical Review, 59:3 (1979), pp.
493-497.
48 E-9 Elitelore as a New Field
of Inquiry: Influences of the
Novel, Film,
and
Oral History on National Policy Decisions in Latin America. Los
Angeles: Pacific Basin Economic Research Center,
UCLA Graduate School
of
Management, 1979. (Coedited by
James W. Wilkie and Edna Monzón de
Wilkie.)
49 E-10 Statistical Abstract of Latin America
20 (1980). (Coedited by James W.
Wilkie
and Peter Reich.)
50 R-5 "Review of Labyrinths
of Power: Political Recruitment in
Twentieth-Century
Mexico, by Peter H. Smith,
(Princeton, N.J.:
Princeton
University Press, 1979)," Hispanic American
Historical
Review, 61:1 (1981), pp. 121-124.
51 E-11 Statistical Abstract of Latin America
21 (1981). (Coedited by James W.
Wilkie
and Stephen Haber.)
52a
A-24 "Quantifying
the Class Structure of Mexico, 1895-1970," Chapter 36 in
item
51, above. (Co-authored by James
W. Wilkie and Paul D. Wilkins.)
52b Item
52a translated and reprinted in Enrique Florescano, ed., Ensayos
sobre
Historia de la Población de México (México, D.F.: Instituto
Nacional
de Antropología e Historia, 1988).
53
A-25 "Evita
as Theater: From Elitelore to
Folklore," Journal of
Latin
American
Lore 7:1 (1981), pp. 99-140. (Co-authored by Monica
Menell-Kinberg.)
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No. E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
54 "Letter
on Behalf of the Consortium of Latin American Studies Programs
and
the Latin American Studies Association Requesting the Establishment
of
a U.S. AID Historical Office," LASA Newsletter, June 1981, pp.
11-12.
55a
A-26 "The Problem
of Octavio Paz's View of Mexico Today," in Two Essays on
Latin
American Political Myths: Octavio
Paz and Che Guevara. Buffalo:
Council
on International Studies, State University of New York, 1981,
pp.
1-18.
55b Item
55a reprinted as "The Historical View of Octavio Paz: A Critique
of
the Washington Address," in New Scholar, vol. 9 (1984), pp. 1-11.
56
A-27 "Discotecas
vs. Revolution in Latin America,"
Billboard Spotlight on
Latin
America III, October 1981, p. 1.
57
E-12 Statistical
Abstract of Latin America 22 (1982). (Coedited by
James
W. Wilkie and Stephen Haber.)
58
A-28 "Mexico's
'New' Financial Crisis of 1982 in Historical Perspective,"
Preface
in item 57, above.
59
A-29 "The
Management and Mismanagement of National and International
Statistical
Resources in the Americas,"
Chapter 41 in item 57, above.
59a Item
59, reprinted in Public Policy Issues and Latin American Library
Resources
(Madison, Wis.: Seminar on the
Acquisition of Latin American
Library
Materials, University of Wisconsin, 1984). pp. 134- 143.
60 UC
MEXUS: Resources and Programs
(Los Angeles: UC Consortium on
Mexico and
the United States, 1982.
61
A-30 "U.S.
Foreign Policy and Economic Assistance in Bolivia, 1948-1976,"
in
Jerry R. Ladman (ed.), Modern-Day Bolivia. Tempe: Arizona State
University
Press, 1982, pp. 83-121.
62
A-31 "Conflicting
'National Interests' Between and Within Mexico and the
United
States," in Carlos Vásquez and Manuel García y Griego
(eds.),
Mexican-U.S.
Relations: Conflict and
Convergence (Los Angeles: UCLA
Chicano
Studies Research Center Publications and UCLA Latin American
Center
Publications, 1983), Chapter 1, pp. 29-42.
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No. E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
63
A-32 "Problems
and Processes of Developing Research on a 'New' Area: The
United
States-Mexico Border," in
Stanley R. Ross (ed.), Ecology and
Development
of the Border Region (Mexico, D.F.: Asociación Nacional de
Universidades
e Institutos de Enseñanza Superior, 1983), pp. 301-304.
