Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies Faculty: Publications since January 2023


%% Baker, Paul A.   
@article{fds369104,
   Author = {Luethje, M and Benito, X and Schneider, T and Mosquera, PV and Baker, P and Fritz, SC},
   Title = {Paleolimnological responses of Ecuadorian páramo lakes to
             local and regional stressors over the last two
             millennia},
   Journal = {Journal of Paleolimnology},
   Volume = {69},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {305-323},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10933-022-00274-5},
   Abstract = {Increasing surface air temperatures and human influences
             (e.g., agriculture, livestock grazing, tourism) are altering
             lacustrine ecosystems in the South American Andean páramo,
             and these influences are evident in changes in the
             diatom-species composition in sediment cores from the region
             that span the last ~ 150 years. Existing studies are
             limited by their short temporal scales and limited spatial
             extent. We analyzed two sediment cores spanning the last two
             millennia from the northern (Laguna Piñan) and southern
             (Laguna Fondococha) Andean páramo of Ecuador to provide a
             longer-term perspective on lake dynamics. Both lakes show
             shifts in the dominant diatoms through time. Fondococha
             diatoms shifted in dominance between two Aulacoseira species
             and in the planktic to benthic ratio, and these shifts are
             interpreted as evidence of changing lake level. The inferred
             shifts are corroborated by changes in sediment geochemistry.
             Piñan shows a directional shift in the diatom assemblage
             over the period of the record, from benthic diatoms tolerant
             of high dissolved organic carbon (DOC), low pH, and low
             nutrients, to an assemblage characteristic of lower DOC,
             higher pH, nutrients and lake levels. Shifts in Piñan’s
             diatoms are correlated with tephra layers in the sediment,
             suggesting that local volcanic deposition may have been
             responsible for altering the catchment and lake
             geochemistry. This is supported by relatively high δ13C
             values in organic matter associated with tephra layers,
             which become more negative up-section. Our study suggests
             that remote lakes in spatially heterogenous montane regions
             act as sentinels of different facets of environmental change
             and provide insights into Andean ecosystem responses to
             environmental perturbations.},
   Doi = {10.1007/s10933-022-00274-5},
   Key = {fds369104}
}

@article{fds369726,
   Author = {Luethje, M and Benito, X and Schneider, T and Mosquera, PV and Baker, P and Fritz, SC},
   Title = {Correction: Paleolimnological responses of Ecuadorian
             páramo lakes to local and regional stressors over the last
             two millennia (Journal of Paleolimnology, (2023), 69, 4,
             (305-323), 10.1007/s10933-022-00274-5)},
   Journal = {Journal of Paleolimnology},
   Volume = {69},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {325},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10933-023-00278-9},
   Abstract = {Following the publication of the original article (Luethje
             2022), the typesetters have mistakenly induced the text,
             “"Melina use only…for". It should be removed in the
             abstract and it should say "higher pH…". The original
             article has been revised.},
   Doi = {10.1007/s10933-023-00278-9},
   Key = {fds369726}
}


%% Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo   
@misc{fds372982,
   Author = {Fairfax, FG and McFalls, E and Rogers, A and Kwesi, J and Washington,
             AN and Daily, SB and Peoples, CE and Xiao, H and Bonilla-Silva,
             E},
   Title = {Work In Progress: A Novel Approach to Understanding
             Perceptions of Race among Computing Undergraduates},
   Journal = {ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference
             Proceedings},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {June},
   Key = {fds372982}
}

@article{fds370895,
   Author = {Bonilla-Silva, E},
   Title = {It's not the rotten apples! Why family scholars should adopt
             a structural perspective on racism},
   Journal = {Journal of Family Theory and Review},
   Volume = {15},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {192-205},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jftr.12503},
   Abstract = {In this article, I urge family scholars to anchor their race
             work on the structural racism perspective. First, I provide
             some limitations of the prejudice problematic used by most
             family scholars. Second, I discuss the basic components of
             my structural theory, which I call the racialized social
             system approach. Third, I bolster my original theorization
             with a new conceptual map to make the structure
             intelligible—to account for why actors, for the most part,
             behave in ways that reproduce the racial order. In this
             discussion, I highlight the importance of the “white
             habitus” in shaping the lives and behaviors of White
             people. Lastly, I conclude by summarizing my claims and
             asking family scholars to continue deepening their work on
             structural racism and families, as well as on fighting how
             it shapes their own fields and lives.},
   Doi = {10.1111/jftr.12503},
   Key = {fds370895}
}

@article{fds370632,
   Author = {Robertson, AD and Vélez, V and Hairston, WT and Bonilla-Silva,
             E},
   Title = {Race-evasive frames in physics and physics education:
             Results from an interview study},
   Journal = {Physical Review Physics Education Research},
   Volume = {19},
   Number = {1},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.19.010115},
   Abstract = {Mainstream physics teaching and learning produces material
             outcomes that, when analyzed through the lens of Critical
             Race Theory, point to white supremacy, or "the systemic
             maintenance of the dominant position that produces white
             privilege"(Battey & Levya, 2016). In particular, the
             continued, extreme underrepresentation of People of Color in
             physics and a growing number of first-person accounts of the
             harm that People of Color experience in physics classrooms
             and departments speak to a system that valorizes whiteness
             and marginalizes People of Color. If we take Critical Race
             Theory as a lens, we expect that maintaining white supremacy
             in physics happens in part via discipline-specific
             instantiations of broader mechanisms that reproduce
             whiteness. In this study, we illustrate one such mechanism:
             race evasiveness, a powerful ideology that uses race-neutral
             discourse to explain away racialized phenomena, evading race
             as a shaping force in social phenomena. We offer examples
             from interviews with twelve university physics faculty,
             showing what race-evasive discourses can look like in
             physics and how physics epistemologies, discourses, and
             stories reify race-evasive frames. This work aims to support
             faculty in refusing race evasiveness in physics teaching and
             learning, toward developing race-conscious analyses that can
             help us challenge white supremacy in our
             discipline.},
   Doi = {10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.19.010115},
   Key = {fds370632}
}


%% Crichlow, Michaeline A.   
@article{fds373885,
   Author = {Crichlow, MA},
   Title = {Unpayable debt: What lies beneath 1},
   Journal = {Cultural Dynamics},
   Volume = {35},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {223-229},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09213740231208470},
   Doi = {10.1177/09213740231208470},
   Key = {fds373885}
}

