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  • Contributors

Susan M. Socolow, Professor Emeritus at Emory University, has edited three books and written three others, as well as several articles on the colonial history of Río de la Plata. She has served as vice president of the American Historical Association, president of the Conference on Latin American History, and co-president of the Rocky Mountain Council for Latin American History (RMCLAS). She is a member of the Argentine Academy of History and the Junta Histórica de Córdoba and a recipient of the RMCLAS Lieuwen Award for Excellence in Teaching Latin American History.

Elizabeth W. Kiddy is Associate Professor of History at Albright College, and the director of its Latin American and Caribbean Studies Program. She has published several works on the history of the black Rosary brotherhoods in Brazil. More recently her work has focused on the social, cultural, environmental, and political history of the São Francisco River and Valley since Brazilian independence.

Alina Silveira is Professor at the University of Buenos Aires School of Philosophy and Letters. Her field of research, and the topic of her doctoral thesis, is British migration to Buenos Aires between 1810 and 1880. She has published chapters in several books and articles in a variety of journals related to Latin American migration and education.

Julia G. Young is Assistant Professor of History at The Catholic University of America. She is completing her first book project, which examines the network of religious exiles, political refugees, and emigrants who supported the Catholic Church during Mexico's Cristero War, and, more generally, the ways that religion and religious conflicts can shape diasporic identities among migrants. Her research interests include modern Mexican history, the Latin American Catholic Church, and global migrations. [End Page v]

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