• No results found

JUAN A. BOGLIACCINI Av. 8 de Octubre 2738 Montevideo, 11600, URUGUAY

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "JUAN A. BOGLIACCINI Av. 8 de Octubre 2738 Montevideo, 11600, URUGUAY"

Copied!
5
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

JUAN A. BOGLIACCINI Av. 8 de Octubre 2738

Montevideo, 11600, URUGUAY juan.bogliaccini@ucu.edu.uy CURRENT POSITIONS

• Assistant Professor, Department of Social and Political Sciences, Catholic University of Uruguay. Fall 2012–.

• Researcher categorized in the Uruguayan National Research System, National Re-search and Innovation Agency (ANII), 2010-present.

• Instructor at the Methods Winter School, Catholic Univeristy of Uruguay, 2014–. Course taught: Intro to Probit and Logit Models.

EDUCATION

• Ph.D. in Political Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2012. – Major: Comparative Politics

– Minor: Methods

– Dissertation:Small latecomers into the global market: power conflict and institu-tional change in Chile and Uruguay

• M.A. in Education Policies, Alberto Hurtado University, Chile, 2005, (magna cum laude).

• B.A. in Sociology, Catholic University in Uruguay, 2001. RESEARCH INTERESTS

• Comparative political economy • Comparative welfare states • Public and social policies PUBLICATIONS

WORK IN PROGRESS

BOOK

• Manuscript: After the Latin American Great Transformation: the distributive conflict and models of development

ARTICLES

• Foreign Direct Investment and Inequality in Developing Countries: Does sector mat-ter? (with Patrick Egan)

• Determinants of business organization in Latin America

• The geography of human capital inequality in Uruguay (with Santiago Lopez Cari-boni)

• Models of capitalism in Latin America: a conceptual note

• Party Labor Coalitions and Models of Capitalism in Latin America

• The political economy of taxes in Latin America: a public opinion perspective (with Juan Luna)

(2)

REFEREED ARTICLES

• 2015 (Forthcoming December) Institutional determinants of learning inequality in Uruguay, coauthored with Federico Rodriguez CEPAL Review116.

• 2013. Trade liberalization, deindustrialization and inequality. Evidence from Latin American middle-income countries,Latin American Research Review 48(2) 79-105. • 2012. Capitalism in the Southern Cone of Latina America after the Washington

Consensus. Notes without score?, Coauthored with Fernando Filgueira Revista del CLAD Reforma y Democracia 51, 24–56.

• 2005. Las claves territoriales de la fractura social urbana: Inseguridad y segregaci´on en MontevideoRevista PRISMA 21.

CHAPTERS IN EDITED VOLUMES

• 2012. ”Claves y cdigos del capitalismo en Uruguay”, Coauthored with Fernando Filgueira, in G. Caetano and R. Arocena (eds)La aventura uruguaya. Debate. • 2010. ”Development and Reforms of Latin American Welfare States”, Coauthored

with Evelyne Huber, inThe Oxford Handbook of Comparative Welfare States. • 2007. ”Primary education; Changing Mainstay of Uruguay”, in Noblit y Pink (eds.)

International Handbook of Urban Education. Sprinter.

• 2006. ”Los lmites de la promesa educativa en Amrica Latina: una constatacin global y cinco hiptesis antipticas”, Coauthored with F.Filgueira, S.Lijtenstein and F.Rodriguez, inGlobalizacin, educacin y pobreza en Amrica Latina. Hacia una nueva agenda poltica? CIDOB Foundation, Barcelona.

• 2006. ”Tendencias de aprendizaje y paradojas descentralizadoras en los sistemas ed-ucativos de Amrica Latina”, Coauthored with F.Filgueira and M.Fritsche in Descen-tralizacin educativa en Amrica Latina. Konrad Adenahuer Foundation.

• 2006. ”Centralismo y descentralizacin como ejercicio iterativo”, Coauthored with F.Filgueira and C.Molina in Descentralizacin educativa en Amrica Latina. Konrad Adenahuer Foundation.

• 2006. ”Las reformas educacionales en Chile y Uruguay: descentralizacin orientada al mercado versus centralismo estatista”, Coauthored with Fernando Filgueira, in Goma and Jordana (eds.) Decentralization and Social Policies. CIDOB Foundation.