@article{fds374587,
   Author = {Crichlow, MA},
   Title = {Of "Realities and Possibilities"},
   Journal = {Small Axe},
   Volume = {27},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {147-176},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/07990537-10899400},
   Abstract = {Within the logic of our present behavior-orienting telos of
             "development" and "economic growth," any "strategy" designed
             to secure the material basis of Black Africa as a viable,
             unified and geopolitically nonvulnerable, multiethnic,
             multicreedal in Kenya, Zimbabwe, and South Africa,
             multiracial, civilization must paradoxically move
             conceptually beyond our present hegemonic conception of
             economic agencies, as the primary agencies, to those of
             culture-systemic ones. -Sylvia Wynter, "Is 'Development' a
             Purely Empirical Concept or Also Teleological?"},
   Doi = {10.1215/07990537-10899400},
   Key = {fds374587}
}


%% Davis, N. Gregson   
@book{fds294195,
   Author = {Davis, G},
   Title = {POLYHYMNIA: THE RHETORIC OF HORATION LYRIC
             DISCOURSE},
   Pages = {1-282},
   Publisher = {University of California Press},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {0520070771},
   Abstract = {Horace's Odes have a surface translucency that belies their
             rhetorical sophistication. Gregson Davis brings together
             recent trends in the study of Augustan poetry and critical
             theory and deftly applies them to individual poems.
             Exploring four rhetorical strategies—what he calls modes
             of assimilation, authentication, consolation, and praise and
             dispraise—Davis produces enlightening, new interpretations
             of this classic work. Polyhymnia, named after one of the
             Muses invoked in Horace's opening poem, revises the common
             image of Horace as a complacent, uncomplicated, and
             basically superficial singer. Focusing on the artistic
             persona—the lyric "self" that is constituted in the
             text—Davis explores how the lyric speaker constructs
             subtle "arguments" whose building-blocks are topoi,
             recurrent motifs, and generic conventions. By examining the
             substructure of lyric argument in groupings of poems sharing
             similar strategies, the author discloses the major
             principles that inform Horatian lyric composition.},
   Key = {fds294195}
}


%% French, John D.   
@article{fds365458,
   Author = {French, JD},
   Title = {Epilogue: Authoritarianism and the Specter of
             Democracy},
   Journal = {International Review of Social History},
   Volume = {68},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {173-175},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020859022000608},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0020859022000608},
   Key = {fds365458}
}

@article{fds365686,
   Author = {French, JD},
   Title = {Common Men, Exceptional Politicians: What Do We Gain from an
             Embodied Social Biographical Approach to Leftist Leaders
             Like Germany's August Bebel and Brazil's Luis Inácio Lula
             da Silva?},
   Journal = {International Review of Social History},
   Volume = {68},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {111-121},
   Publisher = {Cambridge University Press (CUP)},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {April},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020859022000554},
   Abstract = {Lula and His Politics of Cunning explores the origin, roots,
             and evolution of Luis Inácio Lula da Silva's vision,
             discourse, and practice of leadership as a process of
             becoming. This commentary invites historians of labor
             movements and the left to think beyond their geographical
             and chronological specializations. It argues that there is
             much to gain from thinking globally if we wish to achieve
             meaningful causal insights applicable to the sweep of
             capitalist development.},
   Doi = {10.1017/S0020859022000554},
   Key = {fds365686}
}


%% Gabara, Esther   
@article{fds373485,
   Author = {Gabara, E},
   Title = {“Doing unpayable debt”},
   Journal = {Cultural Dynamics},
   Volume = {35},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {237-244},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09213740231206093},
   Abstract = {This response to Denise Ferreira da Silva’s Unpayable Debt
             (2022) takes seriously the author’s self-description as a
             scholar and artist, and so considers the study within a
             genealogy of contemporary experiments with the book form in
             the Americas. Unpayable Debt calls for a reader who will
             assemble its sequence of moments and texts into an
             accounting of the debt that Western epistemologies,
             disciplines, and habits of reading owe to the people and
             cultures subjected to the trans-Atlantic slave trade, and to
             the dispossession and genocide of indigenous peoples.
             Fiction, distinct from history and the other disciplines
             that use the written word, proves essential to calculate
             that liability, and Ferreira da Silva exercises its
             inventive power in her scholarly critique as much as in
             videos, performances, and social practice
             collaborations.},
   Doi = {10.1177/09213740231206093},
   Key = {fds373485}
}


%% Gereffi, Gary   
@book{fds375506,
   Title = {Global Value Chain Studies: Taking Stock, Looking Ahead:
             Proceedings of the Doctorate ad Honorem Awarding Ceremony to
             Prof. Gary Gereffi and related workshop},
   Pages = {1-114},
   Publisher = {Padova University Press},
   Editor = {De Marchi and V and Bettiol, M and Di Maria and E},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {978-88-6938-380-9},
   Abstract = {How to study the globalization of the economy? What are the
             scenarios for globalization processes in the post-pandemic
             era? This book takes stock of the current debate starting
             with the studies of Prof. Gary Gereffi (Duke University),
             who developed the theory of Global Value Chains and made a
             fundamental contribution to the understanding of the
             dynamics of international trade and the organization of
             production on a global scale. A research path that led
             important opportunities to visit and compare with the
             Italian and Veneto context in particular, through Prof.
             Gereffi’s numerous visiting periods between Venice and
             Padua. For these reasons, the University of Padua awarded
             Prof. Gary Gereffi an Honorary Doctorate in Economics and
             Management (based on the proposal of the Department of
             Economics and Management “Marco Fanno”) on March 13th,
             2023. The volume contains the proceedings of the ceremony
             and the workshop organized with scholars who have
             collaborated with Prof. Gereffi and enriched studies on
             Global Value Chains through the Italian perspective.
             Insights from business practitioners are also
             included.},
   Key = {fds375506}
}

@article{fds372751,
   Author = {Gereffi, G},
   Title = {Navigating 21st century industrial policy},
   Journal = {Columbia FDI Perspectives},
   Pages = {1-4},
   Publisher = {Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {September},
   Abstract = {New industrial policies should not aim for self-sufficiency,
             but rather for more secure supply chains that rely on
             diversified international suppliers and some domestic
             suppliers. Because major economies are pursuing similar
             goals, new industrial policies can conflict with those of
             friendly countries and flexibility is needed to deal with
             conflicts.},
   Key = {fds372751}
}

