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  • Contributors

Sandra Aguilar-Rodríguez has an MPhil in Latin American Studies from the University of Oxford and is currently writing up her doctoral thesis at the University of Manchester. She has presented papers at the SLAS, CALACS, and LASA conferences, among other international congresses. Her research interests are gender, class, welfare, modernity, daily life, consumption, and food in twentieth-century Latin America, particularly Mexico.

Paul Gootenberg is Professor of History at Stony Brook University. Besides his writings in Peruvian economic and social history, he has edited Cocaine: Global Histories (Routledge, 1999) and recently completed a book manuscript on the long-term transformations of Andean cocaine between 1850 and 1975.

Ruth Pike is Professor Emerita of History at Hunter College of the City University of New York. Her interests are early modern Spanish history and colonial Spanish America. Her recent publications include: Penal Servitude in Early Modern Spain (1983), Linajudos and Conversos in Seville: Greed and Prejudice in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Spain (2000), and “Partnership Companies in the Sixteenth-Century Transatlantic Trade: The De La Fuente Family of Seville,” in The Journal of European Economic History 34 (2005), pp. 245-262.

Gertrude M. Yeager is an Associate Professor of Latin American history at Tulane University specializing in Chilean and Andean history. Recent publications have focused on women, religion and modernization in Chile. This research has been supported by Fulbright and the Stone Center for Latin American Studies at Tulane University. Her current research focuses on gender and religion in the modern period, 1880-1940, and has been funded by the Newcomb Foundation. [End Page v]

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