64 "Economic
Development and Nation State in Latin America, 1850-1930,"
Report
on Session at American Historical Association Meeting, San
Francisco,
Dec. 28, 1983, Hispanic Historical Review 64:3
(1964),
pp. 625-627.
65
E-13 Statistical
Abstract of Latin America 23 (1984).
(Coedited by James W.
Wilkie
and Adam Perkal.)
66
A-33 "On
Defining the Concepts of Latin America, The Caribbean, and
Economically
Questionable Nations (EQNs)."
Preface (pp. vii-xxv) in
item
65, above.
67
A-34 "New
Research on Food Production in Latin America Since 1952," Chapter
35
(pp. 733-781) in item 65, above. (Co-authored by James W. Wilkie and
Manuel
Moreno-Ibáñez.)
68
A-35 "Latin
American Food and Population in the Era of Land Reform Since the
1950s"
in John C. Super and Thomas C. Wright (eds.), Food, Politics,
and
Society in Latin America (Lincoln:
University of Nebraska Press,
1985),
pp.
65-105. (Co-authored by James W.
Wilkie and Manuel Moreno-
Ibáñez).
69
A-36 "An
Interview with Woodrow Borah," Hispanic American Historical Review
65:3
(1985), pp. 401-441. (Co-authored
by James W. Wilkie and Rebecca
Horn).
70a
A-37 "Borrowing as
Revenue: The Case of Mexico,
1935-1982, The Mexican
Forum
5:2 (1985), pp. 3-7.
70b Item
70a reprinted in item 90a, below, chapter 3.
71
E-14 Statistical
Abstract of Latin America 24 (1985).
(Coedited by James W.
Wilkie
and Adam Perkal.)
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No.; E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
72
A-38 "Changes
in Mexico Since 1895: Central
Government Revenue, Public
Sector
Expenditures, and National Economic Growth," Chapter 34 (pp. 861-
880)
in item 71, above.
73a
A-39 "The Dramatic
Growth of Mexico's Economy and the Rise of Statist
Government
Power, 1910-1982," The Mexican Forum 5:4 (1985), pp. 33- 40.
73b Item
73a reprinted in item 90a, below, chapter 4.
73c Item
73a translated into Chinese and reprinted in Latin American Data
(Beijing)
4 (1989), pp. 69-89.
74 E-15 Rules of the Game and Games Without
Rule in Border Life; III Symposium
of
United States and Mexican Universities. Mexico, D.F.:
ANUIES and
PROFMEX,
1985. (Coedited by Mario Miranda
and James W. Wilkie.)
75
A-40 "La
Rivoluzione Messicana e la Sua Eredita," in Nicola Tranfaglia and
Massimo
Firpo, eds., La Storia - I Grandi Problemi dal Medioevo all'Eta
Contemporanea,
Vol. IX, n. 4 (Torino: Unione
Tipografico- Editrice
Torinese,
1986), pp. 56-72.
76
R-6 "Review
of Man, Land, and Water; Mexico's Farmland Irrigation
Policies, 1885-1911 , by Clifton B. Kroeber (Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1983)," Pacific Historical Review 55:3 (1986),
pp. 483-484..
77 N-2
"Obituary: Stanley R. Ross
(1921-1985)," Hispanic American Historical
Review 66:2 (1986), pp. 341-345.
--a n-3 "Letter from
PROFMEX President Wilkie," Mexico
Policy News 1 (Spring 1986), p. 1-2.
78
E-16 Statistical
Abstract of Latin America 25 (1987).
(Coedited by James W.
Wilkie and David E. Lorey.)
79
A-41 "Views
of Latin America's Reality," Preface (pp. ix-xxvi), in item 78
above.
_____________
a. Missing number
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No.; E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R =Review No.
80
A-42 "Bolivia: Ironies in the National Revolutionary
Process, 1952-1986,"
Chapter
35 (pp. 911-928) in item 78 above.
81
A-43 "The
'I' as 'We' in Elitelore: The
Merging of Individual and Collective Lores," Journal of Latin American Lore
13:1 (1987) PP. 3-26.
(Co-authored
by David E. Lorey and James W. Wilkie.)
82 E-17
Statistical Abstract of Latin America 26 (1988). (Coedited by
James W.