@article{fds369398,
   Author = {De Marchi and V and Gereffi, G},
   Title = {Using the global value chain framework to analyse and tackle
             global environmental crises},
   Journal = {Journal of Industrial and Business Economics},
   Volume = {50},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {149-159},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40812-022-00253-x},
   Abstract = {Climate crises are being experienced all over the world and
             appear to be accelerating as “extreme weather” events
             become the “new normal.” In today’s world economy,
             where trade and production activities are internationally
             dispersed and prone to disruptions, the global value chain
             (GVC) framework provides a systematic approach to understand
             and combat environmental crises and to advance sustainable
             development options across global, regional, and local
             scales. A vast “implementation deficit” characterizes
             sustainability efforts to date. The GVC framework
             incorporates firm and policymaker perspectives in a
             multistakeholder approach that offers multiple building
             blocks for a progressive environmental agenda, including: a
             multi-actor perspective to define sustainability; measuring
             it across diverse geographic scales; analysis of both
             environmental upgrading and downgrading; distinguishing
             motivations, actions, and outcomes when assessing
             environmental performance; viewing GVC resilience in terms
             of the interplay of economic and environmental forces; and
             highlighting how context matters in analyzing national,
             industry, and geopolitical factors.},
   Doi = {10.1007/s40812-022-00253-x},
   Key = {fds369398}
}

@article{fds368832,
   Author = {Gereffi, G},
   Title = {How to Make Global Supply Chains More Resilient},
   Journal = {Columbia FDI Perspectives},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   Abstract = {Post-pandemic, companies have four main options to reduce
             rigidity and increase resilience in global supply chains:
             make them more domestic (e.g., reshoring, stockpiles); make
             them shorter (e.g., reducing the physical distances
             traversed by supply chains through regionalized production,
             such as Mexico and Central America for the US); make them
             more diversified (e.g., reduce dependence on one or a few
             countries); and make them more digital (e.g., digital
             versions of real products and using digital technology to
             track the supply chain better). This article outlines key
             government policies that can support these corporate
             strategic options.},
   Key = {fds368832}
}


%% James, Sherman A.   
@article{fds372338,
   Author = {Torsney, BM and Symonds, JE and Lombardi, D and Burke, KM and Torsney,
             CB and James, SA},
   Title = {Emergence of college students’ John Henryism during
             schoolwork: an exploratory study},
   Journal = {Educational Psychology},
   Volume = {43},
   Number = {6},
   Pages = {698-716},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01443410.2023.2240985},
   Abstract = {John Henryism (JH), named after the American folk hero John
             Henry, is a construct characterised by a behavioural
             predisposition for high-effort coping with psychosocial
             stressors. While it has been rigorously studied in the
             health sciences, little empirical research has focused on
             how JH emerges within educational contexts, specifically
             during schoolwork. This exploratory study investigated
             factors related to JH—race/ethnicity, gender,
             first-generation college student status, and high-effort
             coping—on school-based cognitive and emotional engagement.
             Results revealed that high JH scores predicted positive
             cognitive and emotional momentary engagement, particularly
             for racial/ethnic minorities and first-generation college
             students. Furthermore, in comparing our subsample of
             first-generation females with our overall sample of female
             students, we learned that JH had a greater positive
             influence on first-generation females’ momentary
             engagement than on that of the overall sample of female
             students. Findings suggest that historically marginalised
             groups may regularly rely on JH to cope with systemic
             inequality in school activities.},
   Doi = {10.1080/01443410.2023.2240985},
   Key = {fds372338}
}

@article{fds373702,
   Author = {Torsney, BM and Burke, KM and Milidou, M and Lombardi, D and Symonds,
             JE and Torsney, CB and James, SA},
   Title = {Beyond growth mindset: Exploring John Henryism and academic
             task engagement in higher education},
   Journal = {Social Psychology of Education},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11218-023-09813-y},
   Abstract = {This study examined how students from historically
             marginalized identity groups (i.e., Black and Latinx,
             females, and first-generation college students) engage
             momentarily in a school-based task. We explored how John
             Henryism, defined as effortful, active coping as a response
             to environmental stress, and growth and fixed mindset
             mediate the relationship between identity groups and
             momentary engagement outcomes (i.e., positive/negative
             emotions and cognitive engagement). Findings from two
             structural equation models—one including John Henryism as
             a mediating latent construct and one without—demonstrated
             that only John Henryism mediated the relationship between
             historically underrepresented groups and positive momentary
             engagement (i.e., increased cognitive engagement and
             positive emotions, while lowering negative emotions) while
             growth mindset did not. These findings suggest that John
             Henryism and growth mindset may work together to buffer
             environmental stressors that affect historically
             underrepresented students’ academic success.},
   Doi = {10.1007/s11218-023-09813-y},
   Key = {fds373702}
}


%% Jenson, Deborah   
@article{fds371713,
   Author = {Auguste, E and Beauliere, G and Jenson, D and LeBrun, J and Blanc,
             J},
   Title = {La lutte continue: Louis Mars and the genesis of
             ethnopsychiatry.},
   Journal = {The American psychologist},
   Volume = {78},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {469-483},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/amp0001097},
   Abstract = {The scientific contributions of Western mental health
             professionals have been lauded and leveraged for global
             mental health responses to varying degrees of success. In
             recent years, the necessity of recognizing the
             inefficiencies of solely etic and Western-based
             psychological intervention has been reflected in certain
             decolonial scholars like Frantz Fanon gaining more
             recognition. Despite this urgent focus on decolonial
             psychology, there are still others whose work has
             historically and contemporarily not received a great deal of
             attention. There is no better example of such a scholar than
             Dr. Louis Mars, Haiti's first psychiatrist. Mars made a
             lasting impact on the communities of Haiti by shifting the
             conversation around Haitian culture and the practice of how
             people living with a mental illness were treated. Further,
             he influenced the global practice of psychiatry by coining
             "ethnopsychiatry" and asserting that non-Western culture
             should be intimately considered, rather than stigmatized, in
             treating people around the world. Unfortunately, the
             significance of his contributions to ethnopsychiatry,
             ethnodrama, and the subsequent field of psychology has
             effectively been erased from the disciplinary canon. Indeed,
             the weight of Mars' psychiatric and political work deserves
             focus. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights
             reserved).},
   Doi = {10.1037/amp0001097},
   Key = {fds371713}
}


%% Matory, J. Lorand   
@article{fds375074,
   Author = {Matory, JL},
   Title = {‘On the backs of Blacks’: the fetish and how socially
             inferior Europeans put down Africans to prove their equality
             with their own oppressors},
   Journal = {History of European Ideas},
   Pages = {1-4},
   Publisher = {Informa UK Limited},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01916599.2023.2277644},
   Doi = {10.1080/01916599.2023.2277644},
   Key = {fds375074}
}

