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Kenneth Roberts
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Kenneth M. Roberts teaches
comparative and Latin America politics, with an emphasis on the political
economy of development and the politics of inequality. His research is
devoted to the study of political parties, populism, and labor and social
movements. He obtained his Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1992, then
taught at the University of New Mexico before joining the faculty at Cornell.
He is the author of Deepening Democracy? The Modern Left and Social
Movements in Chile and Peru (Stanford University Press, 1998), along
with a forthcoming manuscript from Cambridge University Press on the transformation
of party systems in Latin America's neoliberal era. His research on the
social bases of political representation in Latin America has been published
in a number of scholarly journals, including American Political Science
Review, World Politics, Annual Review of Political Science, Comparative
Political Studies, Comparative Politics, Studies in Comparative International
Development, Politics and Society, and Latin American Politics
and Society. He has conducted research in Chile, Peru, Venezuela,
and Argentina, with funding support from Fulbright, MacArther, Mellon,
and National Science Foundation grants. He is also a co-team leader of
the Institute for the Social Sciences 2006-09 theme project on "Contentious
Knowledge: Science, Social Science, and Social Movements," and he
is coordinating a working group of U.S. and Latin American scholars studying
the "new Left" in Latin America. Courses Taught: Graduate Courses:
Selected Publications: Link to Contentious Politics gateway
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