Wilkie,
David E. Lorey, and Enrique C. Ochoa.)
83a
A-44 "From
Economic Growth to Economic Stagnation in Mexico: Statistical
Series
for Understanding Pre- and Post-1982 Changes," Chapter 35 (pp.
913-936)
in item 82 above.
83b Item
83a revised, translated, and reprinted in El Economista Mexicano
20.4/5
(1989), pp. 61-96.
84
E-18 Estudios
Cuantitativos sobre la Historia de México (México, D.F.:
Universidad
Nacional Autónoma de México, 1988). (Co-edited by Samuel
Schmidt,
James W. Wilkie, and Manuel Esparza.) (Introduction by Wilkie.)
85
E-19 Statistical
Abstract of Latin America 27 (1989). (Coedited by
James W. Wilkie and Enrique C. Ochoa.)
86
A-45 "The
Mexican Financial Imbroglio Since 1982: Debt, Public Expenditure,
and
Nationalized Banking," chapter 37 in item 85, above.
87a
A-46 "First Class
Stereotypes: Conversations on Delta Flights, LAX-MEX, 1988," New
World 3:1-2 (1988-1989), pp. 1-8.
87b Item
87a expanded and translated into Spanish as Part 1 of item 89, below.
87c "El
Fabricante de Retretes," extracted from item 87b, and published in
Nexos
(Mexico City) 137 (May 1989), pp.
14-15.
88
A-47 "Mexico's
Distorted Expenditures in the Public Debt and a Two-Part
Proposal
for Relief," Mexico Policy News 3 (Winter 1989), pp.
4
and 12.
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No. E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
89
A-48 "La
Problemática Mexicana: Retrospectiva y Prospectiva," Revista
Mexicana de Sociología
51:1 (2/1989), pp. 481-506.
[Part 1 is reprinted from item
87a, above;
part 2 is original.]
90a E-20 Society and Economy in Mexico (Los
Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center
Publications, 1990).
90b
“Preface,” in Item 90a translated into Chinese and published
in
Latin America (Beijing: 1991, no. 5), pp. 45-49.
91
A-49 "Six
Ideological Phases in Mexico's 'Permanent Revolution' Since 1910,"
pp. 1-69, in item 90a, above.
92
E-21 Statistical
Abstract of Latin America 28 (1990). (Coedited by
James
W. Wilkie, Enrique C. Ochoa, and David E. Lorey)
93 N-4 "PROFMEX
Interview with Sinaloa Governor Francisco Labastida Ochoa,"
Mexico
Policy News 4 (Spring 1990), pp. 1-3. (Co-authored by James W. Wilkie
and Paul Ganster.)
94 N-5 "Refocusing
Interpretation on the Mexican Political Economy,"
Mexico
Policy News 4 (Spring 1990),
p. 18.
95 E-22 Industria y Trabajo en México
(México, D.F.: UAM-A, 1990).
(Co-edited
by James W. Wilkie and Jesús Reyes Heroles González Garza.)
96 A-50
"Contexto de la Crisis Mexicana: La Política y la
Economía en el México de
Posguerra" (Co-authored by Jeffrey Bortz and James W. Wilkie),
pp. 17-29 in 95, above.
97 N-6 "PROFMEX Interview with
Oaxaca Governor Heladio Ramírez López,"
Mexico 5 (Summer 1990), pp. 11-12. (Co-authored by James W. Wilkie and David E. Lorey.)
98 N-7 "PROFMEX Interview with PRI
Secretary of Foreign Relations,
Romeo
Flores Caballero, Mexico
Policy News 5 (Summer 1990), pp.
16-17. (Co-authored by James W. Wilkie and Edna Monzón.)
99 N-8 "Letter from PROFMEX President James
Wilkie," Mexico Policy News 5 (Summer
1990), p. 20.
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No. E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
100
N-9 “The
Health, Education, and Communication (HEC) Index for Latin America Since
1940, Latin American Studies (Beijing: 1990, no. 6), pp. 59-60.
1O1 N-10 "PROFMEX Interview with
Mexican Consul General Pescador,"
Mexico
Policy News 6 (Spring 1991), pp. 15-17. (Co-authored by James W. Wilkie,
Paul Ganster, and James Platler.)
