Registration – Popp-Martin Student Union, 2nd Floor Lobby

Panel 1 – Contemporary Perspectives in Latin American Decolonial Philosophy: The Past, Present, and Future of Citizenship and States
Room – Student Union 261

Moderator: Pedro Monque, UNC Charlotte

Panelists:

Julián Ríos Acuña, Grinnell College: Notes on the Coloniality of “the Citizen” as a Subject of the Law: A Conceptual-Historical Argument

Paula Landerreche Cardillo, UNC Charlotte: Blood and Roots as Legal Regimes in Spain and the Newly Independent Latin America

Juan Sebastián Ospina, Smith College: Is there a Future for a Theory of the Decolonial State?

Panel 2 – Archæological Investigations by Winthrop University in Latin America 
Room – Student Union 262

Moderator: Brent K.S. Woodfill, Winthrop University

Panelists:

Yuko Shiratori, Rissho University: Rediscovering the Last Lakandon Maya Capital

Brent K.S. Woodfill, Winthrop University: Insights from 3D Digital Models of Maya Landscapes, Monuments, and Objects

Lauren E. Kohut, Winthrop University: Historical Texts and Modern Technologies: Uncovering 17th Century Social, Demographic, and Economic Patterns in an Indigenous Peruvian Village

Panel 3 – Punk, Videogames, and Social Media: Building Community in Latin America
Room – Student Union 263

Moderator: David Dalton, UNC Charlotte

Panelists:

Arin Garcia McCormack, UNC Charlotte: Quisiera gritar que podría beber de tu sangre: Cultural Cannibalism via Musical Production in Caifanes and Café Tacvba

María Solano Rodríguez, UNC Charlotte: ¿ACE o Exterminio?  El VALORANT profesional en Latinoamérica y las complicaciones culturales

David Dalton, UNC Charlotte: Integrating Blackness into the National Imaginary: From Pan-African Solidarity to Afro-Mexican Identity

Break

Panel 4 – Political Behavior and Violence in Latin America
Room – Student Union 261

Moderator: Martín Opertti, Duke University

Panelists:

Matías Tarillo, UNC Chapel Hill: Not Your Party, But Something Else: Political Stereotyping in Low-Partisanship Contexts

Winston Ardoin, UNC Chapel Hill: Dehumanizing the Victim: The Rhetoric of Police Violence in Brazil

Rodrigo Mahlmeister, Duke University: The Ideology-Consumption Trade-Off in Voting Behavior

Commentator: Caitlin Andrews-Lee, UNC Chapel Hill

Panel 5 – Inscribing Power, Resisting Domination: Racialization and Sexuality in Latin American History
Room – Student Union 262

Moderator: Natalie Gasparowicz, Duke University

Panelists:

Julian Alvarez, Duke University: The Rules of Domination: A Comparative View of Naval Punishment in Brazil’s Revolt of the Whip (1910)

Leo Ramirez, Duke University: Genaro García (1867-1920): “Historia verdadera” de la “degeneración” de México indígena

Caroline Schmidt Patricio, Duke University: Titiçh, Contraception, and Abortion: Nahua Women’s Reproductive Health Knowledge in the Early Colonial Period

Commentator: Natalie Gasparowicz, Duke University

Roundtable 1 – Latin American Creative Writers from North Carolina
Room – Student Union 263

Moderator: David Dalton, UNC Charlotte

Presenters:

Kurma Murrain, Mint Museum of Charlotte

Oswaldo Estrada, UNC Chapel Hill

Rafael Acosta, UNC Chapel Hill

Break

Welcome – Jurgen Buchenau, Dowd Term Chair of Capitalism Studies, Professor of History and Latin American Studies, UNC Charlotte

Keynote Address – Popp-Martin Student Union 340ABC

How Revolutions Travel: Reverberations of the Bolivian Revolution in Peru and Ecuador

Carmen Soliz, Department of History, UNC Charlotte

Reception – Popp-Martin Student Union 340ABC