St. Bonaventure University

Faculty Emeriti


Horowitz, Joel

  • Joel Horowitz

  • ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT
    History
    ACADEMIC SCHOOL
    School of Arts and Sciences

    TITLES/RESPONSIBILITIES
    Professor Emeritus, History
    CONTACT
    OFFICE
    COURSES TAUGHT
    • HIST 102. Europe since 1815 
    • HIST 200. Historiography
    • HIST 307. Colonial Latin American History 
    • HIST 308. Modern Latin American History 
    • HIST 309. Argentina and Brazil 
    • HIST 310. History of Mexico 
    • HIST 311. US and the Caribbean
    ACADEMIC DEGREES
    • Ph.D., History, University of California, Berkeley
    • MA, History, University of California, Berkeley
    • AB, History, University of Pennsylvania
    OTHER EDUCATION
    • Fulbright Research Scholar, 1993;
    • Tibesar Prize, awarded by the Conference on Latin American History for the best article in The Americas, 1991;
    • Fulbright Junior Research Scholar, 1984;
    • Doherty Fellowship for Advanced Study in Latin America, 1975-76.
    PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND
    ACCOMPLISHMENTS
    • Argentina’s Radical Party and Popular Mobilization, 1916-1930 (University Park: Penn State University Press, 2008).
    • Argentine Unions, the State and the Rise of Perón, 1930-1945 (Berkeley: Institute of International Studies, University of California, Berkeley, 1990). Translated as Los sindicatos, el estado y el surgimiento de Perón, 1930-1946 (Buenos Aires: Universidad de Tres de Febrero, 2004).
    • “Football Clubs and Neighbourhoods in Buenos Aires before 1943: The Role of Political Linkages and Personal Influence,” Journal of Latin American Studies (Aug. 2014), 557-587.
    • “Economic History and the Politics of Culture in Twentieth-Century Argentina,” Latin American Research Review 48, 2 (Summer 2013), 193-203.
    • “Populism and Its Legacies in Argentina,” in Populism in Latin America, ed. by Michael L. Conniff, 2nd ed., (Tuscaloosa:  University of Alabama Press, 2012, 23-47.updated version of 1999 edition.
    • “Argentine Historical Writing during an Era of Political and Economic Instability" Oxford History of Historical Writing, Vol. 5:  Historical Writing since 1945, ed. by Axel Schneider and Daniel Woolf (Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 2011), 422-439.
    • “Patrones y clientes: el empleo municipal en el Buenos Aires de los primeros gobiernos radicales (1916-1930)," Desarrollo Económico (Jan.-Mar. 2007), 569-596. Slightly revised version of “Bosses and Clients: Municipal Employment in the Buenos Aires of the Radicals, 1916-1930,” Journal of Latin American Studies (Oct. 1999), 617-644.
    • “Corruption, Crime, and Punishment: Recent Scholarship on Latin America” Latin American Research Review, 40, 1 (Feb. 2005), 268-277.
    • “History: 19th and 20th Centuries: Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay,” with Thomas Whigham, Handbook of Latin American Studies: No. 60, prepared for the Hispanic Division of the Library of Congress, ed. by Lawrence Boudon (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2005), 415-460.
    • “Una vez más los sindicatos y el ascenso al poder de Juan D. Perón,” Desarrollo Económico (July-September 2004), 307-311.
    • “Los Radicales, Alvear y la búsqueda de apoyo entre los obreros ferroviarios,” Cuadernos de Historia, Serie Economía y Sociedad, 5, 2002, 85-108.
    • “History: 19th and 20th Centuries: Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay,” with Thomas Whigham, Handbook of Latin American Studies: No. 58 prepared for the Hispanic Division of the Library of Congress, ed. by Lawrence Boudon (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2002), 414-458.
    • “Cuando las élites y los trabajadores coincidieron: La resistencia al programa de bienestar patrocinado por el gobierno argentino, 1923-1924, Anuario IEHS, No. 16, 2001,109-12.
    • “El movimiento obrero,” in Nueva historia argentina, ed. by Juan Suriano, Vol VII: Crisis económica, avance del Estado y incertidumbre política (1930-1943), ed. by Alejandro Cattaruzza (Buenos Aires: Sudamericana, 2001), 239-282.
    • “Bosses and Clients: Municipal Employment in the Buenos Aires of the Radicals, 1916-1930,” Journal of Latin American Studies (Oct. 1999), 617-644.
    • “History: 19th and 20th Centuries: Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay,” with Joseph T. Criscenti, Handbook of Latin American Studies: No. 56 prepared for the Hispanic Division of the Library of Congress, ed. by Dolores Moyano Martin (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1999), 420-456.
    • “Populism and Its Legacies in Argentina,” in Populism in Latin America, ed. by Michael L. Conniff (Tuscaloosa:  University of Alabama Press, 1999), 22-42.
    • Four articles in Encyclopedia of Latin American History, ed. by Barbara A. Tannenbaum (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1996).
    • “Argentina’s Failed General Strike of 1921: A Critical Moment in the Radicals’ Relations with Unions,” Hispanic American Historical Review (Feb. 1995), 57-79.
    • “The Industrialists and the Rise of Juan Perón, 1943-1946: Some Implications for the Conceptualization of Populism,” The Americas (Oct. 1990), 199-218.
    • “Occupational Community and the Creation of a Self-Styled Elite: Railroad Workers in Argentina,” The Americas (July 1985), 55-81. Also in Spanish translation in Desarrollo Económico (Oct.-Dec. 1985), 421-446.
    • “Ideologías sindicales y políticas estatales en la Argentina, 1930-1943,” Desarrollo Económico (July-Sept. 1984), 275-296.
    • “The Impact of Pre-1943 Labor Union Traditions on Peronism,” Journal of Latin American Studies (May 1983), 101-116. Also in Spanish translation in La formación del sindicalismo peronista, ed. by Juan Carlos Torre (Buenos Aires: Legasa, 1988), 99-118.
    TEACHING PHILOSOPHY
    CURRENT RESEARCH INTERESTS/PROJECTS
    Soccer, civic associations and politics in the interwar period in Argentina.
    PERSONAL INTERESTS/COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT
    LINKS