102
N-11 "PROFMEX
Interview with Regional Planner Miguel Sandoval,"
Mexico Policy News 6 (Spring
1991), pp. 18-19. (Co-authored by James W. Wilkie
and David E. Lorey.)
103
A-51 “Images
in the Context of U.S. Policy Relations with Mexico,” pp. 17-56 in
Imágenes
Recíprocas: La Educación en las Relaciones México-Estado Unidos,
ed. by Paul Ganster and Mario Miranda (México, D.F: UAM-A, 1991).
104
N-12 "Council
on Foundations Study Tour of Mexico Led by UCLA,"
Mexico Policy News 6 (Spring
1991), p. 14. (Unsigned.)
105
N-13 "Scholars
for Free Trade With Mexico," Mexico Policy News 6
(Spring
1991), pp. 8-9. (Co-authored by 24 U.S. scholars, listed in alphabetical
order, including James W. Wilkie.)
106a
A-52 “The
Political Agenda in Opening Mexico’s Economy: Salinas Versus the Caciques,”
Mexico Policy News 6 (Spring
1991), pp. 11-13. [Part 1 of 2 parts; for continuation see item 107a, below.]
106b
Item 106a translated into Spanish and published in item 107b, below.
106c Item 106a translated
into Chinese and published in Chinese Journal of Social
Science (Beijing: 1992, no. 2), 30-35.
107a
A-53 "Free Trade for
Mexico: Imposition from the Top of Demand from Below?
Mexico Policy News 7 (Winter
1992), pp. 15-16. [Part 2 of
Political Agenda; for Part 1, see item 106a,
above.]
107b Items 106a and 107a translated
into Spanish and published as
“Comercio Libre Para
México: ¿Imposición o Demanda? in
Revista Mexicana de
Sociología 53:3 (1991), pp. 3-14.
Items A= Research Article No.; B= Book No. E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
108
N-14 "PROFMEX
Presidential Activities in E. Europe and N. America,"
Mexico Policy News 7
(Winter 1992), pp. 5-9.
109
E-23 Statistical
Abstract of Latin America 29 (Parts 1 and 2, 1992).
(Coedited by James W. Wilkie and Carlos
Alberto Contreras.)
110
N-15 "PROFMEX:
Nuevos Enfoques para la Investigación," COMECSO Informa (Consejo
Mexicano de Ciencias Sociales, no. 5 (1992), p. 1, 6
111
N-16 "Project on
Multilateral Philanthropy: Mexican-U.S. Model for Nonprofit Funds Parallels NAFTA Agreement for
Private Sector," Mexico Policy News 8 (Fall 1992), pp. 36-37. (Unsigned.)
112
N-17 "PROFMEX
Interview with Chief of Mexican Consular Corps Eduardo Ibarrola," Mexico Policy News
8 (Fall 1992), pp. 24-26.
113
E-24 Statistical
Abstract of Latin America 30 (Parts 1 and 2, 1993). (Coedited
by James W. Wilkie, and Christof Anders Weber.)
114
A-54 "The Mexican
Case Since 1989 as a Model for World Development and the Globalization of PROFMEX," Mexico
Policy News 9 (Fall 1993), pp.
1,4.
115
N-18 "Mexico's
New Nonprofit Sector to be Advised by Council of Foundations and Society of Fund Raising
Executives/Mexico," Mexico Policy News 9 (Fall 1993), pp. 12-14.
(Unsigned.)
116
N-19 "Pending
U.S.-Mexican Tax Convention and Nonprofit Sectors,"
Mexico Policy News 9 (Fall 1993), p. 1, 4-5. (Unsigned.)
117
N-20 "Pro-NAFTA in Quotes," Mexico
Policy News 9 (Fall 1993), pp.
47-48. (Unsigned.)
118
N-21 "Why Japan Wins if Perot's
Anti-NAFTA Policies Prevail," Mexico Policy News 9 (Fall 1993), p. 52. (Co-authored by
George Baker, Paul Ganster, Stephen Jenner, and James Wilkie.)
