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  • Contributors

John James Clune received his Ph.D. in 1997 from Louisiana State University where he studied under Paul E. Hoffman. Since 1997, he has been a member of the history faculty at the University of West Florida researching and writing on the Spanish Caribbean and Spanish Florida. Upcoming publications include “The Effort to Redefine the Roles of Convents in Late Eighteenth-Century Havana,” Colonial Latin American Historical Review (Winter 2001). jclune@uwf.edu

Alexander S. Dawson received his Ph.D. in Latin American History from SUNY–Stony Brook in 1997, and is currently an Assistant Professor at Montana State University. His work has also appeared in the Journal of Latin American Studies (1998), and he is currently completing a book manuscript titled Savage and Citizen: Indigenismo and the Vagaries of Race in Post-Revolutionary Mexico. zpi7020@maia.oscs.montana.edu

John Mayo is a senior lecturer in history and currently head of the Department of History and Philosophy at the Cave Hill Campus, Barbados, of the University of the West Indies. Recent publications include J. Mayo and Simon Collier (eds), Mining in Chile’s Norte Chico: Journal of Charles Lambert 1825 (Boulder: Westview Press, 1998), and “The British Communities in Nineteenth-Century Chile: Engagement and Isolation,” in Oliver Marshall (ed), English-speaking Communities in Latin America (London: Macmillan, Institute of Latin America Studies Series, 2000). jmayo@uwichill.edu.bb

Jesús F. de la Teja is an associate professor of colonial Mexico, borderlands, and Texas history at Southwest Texas State University. He is the author of San Antonio de Béxar: A Community on New Spain’s Northern Frontier (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1955). He is book review editor of the Southwest Historical Quarterly and managing editor of Catholic Southwest: A Journal of History and Culture. Current research includes a book-length study of the Saltillo fair. JD10@swt.edu

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