AWARDS AND GRANTS

• 2011–2012UNC Graduate School Dissertation Completion Fellowship • 2010UNC Graduate School Off-Campus Dissertation Research Fellowship

• 2010The Luis Quiros Varela Grad Study Travel Fund for dissertation field research • 2009Uhlman Travel Grant, granted by the Political science Department at UNC • 2009Uhlman Summer Research Fund, granted by the Political science Department at

UNC

• 2008Political Science Department at UNC Scholarshipfor the 2009 Institute for Qual-itative and Multi-Method Research

• 2008 Tinker Pre-Dissertation Field Research Grant, granted by the Institute for the Study of the Americas, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

• 2008Language across the Curriculum (LAC) Teaching Assistantship in Spanish Lan-guage, offered by the Area Studies Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

(3)

• 2006Mellon Travel Award, granted by the Institute of Latin American Studies, Uni-versity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

• 1999Ship for World Youth Program 1999 Fellowship, granted by the Government of Japan and the United Nations University

CONFERENCE PAPERS

• 2014Party-labor coalitions in post-adjustment Latin America, paper presented at the American Political Science Association (APSA) Conference. Washington DC, August • 2014 The region of the intertwined paths: party-labor coalitions and distributive dy-namics in Chile and Uruguay, paper presented at the LASA Annual Conference (Chicago, IL), May, and the REPAL Conference (Santiago, Chile), July

• 2013 Business interests organization in Chile and Uruguay, paper presented at the American Political Science Association (APSA) Conference. Chicago, August

• 2013 Business interests organization in Chile and Uruguay, paper presented at the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) Conference. Washington DC, May • 2011Liberalization and inequality in Latin America, paper presented at the American

Political Science Association (APSA) Conference. Seattle, September

• 2011Education System Regulations and learning inequalities, paper presented at the Uruguayan Sociology Association Conference. Montevideo, July

• 2009Post-industrial transitions: FDI, informality and inequality, paper presented at the American Political Science Association (APSA) Conference. Toronto, August • 2009 The effect of top-down liberalization reforms on inequality, paper presented at

the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) Conference. Rio de Janeiro, May • 2008FDI by economic sectors and its effect on inequality in Latin American

middle-income countries, paper presented at the Midwest Political Science Association (MPSA) 66th Conference. Chicago, April

• 2006La paradoja de la descentralizacin en los sistemas educativos de America Latina, paper presented at the VIII Chilean Political Science Conference, Santiago, November RECENT INVITED PRESENTATIONS

• 2015 Inversi´on Extranjera Directa y Desigualdad: an´aliases sectorial, lectio inaugu-ralis at Department of Sociology, Universidad del Rosario. Bogot´a, Colombia. Febru-ary

• 2015Reforma de la Educaci´on en Am´erica Latina, Universidad del Rosario. Bogot´a, Colombia. February

• 2014 M´etodos Mixtos en Ciencia Pol´ıtica, presentation at the FLACSO-ISA Confer-ence. Buenos Aires, July

• 2013La econom´ıa pol´ıtica en la academia Latinamericana: el caso de Uruguay, invited presentation at the REPAL Conference preparation meeting. Santiago de Chile, July • 2013Uruguay y la Enfermedad Mediterr´anea, invited presentation at the II Uruguayan

Sociological Conference. Montevideo, July

• 2012Small latecomers into the global market: market institutions in Chile and Uruguay, paper presented at the School of Political Science, Diego Portales University, Santiago, January

• 2011 Distributive coalitions and the role of business in Uruguay, paper presented at theDualization in Southern Europe and Latin America Workshop, Chapel Hill, April

(4)

• 2010Varieties of capitalism in the Southern Cone of Latin America, paper presented at the Comparative Politics Workshop, Political Science Institute. Catholic University in Chile, Santiago, August

• 2010Market institutions in Chile and Uruguay, paper presented at the IPES Institute Workshop, Catholic University in Uruguay, Montevideo, May

COURSES TAUGHT

• Introduction to the Comparative Method. Graduate Seminar • Introduction to MLE - Logit and Probit Models. Graduate Seminar • OLS Regression. Undergraduate and Graduate Seminars

• Political Economy of the Welfare State. Undergraduate lecture class • Contemporary Latin American Politics. Undergraduate lecture class • Introduction to Political Science. Undergraduate lecture class • Sociology of Family. Undergraduate lecture class

• Introduction to Research Methods. Undergraduate Seminar DEPARTMENT SERVICE

• Chair. Department of Social and Political Sciences. Catholic University at Uruguay. 2012–

• Academic Coordinator for the IV Uruguayan Conference of Political Science. 2012. • Graduate Coordinator. Working Group on Economic and Political Regimes in Latin

America. The Consortium in Latin American Caribbean Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke University. 2008–2009.

