Tulane University
LATEST SITE UPDATES
MEDIA
- Should we Stay or Should we Go - Latinos during Hurricane Evacuations
- Policing and Immigration: El Protector Program
- Immigration and Education
- Managing Cultural Identity
- Perspectives on the H1B Visa
- NOLA Food Trucks
- Futebol: Brazil's National Sport
- Exploring Tropicalia
- Regionalismo of Brazil
- Radio in Brazil
- Roots of Racism in Brazilian Education
- Carmelo Mesa Lago: The Return of the State to Privatized Pension Systems
- Carmelo Mesa Lago: Raul Castro's Economic and Social Reforms in Cuba
- Edésio Fernandes: Informal Urban Land Developme
NEWS
- Latin American Library Special Collections Closed for June and July
- From the Payson Center: Combining study with UN internships in Latin America, Tulane announces the Master's of International Development Panama Field Work Experience
- Feoli and MacKinnon's book on representation and effectiveness in Latin America published
- Graduate and Undergraduate Latin American Photo Contest 2013
- Stone Center hosts annual Awards Ceremony
- Carmelo Mesa presents on Raul Castro's reforms in Cuba
- CIPR Post-doctoral Fellow Jessica Rich Publishes Article in LAPS Journal
- Carmelo Mesa Lago discusses Pension Reform in Cuba
EVENTS
Upcoming Events
Two-week Public Service summer program in Ecuador
Center for Public Service: International Programs
Ecuador: Tropical Field Biology and Conservation
Chocó Rainforest, Ecuador | Tentative dates: August 9 – August 23, 2013
| Application deadline: January 28, 2013 Deadline extended! |
All majors are welcome to apply to spend two weeks in the Andes Mountains of Ecuador. Ecuador: Tropical Field Biology and Conservation gives students the opportunity to apply the theory and knowledge they have acquired in the classroom to the real world. Students will travel with Dr. Karubian and Dr. Duraes to Ecuador for a two-week intensive field course. While on the course, students will experience first-hand the challenges and rewards of conducting field research and implementing conservation activities in tropical environments. These activities will take place within a context of community engagement based on active collaboration and interaction with Ecuadorian local residents in a variety of contexts.
For more information, click here to visit the Center for Public Service’s page on this program.
