2008 Grant Winners

2008 Individual Grant Winners

Juan Felipe Hoyos, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia
Proceso de desmovilización y reincorporación de excombatientes de grupos armados ilegales en el conflicto armado colombiano: Víctimas, victimarios y sus desigualdades


Fiorella Mancini, El Colegio de México, México
Incertidumbre y Trabajo: El impacto de la inseguridad laboral sobre la desigualdad social en México y Argentina


Santiago Ortiz - Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales – FLACSO, Ecuador

¿Comuneros Kichwas o ciudadanos ecuatorianos?  Derechos sociales y políticos indígenas en Otavalo y Cotacachi, 1990 – 2008, Ecuador


Vielka Polanco, Instituto de Derechos Humanos, Santo Domingo, República Dominicana
Los trabajadores agrícolas migrantes haitianos, sus derechos humanos y estrategias de sobrevivencia en la parte dominicana de la frontera norte entre República Dominicana y Haití.



2008 Institutional Grant Winners


Instituto de Investigaciones Tributarias, Aduaneras y de la Seguridad Social, Argentina
The Relationship Between Tax Systems and Inequality: The Role of Tax Administration in Social Cohesion


Federación Nacional de Organizaciones No Gubernamentales para el Desarrollo de las Comunidades Afrocolombianas - AFROAMERICA XXI, Colombia
Indicadores sobre detenciones policivas de personas afrodescendientes en Cali, Colombia


Centro de Estudios Distributivos Laborales y Sociales (CEDLAS) – Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina
Una extensión de la base SEDLAC (Socio-Economic Database for Latin America and the Caribbean)


Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, Peru
Estudio diagnóstico cuantitativo y cualitativo de la niñez indígena en Lima


Fundación Pro Justicia, Bolivia
Seeding a Study of Inequality Among Market Vendors in Cochabamba, Bolivia


Universidad Centroamericana “José Simeón Cañas” (UCA), El Salvador
¿Hay diferentes políticas entre los vecinos? Violencia y crimen en El Salvador y Nicaragua. (La exclusión y no la pobreza como factor del crecimiento exponencial de la delincuencia juvenil en Centroamérica)


Núcleo de Estudos de População – NEPO
Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brazil

Inequality and Gender: Family Characteristics and Dynamics in Brazil


University of São Paulo –Research Center on International Relations, Brazil
Percepções das Elites Sulamericanas sobre o Impacto das Desigualdades Sociais na Estabilidade Democrática



In June 2007, we gave out six individual US$5000 grants to individuals pursuing innovative research on inequality in Latin America. The grant recipients were:

Rodolfo Calderon

FLACSO-Costa Rica

Costa Rica

Delito y exclusión social en Costa Rica

Estela Casados

Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana

Mexico

Viviendo con el virus del papiloma humano. Marginacion y desigualdades de género en la población campesina de Los Tuxtlas, Veracruz, México

Alessandra Chacham

Pontifical Catholic University

Brazil

Autonomy and vulnerability in young women’s lives in Brazil

Andrea Madrid Tamayo

FLACSO-Ecuador

Ecuador

La crisis de los paramos: Exclusión de la agricultura tradicional y de los conocimientos ancestrales de las comunidades campesinas de Cotopaxi, en la formulación y aplicación de las políticas publicas

Juliana Martínez

Universidad de Costa Rica

Costa Rica

Regimenes de bienestar y variedades de patriarcado en América Latina: principales relaciones

Jair Ospina

Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana

Mexico

Desigualdades sociales en la población Nasa (o Paez) de los municipios de Inza y Paez en la región de los Andes del sur de Colombia





The individual grants

We are looking for individuals who are trying to break new ground on inequality, preferably with inter-disciplinary approaches, and with policy implications. The funds are open to both scholars (including graduate students) and practitioners/professionals from any country. We particularly encourage individuals from institutions in Latin America to apply.

Applications can be submitted in English, Spanish or Portuguese. You can apply either via email or by regular mail. To apply, please send your CV (maximum length of four pages), a two-page research plan that describes your broader research project(s) as well as what you plan to do with this award, and a budget. Please have two reference letters sent separately.

The awards must be used within 12 months of receipt. Successful recipients are expected to submit a brief report upon completion of their research as well as a working paper on their research findings which will be included in the observatory’s working paper series.

The institutional grants

The institutional grants will be given to research teams in order to enable them to advance our knowledge on inequality in Latin America and to contribute to the web portal resources. Grants can be given as seed money for new projects, or to advance the progress of existing projects. While we know they will be collaborative, please identify a center or institution as the home base of the project.

Applications can be submitted in English, Spanish or Portuguese. You can apply either via email or by regular mail. To apply, please send a detailed description of the project (3 to 4 pages), a list of participating scholars and practitioners, a budget, and a supporting letter from the director of the home center or institution.

Email applications: please send them to observatoryla@miami.edu (reference letters need to be sent separately from the writer’s email address).

Regular mail applications: please send them to Observatory on Inequality, Center for Latin American Studies, Memorial Building 125, 1111 Memorial Drive, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33124-2302.

If you have any other questions, please don’t hesitate to contact us.