Teaches Latin American and Mexican history, with particular interests in the juridical dimensions of state formation and the intersection between legal and popular cultures in Mexico City in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Professor
Scardaville teaches an introductory survey of Latin American history,
undergraduate
courses on colonial
Latin America and Mexico, a senior seminar on human rights in Latin
America, and graduate courses on various aspects of Mexican and Latin
American history. His most recent publications include “Justice by Paperwork: A Day in the Life of a Court Scribe in Bourbon Mexico City,” “Los procesos judiciales y la autoridad del Estado: reflexiones en torno a la administración de la justicia criminal y la legitimidad en la ciudad de México, desde finales de la Colonia, hasta principios del México independiente,” “Trabajadores, grupo doméstico y supervivencia durante el periodo colonial tardío en la Ciudad de México, o ‘La familia pequeña
no vive major.
Current
Activities
With
support of a research fellowship from the National Endowment for
the Humanities
in 2003, I am completing
a book on "The Restrained Leviathan: Public Order and the Judicial State in Mexico City, 1737-1836," which
explores the role that criminal law played in state formation in
the Mexican capital from the late colonial to the early national
periods.
I also am an affiliate of Consortium for Latino Immigration Studies, a new entity at USC that promotes and coordinates multi-disciplinary research related to Latinos in South Carolina and the Southeast. For more information about the Consortium, click here.
Professor Scardaville's c.v. is located here.
|