@article{fds370565,
   Author = {Matory, JL},
   Title = {基于白-黑肤色差异的族裔间不平等及其生成逻辑
             (The Light-Dark Hierarchy of Human Worth)},
   Journal = {Journal of Chinese National Community Studies
             (中华民族共同体研究)},
   Volume = {2023 (1)},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {143-176},
   Publisher = {Minzu University of Beijing},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   Key = {fds370565}
}


%% Mignolo, Walter D.   
@article{fds374452,
   Author = {Mignolo, W},
   Title = {The explosion of globalism and the advent of the third nomos
             of the earth},
   Pages = {193-207},
   Booktitle = {Globalization: Past, Present, Future},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {December},
   ISBN = {9780520395756},
   Abstract = {We on the planet are experiencing a change of era, no longer
             an era of changes. In the era of changes (1500-2000) or the
             era of the Westernization of the world, changes were linear
             and within the frame of the colonial matrix of power. The
             concepts of newness, evolution, development, transition, and
             postmodernity are concepts singling out the changes in a
             linear, universal time. The change of era cannot be
             understood as a transition in the linear time of Western
             modernity but as an explosion and the reconstitutions of
             planetary cultural times. That explosion marks the advent of
             the third nomos of the Earth and the dispute for control of
             the colonial matrix of power by states not grounded in
             Western political theory and beyond the scope of
             international relations after the Treaty of Westphalia
             (1648). Russia's 2022 special operation in Ukraine,
             responding to NATO's provocations, with the collaboration of
             Ukrainian government, to "contain" Russia, is a signpost of
             the change of era and the advent of the multipolar world
             order that is tantamount with the advent of the third nomos
             of the Earth. The second nomos, the Carl Schmitt narrative,
             was tantamount with the Westernization of the world and the
             colonial matrix of power.},
   Key = {fds374452}
}

@article{fds374453,
   Author = {Mignolo, WD and Bussmann, FS},
   Title = {Coloniality and the State: Race, Nation and
             Dependency},
   Journal = {Theory, Culture and Society},
   Volume = {40},
   Number = {6},
   Pages = {3-18},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {November},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02632764221151126},
   Abstract = {It is of concern that, until now, Western and Southern
             theories have not been able to provide a full conceptual
             understanding of the complicity of the elites and states of
             former colonies outside the West with the political
             domination they suffer from their Western counterparts.
             Decolonial thought, by exploring global epistemic designs,
             can fully explain such political dependency, which, for
             Aníbal Quijano, results from the local elites’ goal to
             racially identify with their Western peers
             (self-humanization), obstructing local nationalization. We
             explore why the racially dehumanized local elites believe
             they can humanize themselves. Our claim is that this happens
             because of modernity’s pretense that everyone can become
             civilized and, thereby, human, hiding the fact that hu(man)s
             are only heterosexual men that are simultaneously Western,
             white and Christian. Only by focusing on the enunciation of
             Western knowledge, instead of on its enunciated content, can
             we make that argument.},
   Doi = {10.1177/02632764221151126},
   Key = {fds374453}
}

@article{fds374454,
   Author = {Mignolo, W},
   Title = {The Colonial Matrix of Power},
   Pages = {39-46},
   Booktitle = {Talking About Global Inequality: Personal Experiences and
             Historical Perspectives},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9783031080418},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-08042-5_5},
   Abstract = {Walter Mignolo is an Argentine semiotician, philosopher, and
             literary scholar who has devoted his career to study the
             historical foundations of the modern/colonial world system
             and imaginary since 1500. He is a William Hane Wannamaker
             Distinguished Professor of Romance Studies at Duke
             University and has written several award-winning books, such
             as The darker side of the renaissance: literacy,
             territoriality and colonization (1996), and Idea of Latin
             America (2006). In this essay, Mignolo takes us back to his
             childhood in the Argentine countryside, through his years as
             a university student, to his theories about
             coloniality/modernity, and his proposal of decolonizing
             knowledge and moving away from European-centered
             epistemologies.},
   Doi = {10.1007/978-3-031-08042-5_5},
   Key = {fds374454}
}

@article{fds374455,
   Author = {Mignolo, W},
   Title = {The Third Nomos of the Earth: The Decline of Western
             Hegemony and the Continuity of Capitalism},
   Pages = {89-111},
   Booktitle = {Knowledge Production and Epistemic Decolonization at the End
             of Pax Americana},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9780367474027},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003036661-3},
   Abstract = {Carl Schmitt traced the emergence and history of the second
             nomos of the earth from the sixteenth century to the end of
             WWI. Anibal Quijano traced the history of the colonial
             matrix of power from the sixteenth century until today.
             Reading Schmitt from Quijano, this chapter recasts both
             stories in terms of – on the one hand – Westernization
             of the world (1500–2000), the emergence of inter-state
             de-Westernization and the drive toward multipolarity, and
             the counterreformation of re-Westernization to maintain
             unipolarity of the global order. And, on the other hand, it
             also traces the emergence of pluriversality and the closing
             of universality in the sphere of ideas and praxis of living
             managed by the people, neither by the State nor by consumer
             persuaders and digital managers of desires. Both
             de-Westernization and pluriversality are signs of the
             emergence of the third nomos of the earth under the hegemony
             of capitalist economy.},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781003036661-3},
   Key = {fds374455}
}

@article{fds374456,
   Author = {Mignolo, WD},
   Title = {The Refiguration of the Social and the Re-Configuration of
             the Communa},
   Pages = {159-185},
   Booktitle = {Considering Space: A Critical Concept for the Social
             Sciences},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781032420882},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003361152-11},
   Abstract = {I argue that “space and the re-configuration of society”
             is a statement highlighting two Western concepts “space”
             and “society.” I argue that none of the coexisting
             civilizations, before 1500, have and care about these two
             concepts introduced in the vernacular modern European
             languages. I use the example of ancient Nahuatl speakers in
             the Valley of Mexico, since I cannot go through planetary
             civilization, to sustain my argument. Nahualts stressed
             places, directions and landscapes (e.g., the condition of
             the land in a given place), rather than space. I am not
             comparing two cosmologies but looking into their
             entanglement since 1500 and the power differential that set
             up the privileges-through today-of Western civilization over
             the others. It is a gnoseological argument that situates
             Western epistemology in its limited and well-deserved place.
             It is also a political and ethical argument relevant to what
             we in the planet are witnessing both at the inter-state
             conflict and in resurgence of the pollical society
             displacing the “social and the individual” separated
             from life on Earth, to restore “communal relations”
             among animal humans and all living organism on earth to
             reconnect with the Earthy and Cosmic energies separated from
             “society” (e.g., climate crisis).},
   Doi = {10.4324/9781003361152-11},
   Key = {fds374456}
}


%% Milian, Claudia   
@article{fds375280,
   Author = {Milian, C},
   Title = {LatinX genesis: On the origins of a mongrel
             species},
   Journal = {Cultural Dynamics},
   Year = {2024},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09213740231223837},
   Abstract = {This essay focuses its attention on Madrid, the Royal
             Botanical Garden (RBG), and the LatinX presence just as they
             were all coming into existence in the Spanish and European
             world. Pursuing a LatinX origin that exceeds humanness, this
             thought exploration tracks the Mesoamerican dahlia,
             transplanted to Spain in 1789. Acocoxochitl—what we now
             know as the dahlia, named after Swedish naturalist Andreas
             Dahl (1751–1789)—was one of the first plants to arrive
             at Madrid’s RBG when it opened nearly three centuries ago.
             The flower was tested on, domesticated, and acclimated,
             making its botanical debut as the dahlia pinnata in 1791.
             The dahlia is a vector for an unanticipated life form,
             clueing us in on where the LatinX world-in-process was
             heading. It offers a glimpse of how the garden and the Latin
             find themselves arranged and come into being. How LatinX
             history is blurred—and how LatinX difference has been
             produced—in Madrid’s iconography is disentangled here.
             The piece weighs in on these considerations: What does it
             mean to think alongside the dahlia? What might the plant
             mean to a human whose body has been tampered with; who
             asymmetrically became one of Carolus Linnaeus’s Latin
             species; who has been “naturally” passed down to
             different kinds of nature; whose construction is both native
             and foreign; and who comes into being through a rather
             unnatural classificatory order?},
   Doi = {10.1177/09213740231223837},
   Key = {fds375280}
}

@article{fds376909,
   Author = {Milian, C and Romera-Figueroa, E},
   Title = {Transatlantic LatinX studies, Iberian studies, and the
             Global South},
   Journal = {Cultural Dynamics},
   Year = {2024},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09213740231223816},
   Abstract = {More than a special issue, this endeavor serves as a
             sourcebook and provocation amplifying embryonic but
             interlinked sites of inquiry: LatinXness in Spain and its
             vital conversation with US LatinX studies as well as Iberian
             studies. LatinXs share historical and cultural connections
             to the Spanish and American empires. The contemporary period
             marks a significant moment on both sides of the Atlantic, as
             Spain now houses Europe’s largest LatinX population and
             the shifting ground of LatinXness exceeds the United States
             as well as a North-South axis of analysis. With an eye
             toward being wide-ranging, bringing forward fresh insights,
             and offering a crucial reference for an expanding area of
             interest—transatlantic LatinX studies—this undertaking
             provides historical contexts, defining moments, conceptual
             parameters, and critical approaches that appraise how
             Spain’s sociocultural and intellectual climate has fully
             entered a LatinX epoch. The exploration faces a cluster of
             questions: What do current characterizations of Spanishness
             invigorate when it admits a long ignored—and
             inseparable—LatinX foundation? What constitutes Spanish
             national currency when animated by LatinX bodies and
             imaginations? What is Spain—and what is Europe—to
             LatinXness and the Global South? What kind of new
             Spain—and new Europe—emerge from LatinXness and Global
             Southness? Collected here are original arguments and
             contributions—academic articles, think pieces, critical
             conversations, poetry, and creative nonfiction—orienting
             us on central thematic concerns that include: new directions
             and perspectives in transatlantic LatinX studies; the idea
             of Europe and Europeanness from Spain’s southernmost
             archipelago, the Canary Islands; LatinX nonhuman origins at
             the Royal Botanical Garden in the Spanish capital; the
             history, uses, and dissemination of the Panchito/Panchita
             racial slur; Madrid’s twenty-first century LatinX Spanish
             language, migration, and culture; present-day brown drag
             performance and practices; Afro-Spanish-Colombian poetry and
             politics; rurality, depopulation, and LatinX repopulation in
             Aguaviva, Spain; diasporic bodies and expressions of
             identity through movement; and movement in translation, X
             equivalencies across bodies, geographies, and languages. The
             volume, as a whole, is an entry point into LatinX studies
             and Iberian studies marshaling ideas and thinking tools that
             may be veering toward a new field of study.},
   Doi = {10.1177/09213740231223816},
   Key = {fds376909}
}

@article{fds375281,
   Author = {Milian, C and Romera-Figueroa, E},
   Title = {A note on the cover image},
   Journal = {Cultural Dynamics},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09213740231223835},
   Doi = {10.1177/09213740231223835},
   Key = {fds375281}
}


%% Olcott, Jocelyn   
@misc{fds376283,
   Author = {Olcott, J},
   Title = {Solidarity struggles: Transnational feminisms and Cold War
             lefts in the Global South},
   Pages = {173-188},
   Booktitle = {Leftist Internationalisms: a Transnational Political
             History},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {9781350247918},
   Key = {fds376283}
}

@article{fds371701,
   Author = {Olcott, J},
   Title = {Decolonizing development: Women of the Global South
             campaigning in the latter years of the Cold
             War},
   Journal = {Clio: Histoire, Femmes et Societes},
   Volume = {57},
   Number = {1},
   Pages = {197-208},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   Key = {fds371701}
}


%% Pimm, Stuart L.   
@article{fds369657,
   Author = {Pimm, SL and Diamond, J and Bishop, KD},
   Title = {Species coexistence by wide constant size
             spacing.},
   Journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the
             United States of America},
   Volume = {120},
   Number = {9},
   Pages = {e2217904120},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {February},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2217904120},
   Abstract = {We consider the distribution of fruit pigeons of the genera
             <i>Ptilinopus</i> and <i>Ducula</i> on the island of New
             Guinea. Of the 21 species, between six and eight coexist
             inside humid lowland forests. We conducted or analyzed 31
             surveys at 16 different sites, resurveying some sites in
             different years. The species coexisting at any single site
             in a single year are a highly nonrandom selection of the
             species to which that site is geographically accessible.
             Their sizes are both much more widely spread and more
             uniformly spaced than in random sets of species drawn from
             the locally available species pool. We also present a
             detailed case study of a highly mobile species that has been
             recorded on every ornithologically explored island in the
             West Papuan island group west of New Guinea. That species'
             rareness on just three well-surveyed islands within the
             group cannot be due to an inability to reach them. Instead,
             its local status decreases from abundant resident to rare
             vagrant in parallel with increasing weight proximity of the
             other resident species.},
   Doi = {10.1073/pnas.2217904120},
   Key = {fds369657}
}

@article{ISI:000255841600030,
   Author = {Joppa, Lucas N. and Loarie, Scott R. and Pimm, Stuart
             L.},
   Title = {On the protection of ``protected areas{''}},
   Journal = {PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE
             UNITED STATES OF AMERICA},
   Volume = {105},
   Number = {18},
   Pages = {6673-6678},
   Year = {2008},
   ISSN = {0027-8424},
   Abstract = {Tropical moist forests contain the majority of terrestrial
             species. Human actions destroy between 1 and 2 million km(2)
             of such forests per decade, with concomitant carbon release
             into the atmosphere. Within these forests, protected areas
             are the principle defense against forest loss and species
             extinctions. Four regions-the Amazon, Congo, South American
             Atlantic Coast, and West Africa-once constituted about half
             the world's tropical moist forest. We measure forest cover
             at progressively larger distances inside and outside of
             protected areas within these four regions, using data-sets
             on protected areas and land-cover. We find important
             geographical differences. In the Amazon and Congo, protected
             areas are generally large and retain high levels of forest
             cover, as do their surroundings. These areas are protected
             de facto by being inaccessible and will likely remain
             protected if they continue to be so. Deciding whether they
             are also protected de jure - that is, whether effective laws
             also protect them-is statistically difficult, for there are
             few controls. In contrast, protected areas in the Atlantic
             Coast forest and West Africa show sharp boundaries in forest
             cover at their edges. This effective protection of forest
             cover is partially offset by their very small size: little
             area is deep inside protected area boundaries. Lands outside
             protected areas in the Atlantic Coast forest are unusually
             fragmented. Finally, we ask whether global databases on
             protected areas are biased toward highly protected areas and
             ignore ``paper parks.{''} Analysis of a Brazilian database
             does not support this presumption.},
   Key = {ISI:000255841600030}
}

@article{ISI:000255398800017,
   Author = {Vale, Mariana M. and Alves, Maria Alice and Pimm, Stuart
             L.},
   Title = {Biopiracy: conservationists have to rebuild lost
             trust},
   Journal = {NATURE},
   Volume = {453},
   Number = {7191},
   Pages = {26},
   Year = {2008},
   ISSN = {0028-0836},
   Key = {ISI:000255398800017}
}

@article{ISI:000253233800014,
   Author = {Pimm, Stuart L.},
   Title = {Biodiversity: Climate change or habitat loss - Which will
             kill more species?},
   Journal = {CURRENT BIOLOGY},
   Volume = {18},
   Number = {3},
   Pages = {R117-R119},
   Year = {2008},
   ISSN = {0960-9822},
   Abstract = {Habitat loss and climate change both kill off species. New
             studies show that the latter is a potent threat. Worse, its
             victims will likely be mostly those not presently threatened
             by habitat loss.},
   Key = {ISI:000253233800014}
}

@article{ISI:000239122100029,
   Author = {Montoya, Jose M. and Pimm, Stuart L. and Sole, Ricard
             V.},
   Title = {Ecological networks and their fragility},
   Journal = {NATURE},
   Volume = {442},
   Number = {7100},
   Pages = {259-264},
   Year = {2006},
   ISSN = {0028-0836},
   Abstract = {Darwin used the metaphor of a `tangled bank' to describe the
             complex interactions between species. Those interactions are
             varied: they can be antagonistic ones involving predation,
             herbivory and parasitism, or mutualistic ones, such as those
             involving the pollination of flowers by insects. Moreover,
             the metaphor hints that the interactions may be complex to
             the point of being impossible to understand. All
             interactions can be visualized as ecological networks, in
             which species are linked together, either directly or
             indirectly through intermediate species. Ecological
             networks, although complex, have well defined patterns that
             both illuminate the ecological mechanisms underlying them
             and promise a better understanding of the relationship
             between complexity and ecological stability.},
   Key = {ISI:000239122100029}
}

@article{ISI:000221243000029,
   Author = {Pimm, SL and Brown, JH},
   Title = {Domains of diversity},
   Journal = {SCIENCE},
   Volume = {304},
   Number = {5672},
   Pages = {831-833},
   Year = {2004},
   ISSN = {0036-8075},
   Key = {ISI:000221243000029}
}

@article{ISI:000186803800059,
   Author = {Ferraz, G and Russell, GJ and Stouffer, PC and Bierregaard,
             RO and Pimm, SL and Lovejoy, TE},
   Title = {Rates of species loss from Amazonian forest
             fragments},
   Journal = {PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE
             UNITED STATES OF AMERICA},
   Volume = {100},
   Number = {24},
   Pages = {14069-14073},
   Year = {2003},
   ISSN = {0027-8424},
   Abstract = {In the face of worldwide habitat fragmentation, managers
             need to devise a time frame for action. We ask how fast do
             understory bird species disappear from experimentally
             isolated plots in the Biological Dynamics of Forest
             Fragments Project, central Amazon, Brazil. Our data consist
             of mist-net records obtained over a period of 13 years in 11
             sites of 1, 10, and 100 hectares. The numbers of captures
             per species per unit time, analyzed under different
             simplifying assumptions, reveal a set of species-loss
             curves. From those declining numbers, we derive a scaling
             rule for the time it takes to lose half the species in a
             fragment as a function of its area. A 10-fold decrease in
             the rate of species loss requires a 1,000-fold increase in
             area. Fragments of 100 hectares lose one half of their
             species in <15 years, too short a time for implementing
             conservation measures.},
   Key = {ISI:000186803800059}
}