• Graduate Coordinator. Working Group on Decentralization in Latin America. Re-search Triangle Consortium. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2008–2009. • Asistant to the Methods Area Coordinator. Social Sciences Department. Catholic

University in Uruguay. 2001–2002. OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

• Chair. Organization Committee for the II REPAL Conference (Red Latinoamericana de Econom´ıa Pol´ıtica). To be held at the Catholic University at Uruguay, July 2015 • Participation in the Committee for Revision of Faculty Rank and Tenure Procedures.

Catholic University at Uruguay. 2013.

• Directive Board Member. Uruguayan Political Science Association. 2012-2013 • Reviewer for Journals: Journal of Comparative Politics, Journal of Politics in Latin

America, Journal of Historical Sociology, Revista del CLAD: Reforma y Democracia, Perfiles Latinoamericanos

• Reviewer for Book Editorials: Palgrave-McMillan

• Current member of the American Political Science Association,American Sociologi-cal Association,Red Latinoamericana de Econom´ıa Pol´ıtica, Latin american Studies Association,Asociaci´on Uruguaya de Ciencia Pol´ıtica

(5)

PAST POSITIONS

• Lecturer. Montevideo University, 2010–2012.

• Visiting Fellow. Instituto IPES. Catholic University in Uruguay, Spring and Summer 2010

• Visiting Fellow. Political Science Institute. Catholic University in Chile, Fall 2010 • Research Assistant for Professors Evelyne Huber and John D. Stephens, University of

North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2006–2010

• Junior Researcher. IPES Institute, Cahtolic University in Uruguay, 2001–2006 • Junior Researcher. CIFRA, Gonz´alez, Raga & Associates, Consulting Firm, 2005–

2006

• Research Assistant. Equipos Mori, Consulting Firm, 1998–1999 NON ACADEMIC PROJECTS (since 2004)

• LAC Regional Study: Building Better Teachers. World Bank, 2012.

• Political Economy Analysis of Territorial Health Service Delivery in Dominican Re-public. World Bank, 2011. Independent consultant to project team.

• Infancy, Adolescence and Family Integral Program (Infamilia) Evaluation, Secretariat of the Presidency. Presidency of Uruguay, 2004. Coordination and final report elab-oration for the Qualitative Component of the Study.

• Lessons learned and good practices in full time schools, National Administration of Public Education (ANEP), Primary Education Quality Improvement Project. Public Education Administration, Uruguay, 2004. With Sergio Lijtenstein.

References

Related documents

The first comprehensive assessment of the vulnerabilities in the civilian GPS infrastructure was published a decade ago in a report prepared by the Volpe National Transportation

This takes into account, where known, delayed and immediate effects and also chronic effects of components from short-term and long-term exposure by oral, inhalation and dermal

The 5,000-recipient model assumes that the e-mail, Facebook, paid Facebook, and Twitter samples each had a level of engagement and interest in CME equal to the sample from the

Position or transfer effects on an individual’s ability while processing a series of test items are of- ten ignored when tests are created. It is often implicitly assumed that

Memberships: American Political Science Association, American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Association for Political Theory, Conference for the Study of Political

Simplified structure of server and hardware components for dynamic data citation within the CCCA Data Centre environment: (i) ckan web server, (ii) the application server for

Step 1 - Write or Review the Position Description Step 2 - Determine the Working Title for the Position Step 3 - Determine the Target Hiring Range.. Step 4 - Review the Credentials

N: Naive MLE, B: Bootstrap bias correction, J: Penalized likelihood estimation with Jeffrey’s prior, G: Penalized likelihood estimation with generalized information matrix, C: