Robert Andolina Seattle University Program in International Studies, Casey 3W 901 12 th Avenue, Seattle, WA 98122 E-mail: andolinr@seattleu.edu ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS Associate Professor of International Studies, Seattle University, September 2011- present. Director of Latin American Studies, Seattle University, starting September 2012. Assistant Professor of International Studies, Seattle University, September 2005- August 2011. Interim Director of Latin American Studies, Seattle University, September 2006-August 2007. Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Hobart & William Smith Colleges, 2003-2005. Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Bates College, 2001-2003. Postdoctoral Research Associate in Geography, University of Cambridge and University of Newcastle (UK), 1999-2001. EDUCATION University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Ph.D. in Political Science, 1999. Examination Fields: Comparative Politics, International Relations. Supporting Fields: Latin American Studies, Social Movement Studies. Thesis: Colonial Legacies and Plurinational Imaginaries: Indigenous Movement Politics in Ecuador and Bolivia. Adviser: Dr. Kathryn Sikkink University of Rochester B.A. in Political Science, 1990. Minor: Applied Economics. University of Wisconsin, Madison Summer Workshop in Quechua Language and Culture (Otavalo, Ecuador), 1996. Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO), Quito, Ecuador Visiting graduate student in Andean Studies, 1994.
Courses Taught: TEACHING Introduction to International Studies Senior Synthesis: Human Geographies in Latin America Senior Synthesis: Cultures of International Development Politics of Latin America U.S. Latin American Relations Transnational Networks and Globalization Indigenous Movements in Latin America Comparing Nations (Introduction to Comparative Politics) Politics of Third World Development World Politics (Intro to International Relations) Fields of Interest: International Development and North-South Relations Transnationalism and Political Geography Latin American Politics (Comparative/International) Politics of Social Movements (Comparative/International) Politics of Ethnicity, Race and Gender (Comparative/International) Books: PUBLICATIONS Indigenous Development in the Andes: Culture, Power, and Transnationalism (coauthored with Nina Laurie and Sarah Radcliffe). Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2009. Academic Journal Articles: The Values of Water: Indigenous Cultures and Development Cultures in Highland Ecuador. Latin American Research Review, Vol. 47 (2012), forthcoming. Development and Culture: Transnational Identity-Making in Bolivia (co-authored with Sarah Radcliffe and Nina Laurie). Political Geography, Vol. 24 (2005), 678-702. [Lead author] Ethnodevelopment: Social Movements, Creating Experts and Professionalising Indigenous Knowledge in Ecuador (co-authored with Nina Laurie and Sarah Radcliffe). Antipode, Vol. 37 (2005), 470-496. [Secondary author] The Transnationalization of Gender and Re-imagining Andean Indigenous Development (co-authored with Sarah Radcliffe and Nina Laurie). Signs, Vol. 29 (2004), 387-416. [Tertiary author] 2
The Sovereign and Its Shadow: Constituent Assembly and Indigenous Movement in Ecuador. Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 35 (2003), 721-750. Indigenous Professionalization: Transnational Social Reproduction in the Andes. (coauthored with Nina Laurie and Sarah Radcliffe) Antipode, Vol. 35 (2003), 463-491. [Tertiary author] Re-territorialized Space and Ethnic Political Participation: Indigenous Municipalities in Ecuador (co-authored with Sarah Radcliffe and Nina Laurie) Space and Polity, Vol. 6 (2002), 289-305. [Secondary author] Chapters in edited volumes (peer reviewed, but not blind/anonymous): La Transnacionalización de Género y el Replantamiento del Desarrollo Indígena Andino (co-authored with Sarah Radcliffe and Nina Laurie). In Las Displicencias de Género en los Cruces del Siglo Pasado al Nuevo Milenio en los Andes, eds. Nina Laurie and Maria Ether Pozo, 51-93. Cochabamba, Bolivia: Centro de Estudios Superiores Universitarios, 2006. [Tertiary author] Gobernabilidad e Identidad: Indigeneidades Transnacionales en Bolivia (co-authored with Sarah Radcliffe and Nina Laurie). In Pueblos Indígenas, Estado y Democracia, ed. Pablo Dávalos, 133-170. Buenos Aires: CLACSO, 2005. [Lead author] Between Local Authenticity and Global Accountability: The Ayllu Movement in Contemporary Bolivia. [Sole author] In Beyond the Lost Decade: Indigenous Movements, Development, and Democracy in Latin America, ed. José Antonio Lucero, 123-152. Princeton: PLAS, Princeton University, 2003. The Excluded Indigenous? Implications of Multiethnic Policies for Water Reform in Bolivia (co-authored with Nina Laurie and Sarah Radcliffe). [Secondary author] In Multiculturalism in Latin America, ed. Rachel Sieder, 252-276. Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2002. El Movimiento Indígena en los Espacios Ambíguos del Poder: Lecciones de la Asamblea Constituyente y el 21 de Enero. [Sole author] In Yuyarinakuy, ed. Pablo Dávalos, 200-208. Quito: Abya Yala, 2001. El Proyecto Político de la CONAIE como Lucha Anticolonial: Una (otra) Reconsideración de Nación y Ciudadanía en el Ecuador. [Sole author] In En Defensa del Pluralismo y la Igualdad: Los Derechos de los Pueblos Indígenas y el Estado, eds. Ileana Almeida and Nidia Arrobo, 49-66. Quito: Abya Yala, 1998. Book reviews: 3
Kurt Weyland, Raul Madrid and Wendy Hunter, eds., Leftist Governments in Latin America: Successes and Shortcomings. Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 44 (2012), forthcoming. Donna Lee Van Cott, From Movements to Parties in Latin America: The Evolution of Ethnic Politics. International Affairs, Vol. 82 (2006), 826-827. Nancy Grey Postero and Leon Zamosc, eds., The Struggle for Indigenous Rights in Latin America. Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 38 (2006), 437-438. Amalia Pallares, From Peasant Struggles to Indian Resistance: The Ecuadorian Andes in the Late Twentieth Century. Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 36 (2004), 610-613. WORKS IN PROGRESS State Constitutions and the Incorporation of Indigenous Autonomy. Invited as chapter for Handbook of Indigenous Politics, eds. Jose Antonio Lucero and Dale Turner. Oxford University Press, under contract. CONFERENCES AND WORKSHOPS The Values of Water: Indigenous Cultures and Development Cultures in Highland Ecuador. Western Political Science Association Annual Meeting, San Antonio, April 21-23 2011. Indigenous Autonomy and International Development in Highland Ecuador. Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Annual Meeting, Tucson, May 20-22 2010. Development Policies and Indigenous Identities in Ecuador: A Post-Structural Consideration. Structuralisms in International Relations, Conference Honoring Bud Duvall, Minneapolis, April 4-5, 2008. Development Policy and Indigenous Identities in Ecuador: A Study in Cultural Citizenship. International Studies Association Conference, San Francisco, March 26-29, 2008. El Soberano y su Sombra: Asamblea Constituyente y Movimiento Indígena en el Ecuador. Ecuadorianists section of the Latin American Studies Association, biannual meeting, Quito, Ecuador, June 29-July 1, 2006. Defining Citizenship in a Post-Rights Context: Development, Indigenous Movements and Water Politics in Transnational Ecuador. Latin American Studies Association Conference, Las Vegas, October 7-9, 2004. 4
From Culturally Appropriate Development to Developmentally Appropriate Culture: Governmentality and Identity in Bolivia. Latin American Social Science Council Workshop, Quito, Ecuador, July 24-26, 2004. Transnationalizing Water Politics: The Case of Andean Indigenous Organizations. International Studies Association Conference, Portland, OR, February 25-March 1, 2003. Legitimacy and Agency in Transnational Politics: Redefining Indigenous Movements in the Bolivian Highlands. Department of Political Studies Seminar, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London (UK), March 14, 2001. Protagonismo Político y Autenticidad en la Retórica sobre la Reconstitución de los Ayllus en Bolivia. Andean Oral History Workshop, La Paz, Bolivia, November 19, 1999. Transnationalism or Postcolonization? Andean Indigenous Movements and the Quincentenary of the Discovery of the Americas. Centre for Transnational Studies Seminar, University of Newcastle (UK), June 9, 1999. Indigenous Movements and the Ambiguous Spaces of Democracy: CONAIE and the 1997-8 Asamblea Nacional Constituyente in Ecuador. Latin American Studies Association Congress, Chicago, September 24-26, 1998. FOREIGN LANGUAGES Near native fluency in Spanish, basic fluency in Quechua. PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES Scholarly Journal Peer Reviewing: Latin American Politics and Society, Journal of Latin American Studies, Political Studies, Global Networks, American Sociological Review, Geoforum, Bulletin of Latin American Research, Sociological Focus. Consulting: Speaker at U.S. State Department briefing for Linda Jewell, Ambassador- Designate to Ecuador. Washington, D.C., August 2005. Memberships: International Studies Association; American Political Science Association; Latin American Studies Association; Society for Latin American Studies. Non-Academic Publications: Guest commentary on current Ecuadorian politics. Latin American Advisor (Inter- American Dialogue, Washington, D.C.), February 22, 2007, p. 4. Iraq War so Unwieldy, It s No Wonder Soldiers Lost Control (guest editorial). Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester, N.Y.), May 13, 2004, p. 12A. SEATTLE UNIVERSITY SERVICE Faculty Director, SU-CIMAS Ecuador Study Abroad Program, 2008-2011 5
Faculty Advisor, International Studies Student Club, 2008-2011 Coordinating Committee, Faculty & Staff Assembly, Arts & Sciences, 2009-2011 Satisfaction Improvement Committee, Arts & Sciences, 2009-2010 Assessment Coordinator, International Studies, 2006-2010 Library Liaison, International Studies, 2005-2007 Search Committee, International Studies, 2005-2006 and 2010-2011 Search Committee, Communications, 2008-2009 FELLOWSHIPS AND GRANTS Seattle University. College of Arts & Sciences Faculty Research Fellowship, 2007-8. Seattle University. Center for Justice & Society Faculty Fellowship, 2005-6; 2007-8. National Endowment for the Humanities. Summer Institute Program Fellowship in Latin American Philosophy, State University of New York at Buffalo, June 2005. Hobart and William Smith Colleges. Faculty Research Grant, 2004-5. University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. Doctoral Dissertation Special Grant, 1996. Committee on Institutional Cooperation. Foreign Language Enhancement Program (FLEP) Fellowship, 1995. Social Science Research Council (SSRC). International Pre-dissertation Fellowship Program, 1993. US Department of Education. Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship, 1993-94 (declined by awardee). Updated July 2012 6