119
A-55 "Mexican
Migration to the United States and the Possibilities of
Bilateral Cooperation: Four Conceptual Frameworks" (Co-authored by
Manuel García y Griego and James W. Wilkie), in Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. and
Lorenzo Meyer, Mexico and the United States: Neighbors in Crisis ( San
Bernadino, CA: Borgo Press, 1993), pp. 83-103.
Items
A= Research
Article No.; B= Book No.; E= Edited Book No.; N= News Article No.; I= Introduction No.; R= Review No.
For list of other abbreviations, see last
page.
120a
I-2
"Introduction," in Samuel Schmidt and David Lorey,
Policy Recommendations for Managing
the El Paso-Ciudad Juárez
Metropolitan Area (PROFMEX Urban Studies Series; El
Paso: El Paso Community Foundation
and UTEP Center for Inter American and Border Studies (1994), p. 2.
120b
“Introducción,”
translation of item 120a, above, Recomendación de
Cursos de Acción para la Administración del Area Metropolitana de
El Paso/Ciudad Juárez (PROFMEX Serie de Estudios Urbanos: El Paso:
Centro de Estudios Inter Americanos y Fronterizos, UTEP y
El Paso Community Foundation, 1994.
121
B-8 La
Estadística Económica en México. Los Orígenes
(México, D.F.: Siglo XXI
Editores, 1994. (Co-authored by Sergio de
la Peña and James W. Wilkie.)
122
A-56 “Primera Reforma
Agraria en México, 1853-1909, A Través de la Estadística Nacional” in
item 121, above, pp. 129-193.
123
N-22 “Report from the
PROFMEX Executive Committee,” PROFMEX Letter 1
(November 1944), pp. 1-4. (Co-authored
by Paul Ganster, Arturo Grunstein, Sylvia Ortega Salazar, James
F. Platler, James W. Wilkie.)
124
N-23 “Mexican National
Lottery Sponsors Eastern European Connection to Mexico’s Model for Globalizing
Nonprofit Sectors,“ PROFMEX
Letter 2 (December 1994), p. 5. (Unsigned article
by James W. Wilkie and
Olga M. Lazin, summary of RR6, below.)
125 E-25 Statistical Abstract of Latin America
31 (Parts 1 and 2, 1995).
(Coediters
James W. Wilkie, Carlos Alberto Contreras, and Cathlene
Komisaruk.)
126a
A-57 "Mexico as
Linchpin for Free Trade in the Americas," in item 125,
above. (Coauthored by James W. Wilkie
and Olga M. Lazin.)
126b Item 126a reprinted as Chapter 1
in item 128, below.
Items
A= Research No.; B=Book No.; E=Edited Book No.; N=News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R=Review No.
For list of other abbreviations, see last
page.
126c Item 126a translated as "México Como Punta de Lanza para el Libre
Comerio en las Américas," in Jesús Arroyo Alejandre
and David E. Lorey,
Ajustes y Desajustes Regionales: El
Caso de Jalisco a Fines del Sexenio Salinista (Guadalajara:
Universidad de Guadalajara y UCLA Program on Mexico, 1995), pp. 47-111.
127 B-9 Vol 1 of Frente a la Revolución Mexicana: 17
Protagonistas de la Etapa
Constructiva, by James W.
Wilkie and Edna Monzón Wilkie
(México, D.F.: UAM-A), 4 volumes
Coordinating Editor: Rafael
Rodríguez Castañeda):
Vol
1. Intelectuales: Luis Chávez Orozco, Daniel Cosío Villegas,
José
Muñoz Cota, Jesús Silva Herzog (1995)
128
E-26 México
y las Américas, eds. Jesús Arroyo Alejandre, Carlos
Pallán, James W. Wilkie (Guadalajara: ANUIES, PROFMEX, Universidad de Guadalajara, 1996).
129 E-27
Statistical Abstract
of Latin America 32, 1996
(Coedited
by James W. Wilkie, Cathlene Komisaruk,
José
Guadalupe Ortega.)
130 R-7 “Review
of La Hacienda Pública y la Política Económica,
1929-1958
by Enrique Cárdenas (México, D.F.:
Fidecomiso Historia de las Americas,
El Colegio de México, Fondo de Cultura
Económico, 1994),” in
American Historical Review, 101; 5, December 1996, pp. 1659-1660.
131 E-28 Statistical Abstract
of Latin America 33, 1997
(Coediters by James W.
Wilkie and José Guadalupe Ortega).
132 E-29 Integrating
Cities and Regions: North America Faces Globalization,
Codited by James W. Wilkie and Clint E. Smith (Guadalajara y
Los Angeles: University of Guadalajara, UCLA Program on Mexico,
Centro Internacional ‘Lucas Alamán’ para el Crecimiento Económico,
1998
133a A-58 “On Studying Cities and
Regions: Real and Virtual,”
pp.
525-544, “Afterword” in item 132, above,
133b Translation
of item 133, pp. 545-566, in item 132, above.
Items
A= Research No.; B=Book No.; E=Edited Book No.; N=News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R=Review No.
For list of other abbreviations, see last
page.
134 E-30 Statistical Abstract
of Latin America 34, 1998
(Coedited by
James
W. Wilkie, Eduardo Alemán, and José Guadalupe Ortega).
135 I-3 “Prefacio: Las Conferencias
PROFMEX 1996 de Beijing en el Contexto
de
los Bloques Comerciales Emergentes en el Mundo,” pp. 15-17 in Oscar
González Cuevas, ed., México Frente a la Modernización
de China (México, D.F.:Limusa-Noriega Editores y Universidad
Autónoma de Azcapotzalco, 1999).
136 A-59
“Globalización Fast-Track y el Surigmiento de Libre
Comercio
(ALC)
y Corporaciones Transglobales (CTG) Virtuales” (including a case study on
China, co-authored with Olga M. Lazin), pp. 307-359, in
Oscar
González Cuevas, ed., México Frente a la Modernización
de China (México, D.F.:Limusa-Noriega Editores y Universidad
Autónoma de Azcapotzalco, 1999).
137 E-31 Statistical Abstract
of Latin America 35, 1999
(Coedited by
James
W. Wilkie, Eduardo Alemán, and José Guadalupe Ortega).
138 N-24 “México:
Líder del TCL de las Américas—[Wilkie],” El
Economista
(Mexico City Daily), March 3, 1999.
139 N-25
“Revoluciones Verdes,” UnoMásUno, June 13, 1999, pp. 13-15
140
E-32 México
y el Mundo (México, D.F.: ANUIES, PROFMEX,1999)
(Co-edited
by James W. Wilkie, Alejandro Mungrary,
Jesús
Arroyo Alejandre.)
141
I-4 .“Presentación:
El Modelo Mexicano en el Desarrollo Global y el
Caso
de Michoacán, pp. 15-22 in item 140, above.
142
A-60 El
Caso de Michoacán y Su Lugar en el Mundo: El Reto de Conocer
las
Regiones de México en Tiempos de Constante Cambio,” pp. 46-50
in
item 140, above.
Items
A= Research No.; B=Book No.; E=Edited Book No.; N=News Article No.;
I= Introduction No.; R=Review No.
For list of other abbreviations, see last
page.
143
E-33 Statistical
Abstract of Latin America 36, 2000
(Coedited by
James
W. Wilkie, Eduardo Alemán, and José Guadalupe Ortega).
144
N-26 “[Wilkie
y PROFMEX] Piden Beneficios para Migrantes,” Reforma
(Mexico
City), July 8, 2000. Press Conference.
145 A-61 “El ‘Modelo’ de Mexico Visto
Desde Afuera: 13
Pasos Más Allá
de la Teoría de
“Mexicanización”
Ofrecida Por el Yugoslavo
Bogdan Denitch,” Mexico and the World
5:3 (Summer 2000),
www.profmex.com
146
E-34 Statistical Abstract of Latin America
37, 2000 (Coedited by
James
W. Wilkie, Eduardo Alemán, and José Guadalupe Ortega.)
147 A-62 “A Proportional Approach to
Measuring the U.S.-Latin American
GDP ‘Gap’ Since 1940.” pp
1045-1082 in item 145 above. (Co-Author Michael Ray.)
148
B-10 Vol 2. of Frente a la
Revolución Mexicana: 17 Protagonistas de la Etapa
Constructiva, by James W. Wilkie
and Edna Monzón Wilkie
(México, D.F.: