Our Students
First Year Students
Jackie Torres
Tristin Bautista
Continuing Students
Adela Arriola
University of California, Berkeley, B.A. in Global Studies with concentration in Global Societies and Cultures
Hometown: Lawndale, CA
Adela is interested in exploring the relationship between social issues and the production of visual culture to understand how Latin American and diasporic communities engage with art to empower and preserve their cultural identities. She is particularly interested in the public and institutional presentation and representation of materials from marginalized Latinx communities.
Anthony Lawrence Zetino
University of California, Los Angeles, B.A. in History
Hometown: Los Angeles, CA
Anthony is a historian with experience in Area Studies. His undergraduate studies were centered on the history of the MENA region and Central/South Asia. Anthony focused on the effects of imperialism on these regions, particularly its impact on the material and social conditions within these areas. Previously, Anthony has done research on the history of homosexuality in the MENA region and the institutionalization of homophobia due to colonial influence. Anthony seeks to bring these perspectives to his analysis of Latin American conditions, as well as researching the forms in which resistance has manifested in the face of imperialism and oppression, regionally and within a connected global context.
Kady Drorbaugh
Bard College, BA in Historical Studies and Spanish Studies
Hometown: Seattle, WA
Kady is seeking to delver further into the study of Indigenous, Spanish and Afro-Latinx accounts of Spanish colonization to explore historical narratives, their formation and their impact on dominant perspectives regarding historical periods and events. She hopes to combine this academic focus with the Master in Library and Information Studies to explore how historical archives and libraries, as well as the ease of access to the information they contain, impact collective historical consciousness.
Luis Enrique Arguelles
University of California, Davis. B.A. in English & Chicanx Studies
Hometown: Oceanside, CA
Luis is interested in researching the land struggles that took place in Oaxaca's Valles Centrales region long after the Mexican revolution. He is also interested in seeing how, if at all, these land struggles influenced transnational migration patterns, and how this history is retold and preserved.
Mati Castillo
University of Pittsburgh, BA in Anthropology and Spanish, Minor in Museum Studies
Hometown: Oxnard, CA
Mati is interested in the representation of Latinx people and their history within US monuments and museums. Through collaboration and community based participatory research, she hopes to give people the opportunity to be the stewards of their own culture and have greater input in how their stories are told. She is also completing a Master's in Library and Information Science.
Sydney Johnson
University of South Dakota, B.A. in Spanish & Journalism
Hometown: Omaha, NE
The importance of women in Latin American cultures from indigenous to modern day and how that has changed with the introduction of different forms of media such as art, film, music, etc.
Recent Graduates
Abigail Weinberg
New York University, Journalism and Spanish
Hometown: Boston, MA
Abigail has researched the medieval influences on early modern maps of colonial Latin America. She is interested in visual culture, cartography, and transportation policy. Abigail's thesis is available here.
Alejandra Rios Gutierrez
B.S. in International Studies & Business Administration (International Business & Economics), Saint Louis University
Hometown: Guadalajara, MX and Aurora, IL
Alejandra is interested in exploring social and spatial justice issues in Latin American cities. As part of the dual degree program, she is also completing a degree in Urban Planning where she focuses on transportation planning. Alejandra hopes to combine her interests by engaging in comparative urban planning to learn better strategies for planning equitable and just cities.
Amanda Gormsen
B.A. in Environmental Policy and B.B.A in Finance, William & Mary
Hometown: Washington, DC
Amanda is interested in environmental studies and urban planning in Latin America with a focus on climate change mitigation/adaptation and environmental justice. She is part of the dual degree program with Urban Planning.
Andrew Edwards
BS in Sociology with Spanish minor, Portland State University; MA in Gender Studies, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Hometown: Salem, OR
Andrew focuses on Latin American intellectual history, especially that of feminism and class struggle. He is also interested in populism, migration, and empire as they play out within Latin America and across the Western Hemisphere.
Cesar Ovando
California State University, Dominguez Hills, B.A in History (with a minor in Anthropology and Indigenous Peoples of the America
Hometown: Riverside, California
Cesar is interested in researching the mechanisms of cultural resistance and adaptations that the Highland Guatemala Maya communities persisted against Spanish colonialism during the 16th-18th century. He intends to approach his research through an interdisciplinary lens by incorporating historical, archaeological, ethnographic, gender/sexuality studies, and comparative literature methods. Cesar's thesis is available here.
Christina Rodriguez
University of California, Riverside B.A. in Psychology; University of California, Los Angeles M.S.S.
Hometown: San Francisco, California
Christina's research interests are the mental health and well-being of Indigenous Mayan women in Guatemala and how culture and traditions can help or influence these outcomes.
Cristian Reyes
B.A. in History, UC Irvine, JD/MBA, Southwestern Law School
Hometown: La Verne, California
Cristian is interested in studying the experiences of early modern Afro-descendant peoples living within the Spanish Atlantic World. Utilizing methods from anthropology and literary studies, he hopes to explore the ways in which Afro-Latin Americans deployed multiple, overlapping identities to carve out spaces of freedom within the confines of Spanish colonial rule.
Dayra Lopez Magana
BA in English, minor in Portuguese - University of California, Los Angeles
Hometown: Ontario, CA
Dayra is highly interested in researching transnational migration between Latin American countries and the United States. More specifically, she hopes to learn about how these physical movements across borders create social movements that influence racial, ethnic, gender, and sexuality discourses.
Dulce María López
Media Studies B.A. and Practice of Art Minor at UC Berkeley
Hometown: Tolimán, Jalisco, México
Dulce is an artivist and immigrant who is interested in culture-shaping initiatives and their impact on social, environmental, and economic justice in rural communities with the goal of addressing forced migration. Dulce plans to utilize her research not only to continue expanding on her political art strategies but also to enrich collaborations with transnational organizations that support and preserve rural and immigration-impacted areas.
Dylan Dornfeld
International Studies Major, University of Oregon
Hometown: Salem, OR
Dylan's research focuses on communal governing practices in the Sierra Norte region of Oaxaca, denominated "usos y costumbres" by the Mexican state. He is interested in exploring the ways in which indigenous communal governance reinforces cultural identity, connection to the land and the protection of natural resources.
Dylan's thesis is available here.
Elisa Nesi Rocha
Social Sciences at Fundação Getulio Vargas and Business at Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Hometown: Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
Elisa is a published researcher and marketing professional specialized in accessible beauty brands. With a broad education and professional actuation, her interests are the relationships between social movements, the empowerment of black women, and the market of beauty products. With a background of the Brazillian context and reality, Elisa intends to expand her research to all the daughters of the Atlantic diaspore in the global south.
Emme Rackham
BA in Global Studies, UCLA
Hometown: Los Angeles, CA
Relying on Feminist scholars and educators throughout Latin America and the United States, Emme wants to connect education practices to reimagining justice and equity in our communities, including all migration experiences. Specifically, she wants to focus on a decarceral approach to justice that could revolutionize the way we perceive immigration. Emme is a Departmental Scholar who is pursuing the bachelor's and master's degrees simultaneously.
Fatima Gonzalez Gomez
BS in Latin America and Latino Studies/Politics, University of California, Santa Cruz
Hometown: San Francisco, CA
Fatima is interested in examining how Salvadoran political identities are passed down through generations and are tied to Salvadoran migration patterns in the larger Bay Area in the post Civil War-era. Her hope is to find how generational divides help shape ideas and how diasporic communities transform experiences across space and time.
Juan Venegas
CSU Dominguez Hills, Chicana/o/x Studies
Hometown: East Side San Jose, California
Juan's research interests are Afro-Mexican History and lived experiences. In addition, exploring the overwhelming amount of Black and Brown coalitions such as the Mexican Underground Railroad and how it can conspire racial solidarity.
Mia Giordano
Undergraduate major: Public Health & Spanish, Temple University
Home state/city: Coopersburg, PA
Mia's research interests intersect public health and Latin American Studies, and include immigrant health, human rights, historical memory, and the long-term health outcomes in families affected by political violence in Latin America. In this interview article, Mia talks about her fieldwork in Guatemala as a M.P.H. and LAS M.A. student.
Roxanne Valle
BA in Sociology and Latino/a and Latin American Studies, Occidental College
Hometown: Azusa, California // Tongva Land
Roxanne is interested in studying colonialism in Mexico, specifically the relationship between the division of labor, social control, and cultural reproduction following the violent military and spiritual so-called conquests.
Roxanne's thesis is available here.
Theresa Edwards
B.A. in Diplomacy & World Affairs and Spanish, Occidental College
Hometown: Seattle, WA
Theresa is interested in human rights, migration, and socio-environmental conflicts in Latin America. Specifically, she is interested in indigenous-led resistance to natural resource extraction and infrastructure projects, as well as the experiences of indigenous migrants within the U.S. immigration system. Theresa's thesis is available here.