2012 OAH/NCPH Annual Meeting Program

Page 41

Topics Latino/a

Legal and Constitutional

  S at u r day, A p r i l 21

  T h u r s day, A p r i l 19

  T h u r s day, A p r i l 19

8 :30 AM

10 : 3 0 A M

10 : 3 0 A M

Give Me a Home: Race, Industrial Paternalism, and the State in the Extractive and Agricultural West, 1917-1947

New Directions in African American, Latino/a, Asian American, and Native American (ALANA) Histories

Border Formations, Repatriation, and Exclusion: Chinese and Mexican Migration to the United States, Mexico, and China

8 :30 AM

1:30 PM

Lessons from ACORN: Rethinking Community Organizing in Modern America

Violent Encounters: Nineteenth-Century U. S. Crossings into Mexico

  F r i day, A p r i l 2 0

8 :30 AM

3:30 PM

Laboring the Empire: Roundtable on Work, Culture, and the American Empire

Latinos/as in the American South: Over One Hundred Years of History

10 : 3 0 A M

The Transnational Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. 10 : 3 0 A M

One Hundred Years Later: The Legacy of 1912 and the Future of Progressive Politics in America 1:30 PM

The Crisis of the Public Sector and the Fight over Its Future: A Roundtable Discussion 1:30 PM

Laboring for Healthy Environments: Working-Class Responses to Environmental Inequalities in the Postwar Era 1:30 PM

Doing Labor History in Public: Recent Experiences with the Politics of Memory and Representation 1:30 PM

Doing Labor History at Historic Sites: Case Studies from Public Historians   S u n day, A p r i l 2 2 8 :30 AM

Religion, Democracy, and the Working Class in Capitalist America, Gilded Age to Present

8 :30 AM

State Power at the Border: Comparative Perspectives on US Immigration Regulation from the Civil War to the Progressive Era

  F r i day, A p r i l 2 0

10 : 3 0 A M

8 :30 AM

A Different Kind of History: Historians in the Legal Arena

Historicizing the Border: National Parks, Immigrant Barrios, and the Long History of Border Relations 8 :30 AM

Historicizing the Border: National Parks, Immigrant Barrios, and the Long History of Border Relations 8 :30 AM

10 : 3 0 A M

Policing, Violence, and the Democratic State in the United States since 1850 1:30 PM

Remembering Guantánamo: Building a Public History of One Hundred Years in the “Legal Black Hole”

Beyond Black and Brown Power: BlackLatino Relations in the Late Civil Rights Period

1:30 PM

  S at u r day, A p r i l 21

  S at u r day, A p r i l 21

8 :30 AM

10 : 3 0 A M

Public History and Latino Communities: Projects, People, Problems

Birthright Citizenship: Can the Fourteenth Amendment Defend Itself?

Teaching Prohibition with Federal Court Records

1:30 PM

State of the Field: US-Mexican Borderlands History

Midwest

  S u n day, A p r i l 2 2

  T h u r s day, A p r i l 19

10 : 3 0 A M

1:30 PM

New Dimensions in Latino/a Urban History

Ethnicity on the Urban Frontier: Comparative Perspectives on Milwaukee Germans

10 : 3 0 A M

  S at u r day, A p r i l 21

Race and Class on the Roads and Rails: New Approaches to a Working-Class History of Mass Transportation

10 : 3 0 A M

10 : 3 0 A M

Maritime Perspectives on Work, Class and Global Capitalism 11 : 0 0 A M

Wisconsin 2011: A Teaching Challenge 1:30 PM

Incorporating Labor History into Your Curriculum

The Beer Garden That Made Milwaukee Famous: Gemeinschaft, Gemütlichkeit, and Schlitz   S u n day, A p r i l 2 2 8 :30 AM

Mapping Milwaukee’s History 10 : 3 0 A M

New Perspectives on Red Scares in Wisconsin and the Nation 11 : 0 0 A M

Wisconsin 2011: A Teaching Challenge

2012 OAH/NCPH Annual Meeting  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  37

Topics

Labor, Cont.


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.