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  • Contributors

Paul Lokken received his Ph.D. from the University of Florida in 2000, under the direction of Murdo J. MacLeod. He is currently assistant professor of history at Bryant College in Smithfield, Rhode Island. He is writing a book on people of African origins and the politics of descent in mid-colonial Guatemala.

Jeffrey M. Shumway studied with Donna J. Guy at the University of Arizona, where he received his Ph.D. in 1999. His article in this issue is part of a larger book manuscript that examines the impact of independence and nation building on family and society in nineteenth-century Buenos Aires. Dr. Shumway is an assistant professor of history at Brigham Young University.

Lucía Lionetti is affiliated with the Instituto de Estudios Histórico-Sociales of the Universidad Nacional del Centro Provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Ana María Kapelusz-Poppi is affiliated with the University of Illinois at Chicago. She presented a previous version of “Rural Health and State Construction in Post-Revolutionary Mexico: The Nicolaita Project for Rural Medical Services” at the 2000 conference of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA). [End Page iv]

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