@article{ISI:000182612600052,
   Author = {Sugihara, G and Bersier, LF and Southwood, TRE and Pimm, SL and May, RM},
   Title = {Predicted correspondence between species abundances and
             dendrograms of niche similarities},
   Journal = {PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE
             UNITED STATES OF AMERICA},
   Volume = {100},
   Number = {9},
   Pages = {5246-5251},
   Year = {2003},
   ISSN = {0027-8424},
   Abstract = {We examine a hypothesized relationship between two
             descriptions of community structure: the niche-overlap
             dendrogram that describes the ecological similarities of
             species and the pattern of relative abundances.
             Specifically, we examine the way in. which this relationship
             follows from the niche hierarchy model, whose fundamental
             assumption is a direct connection between abundances and
             underlying hierarchical community organization. We test
             three important, although correlated, predictions of the
             niche hierarchy model and show that they are upheld in a set
             of 11 communities (encompassing fishes, amphibians, lizards,
             and birds) where both abundances and dendrograms were
             reported. First, species that are highly nested in the
             dendrogram are on average less abundant than species from
             branches less subdivided. Second, and more significantly,
             more equitable community abundances are associated with more
             evenly branched dendrogram structures, whereas less
             equitable abundances are associated with less even
             dendrograms. This relationship shows that abundance patterns
             can give insight into less visible aspects of community
             organization. Third, one can recover the distribution of
             proportional abundances seen in assemblages containing two
             species by treating each branch point in the dendrogram as a
             two-species case. This reconstruction cannot be achieved if
             abundances and the dendrogram are unrelated and suggests a
             method for hierarchically decomposing systems. To our
             knowledge, this is the first test of a species abundance
             model based on nontrivial predictions as to the origins and
             causes of abundance patterns, and not simply on the
             goodness-of-fit of distributions.},
   Key = {ISI:000182612600052}
}

@article{ISI:000183042400029,
   Author = {Liu, JG and Ouyang, ZY and Pimm, SL and Raven, PH and Wang,
             XK and Miao, H and Han, NY},
   Title = {Protecting China's biodiversity},
   Journal = {SCIENCE},
   Volume = {300},
   Number = {5623},
   Pages = {1240-1241},
   Year = {2003},
   ISSN = {0036-8075},
   Key = {ISI:000183042400029}
}

@article{ISI:000169246400037,
   Author = {Pimm, SL and van Aarde, RJ},
   Title = {Population control - African elephants and
             contraception},
   Journal = {NATURE},
   Volume = {411},
   Number = {6839},
   Pages = {766},
   Year = {2001},
   ISSN = {0028-0836},
   Key = {ISI:000169246400037}
}


%% Shapiro - Garza, Elizabeth   
@misc{fds178486,
   Author = {E.N. Shapiro},
   Title = {Community Forum of the Ecosystem Marketplace},
   Journal = {Vol. 1, No. 4 & 5; Vol. 2, No. 1-9; Vol. 3 No. 1,
             www.EcosystemMarketplace.comSilverblatt, Irene   
@misc{fds373006,
   Author = {Silverblatt, I},
   Title = {Interpreting women in states: New feminist
             ethnohistories},
   Pages = {140-171},
   Booktitle = {Gender at the Crossroads of Knowledge: Feminist Anthropology
             in the Postmodern Era},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {September},
   ISBN = {9780520070936},
   Key = {fds373006}
}


%% Starn, Orin   
@article{fds371615,
   Author = {Starn, O},
   Title = {Lane C},
   Journal = {Anthropology and Humanism},
   Volume = {48},
   Number = {2},
   Pages = {417-418},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {December},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/anhu.12451},
   Abstract = {This poem for the “hundreds” in honor of Kathleen
             Stewart is about anthropology, life and death, and doing
             fieldwork in an Amazon.com warehouse.},
   Doi = {10.1111/anhu.12451},
   Key = {fds371615}
}

@article{fds371428,
   Author = {La Serna and M and Starn, O},
   Title = {Beyond the Gonzalo Mystique: Challenges to Abimael Guzmn's
             Leadership inside Peru's Shining Path, 1982-1992},
   Journal = {Latin American Research Review},
   Volume = {58},
   Number = {4},
   Pages = {743-761},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/lar.2023.25},
   Abstract = {From the moment it launched its armed insurgency in 1980
             until the death of its former leader in September 2021,
             Peru's Shining Path mesmerized observers. The Maoist group
             had a well-established reputation as a personality cult
             whose members were fanatically devoted to Abimael Guzmán,
             the messianic leader they revered as Presidente Gonzalo.
             According to this narrative, referred to here as the Gonzalo
             mystique, Shining Path zealots were prepared to submit to
             Guzmán's authority and will - no matter how violent or
             suicidal - because they viewed him as a messiah-prophet who
             would usher in a new era of communist utopia. Drawing on
             newly available sources, including the minutes of Shining
             Path's 1988-1989 congress, this article complicates the
             Gonzalo mystique narrative, tracing the unrelenting efforts
             by middle- and high-ranking militants to challenge,
             undermine, disobey, and even unseat Guzmán throughout the
             insurgency. Far from seeing their leader as the undisputed
             cosmocrat of the popular imagination, these militants
             recognized Guzmán for who he was: a deeply flawed man with
             errant ideas, including a dubious interpretation of Maoism,
             problematic military strategy, and a revolutionary path that
             was anything but shining.},
   Doi = {10.1017/lar.2023.25},
   Key = {fds371428}
}


%% Swenson, Jennifer J.   
@article{fds370394,
   Author = {Qiu, T and Bell, AJ and Swenson, JJ and Clark, JS},
   Title = {Habitat–trait interactions that control response to
             climate change: North American ground beetles
             (Carabidae)},
   Journal = {Global Ecology and Biogeography},
   Volume = {32},
   Number = {6},
   Pages = {987-1001},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {June},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/geb.13670},
   Abstract = {Aim: As one of the most diverse and economically important
             families on Earth, ground beetles (Carabidae) are viewed as
             a key barometer of climate change. Recent meta-analyses
             provide equivocal evidence on abundance changes of
             terrestrial insects. Generalizations from traits (e.g., body
             size, diets, flights) provide insights into understanding
             community responses, but syntheses for the diverse Carabidae
             have not yet emerged. We aim to determine how habitat and
             trait syndromes mediate risks from contemporary and future
             climate change on the Carabidae community. Location: North
             America. Time period: 2012–2100. Major taxa studied:
             Ground beetles (Carabidae). Methods: We synthesized the
             abundance and trait data for 136 species from the National
             Ecological Observatory Network (NEON) and additional raw
             data from studies across North America with remotely sensed
             habitat characteristics in a generalized joint attribute
             model. Combined Light Detection and RAnging (LiDAR) and
             hyperspectral imagery were used to derive habitat at a
             continental scale. We evaluated climate risks on the joint
             response of species and traits by expanding climate velocity
             to response velocity given habitat change. Results: Habitat
             contributes more variations in species abundance and
             community-weighted mean traits compared to climate. Across
             North America, grassland fliers benefit from open habitats
             in hot, dry climates. By contrast, large-bodied, burrowing
             omnivores prefer warm-wet climates beneath closed canopies.
             Species-specific abundance changes predicted by the fitted
             model under future shared socioeconomic pathways (SSP)
             scenarios are controlled by climate interactions with
             habitat heterogeneity. For example, the mid-size, non-flier
             is projected to decline across much of the continent, but
             the magnitudes of declines are reduced or even reversed
             where canopies are open. Conversely, temperature dominates
             the response of the small, frequent flier Agonoleptus
             conjunctus, causing projected change to be more closely
             linked to regional temperature changes. Main conclusions:
             Carabidae community reorganization under climate change is
             being governed by climate–habitat interactions (CHI).
             Species-specific responses to CHI are explained by trait
             syndromes. The fact that habitat mediates warming impacts
             has immediate application to critical habitat designation
             for carabid conservation.},
   Doi = {10.1111/geb.13670},
   Key = {fds370394}
}

@article{fds370066,
   Author = {Bogdziewicz, M and Acuña, MCA and Andrus, R and Ascoli, D and Bergeron,
             Y and Brveiller, D and Boivin, T and Bonal, R and Caignard, T and Cailleret, M and Calama, R and Calderon, SD and Camarero, JJ and Chang-Yang, CH and Chave, J and Chianucci, F and Cleavitt, NL and Courbaud, B and Cutini, A and Curt, T and Das, A and Davi, H and Delpierre,
             N and Delzon, S and Dietze, M and Dormont, L and Farfan-Rios, W and Gehring, CA and Gilbert, GS and Gratzer, G and Greenberg, CH and Guignabert, A and Guo, Q and Hacket-Pain, A and Hampe, A and Han, Q and Hoshizaki, K and Ibanez, I and Johnstone, JF and Journé, V and Kitzberger, T and Knops, JMH and Kunstler, G and Kobe, R and Lageard,
             JGA and LaMontagne, JM and Ledwon, M and Leininger, T and Limousin, JM and Lutz, JA and Macias, D and Marell, A and McIntire, EJB and Moran, E and Motta, R and Myers, J and Nagel, TA and Naoe, S and Noguchi, M and Oguro,
             M and Kurokawa, H and Ourcival, JM and Parmenter, R and Perez-Ramos, IM and Piechnik, L and Podgórski, T and Poulsen, J and Qiu, T and Redmond, MD and Reid, CD and Rodman, KC and Šamonil, P and Holik, J and Scher, CL and Van Marle, HS and Seget, B and Shibata, M and Sharma, S and Silman, M and Steele, MA and Straub, JN and Sun, IF and Sutton, S and Swenson, J and Thomas, PA and Uriarte, M and Vacchiano, G and Veblen, TT and Wright, B and Wright, SJ and Whitham, TG and Zhu, K and Zimmerman, JK and Zywiec, M and Clark, JS},
   Title = {Linking seed size and number to trait syndromes in
             trees},
   Journal = {Global Ecology and Biogeography},
   Volume = {32},
   Number = {5},
   Pages = {683-694},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {May},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/geb.13652},
   Abstract = {Aim: Our understanding of the mechanisms that maintain
             forest diversity under changing climate can benefit from
             knowledge about traits that are closely linked to fitness.
             We tested whether the link between traits and seed number
             and seed size is consistent with two hypotheses, termed the
             leaf economics spectrum and the plant size syndrome, or
             whether reproduction represents an independent dimension
             related to a seed size–seed number trade-off. Location:
             Most of the data come from Europe, North and Central America
             and East Asia. A minority of the data come from South
             America, Africa and Australia. Time period: 1960–2022.
             Major taxa studied: Trees. Methods: We gathered 12 million
             observations of the number of seeds produced in 784 tree
             species. We estimated the number of seeds produced by
             individual trees and scaled it up to the species level.
             Next, we used principal components analysis and generalized
             joint attribute modelling (GJAM) to map seed number and size
             on the tree traits spectrum. Results: Incorporating seed
             size and number into trait analysis while controlling for
             environment and phylogeny with GJAM exposes relationships in
             trees that might otherwise remain hidden. Production of the
             large total biomass of seeds [product of seed number and
             seed size; hereafter, species seed productivity (SSP)] is
             associated with high leaf area, low foliar nitrogen, low
             specific leaf area (SLA) and dense wood. Production of high
             seed numbers is associated with small seeds produced by
             nutrient-demanding species with softwood, small leaves and
             high SLA. Trait covariation is consistent with opposing
             strategies: one fast-growing, early successional, with high
             dispersal, and the other slow-growing, stress-tolerant, that
             recruit in shaded conditions. Main conclusions: Earth system
             models currently assume that reproductive allocation is
             indifferent among plant functional types. Easily measurable
             seed size is a strong predictor of the seed number and
             species seed productivity. The connection of SSP with the
             functional traits can form the first basis of improved
             fecundity prediction across global forests.},
   Doi = {10.1111/geb.13652},
   Key = {fds370066}
}

@article{fds369105,
   Author = {Rico-Straffon, J and Wang, Z and Panlasigui, S and Loucks, CJ and Swenson, J and Pfaff, A},
   Title = {Forest concessions and eco-certifications in the Peruvian
             Amazon: Deforestation impacts of logging rights and logging
             restrictions},
   Journal = {Journal of Environmental Economics and Management},
   Volume = {118},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {March},
   url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jeem.2022.102780},
   Abstract = {Concessions that grant logging rights to firms support
             economic development based on forest resources.
             Eco-certifications put sustainability restrictions on the
             operations of those concessions. For spatially detailed
             data, including many pre-treatment years, we use new
             difference-in-differences estimators to estimate 2002–2018
             impacts upon Peruvian Amazon forests from both logging
             concessions and their eco-certifications. We find that the
             concessions − which in theory could raise or reduce forest
             loss − did not raise loss, if anything reducing it
             slightly by warding off spikes in deforestation pressure.
             Eco-certifications could reduce or raise forest loss, yet we
             find no significant impacts.},
   Doi = {10.1016/j.jeem.2022.102780},
   Key = {fds369105}
}


%% Wesolowski, Katya   
@book{fds368051,
   Author = {Wesolowski, K},
   Title = {Capoeira Connections A Memoir in Motion},
   Pages = {304 pages},
   Publisher = {University of Florida Press},
   Year = {2023},
   Month = {January},
   ISBN = {1683403207},
   Abstract = {This ethnographic memoir weaves together the history of
             capoeira, recent transformations in the practice, and
             personal insights from author Katya Wesolowski&#39;s thirty
             years of experience as a capoeirista.},
   Key = {fds368051}
}