On tenure

Munger has an interesting post about academic life and tenure. On how others don’t understand academic life, he says when family asks if he’s ‘finished’ with his work, he replies:

Well, no, I’ll never finish. When I finish this, I have to do something else. The advantage of being an academic is that you can schedule the 70 hours you work anytime you want during the week. But that doesn’t change the time commitment, and that is what so few people see.

This is true. Often my family doesn’t understand (read: parents don’t) why I’m always working and never finished (and never really take a vacation when I visit them). I’ll never be finished. In part, that’s what drew me to academia. I knew I would work 70 hours a week at any job (that’s my personality), but at least with this one, I define the what and when. When I have students heading off to Ph.D. programs, I tell them to enjoy their summer; it will be the last where they don’t have something to do hanging over their heads.

Munger also suggests that tenure expectations are not any higher now than when he got tenure. (And, he claims that tenure for him was a non-event….and that tells you a lot about the confidence that Mike has.) Young faculty are just slackers.

Well, maybe. I certainly am the only one in my department at Tech that regularly spends all Saturday in the office, but I assumed that was just because our offices are on the shady (i.e., bad) side of campus and everyone lives in the ‘burbs.

Publishing in journals may not have gotten harder; there are certainly more journals to publish in now. However, it is very difficult to publish in the big three (as a comparativist), and many departments only want those publications. Whether it’s more difficult, I couldn’t say.

It has become more difficult to publish books in the last five years. This, I do know. Publishers have told me that they regularly pass up books that 5 years ago would have been published easily. A lot of this has to do with the downturn in the economy, and libraries aren’t buying as many books. Also, digital media are making it easier for professors to assign articles online rather than order books for class.

For comparativists, this is a problem because many of us write dissertations that look like books. And we plan to publish them as books. (Take, for example, my treatise on 70 years of social security–i.e., pensions and health care–politics in Mexico. Yes, please take it. I’m tired of living with it.) And students are still encouraged to produce these types of dissertations. Americanists, however, often write dissertations that are easy to chop into 3-4 journal articles.

I think it has also become more difficult to get grants to support research. Funding is scarce, and I believe the NSF political science program is dominated by a clique that views formal models as the only valid type of theory. I recently resubmitted a proposal that had been rejected on the first round. (I should add that no faculty in my department have NSF political science funding, so I developed my proposal in the dark…so to speak.) The panel comments highlighted three concerns of the reviewers, but in general said my proposal showed scientific promise, could make an important contribution, yadda yadda. I revised the proposal to address the three concerns of the panel, and the other concerns of the reviewers.

One reviewer wanted me to present a theory like X and Y in their papers. So, I went and read those papers, and the papers they cite in economics. Their type of formal model is a minority approach in my subject area, but I duly included a discussion of how my data would allow better tests of their formal models. I did not develop a formal model myself because that is not what I do. Nor is it what 90% of the researchers in this area do. Well, this reviewer, on the second round, was very disappointed that I had not taken his advice and incorporated his suggestions. I really tried to, and I thought I had. No, I did not develop a formal model, but I discussed that literature. I now realize there’s no way I could make that reviewer happy without developing a formal model.

Another reviewer, on the second time around said only “this is a better proposal, but I still think it won’t have broad interest” and will only be of interest to a narrow group that studies Latin America. I will never be able to please this person either, unless I tried to do a cross-regional study, which is highly infeasible for reasons I explain in the proposal (incomparability of data, language requirements, lack of data). Not to mention, it leaves me wondering about all of the funding for Americanist projects. Those certainly are only of interest to Americanists, but they get funded.

One reviewer asserted the project could be done without funding. Nevermind that I explain that travel to research libraries to get the data would be necessary. Nevermind that Tech salaries require summer school teaching to survive, so I will never have time to do the research. It reflects a lack of understanding of how hard it is for professors at non-top 30 departments to do research.

(Yes, I am a little bitter. I didn’t expect to get funded, but I did expect a serious review. I didn’t realize that reviewers would not be willing to consider my arguments and instead insist on their own methodological preference. I don’t think I will ever waste my time, or the reviewers time, in the Political Science division again.)

This really isn’t meant to be a rant. Two weeks ago, I would have ranted. Now, I just have too much work to do. And I’m a little disappointed in the narrow-mindedness of my chosen discipline. And I need to go interview a couple of big-wig Mexican politicians.

You like me. You really really like me.

Monday was Teacher’s Day in Mexico, and I still have a long post pending about the teacher’s strike and all the various factions of the teacher’s union.

In the meantime, I would like to thank my students here in Mexico for the cake they brought me for Teacher’s Day. According to them, they never do that for any of their teachers, but I deserved it. They even sang Las Mananitas and made me blush.

Homophobia, another reason to not like Mexico

According to a preliminary report by the Citizen Commission against hate crime, for every one homicide due to homophobia that is reported, another three go unreported. They estimate that there are 8 homocides a month or 97 a year in the country. The place with the highest number of such hate crimes in Mexico City, but I suspect this is a reflection of the size of the city and probably better reporting. The overwhelming majority of these crimes are against men, though women have been murdered as well.

So even though I regularly see gay couples holding hands in the park by my apartment while walking their dogs, it’s clear that such permissive attitudes do not extend throughout the city or country.

One of the reasons I don’t like Mexico

Racism. In a press conference with reporters, Fox tried to defend Mexican immigration to the United States by saying Mexican immigrants:

…están haciendo trabajos que ni siquiera los negros quieren hacer…

Or, Mexicans are doing the jobs that even the blacks don’t want to do.

But what’s worse, is when the leaders of the other parties denounced Fox’s statement, they did so because:

El señalamiento del presidente Vicente Fox…fue reprobado por los diputados de PRI y PRD, quienes consideraron al jefe del Ejecutivo “inculto, racista y falto de sensibilidad para abordar un tema relacionado con las razas”. Los legisladores reclamaron al mandatario una disculpa pública “porque su postura daña la dignidad de los mexicanos”….

El legislador consideró lamentable la posición del mandatario porque afecta la dignidad de millones de mexicanos que no han sido retenidos en el país por el injusto sistema económico que se vive a lo largo y ancho de la República. “Con su pronunciamiento, Vicente Fox se ubica en la postura de un digno hacendado de principios del siglo XX”.

Their complaint about Fox is that his statement about the work that immigrants do in the U.S. hurts the dignity of Mexicans. And that his position is one of a hacienda owner at the beginning of the 20th century. Implicitly, the legislators are offended that Mexican immigrants would be compared to African-Americans in the United States. Such a comparison, to them, hurts the dignity of Mexicans.

In some regards, the racism isn’t surprising given that the only exposure to African Americans that most Mexicans have is through television and movies, which often portray extreme stereotypes. And even supposed leftists are not immune. I once took a graduate level sociology class at a highly respected university in the D.F. with a faculty member who wrote columns for the leftist paper and dabbled in PRD politics. This professor, during class, told two of the most base/racist jokes about African Americans that I have ever heard. Really childish/stupid jokes. And everyone in class laughed. I was appalled.

Many fancy nightclubs will not let you in if you are too dark skinned. I’ve been waiting outside an after hours club and had several groups of Mexicans offer to let me join them, thinking that surely they will get in sooner with a white girl in their midst. You can also read an earlier post of mine about racism I witnessed at a Wal-Mart owned grocery story.

So, I’m afraid that the indignant legislators from the PRI and the PRD miss the point. They are worried about Fox being racist toward Mexicans with more indigenous heritage, but looking down on African Americans is clearly acceptable to them. Their own prejudices are so strong and socially acceptable that they can’t see the offensiveness of their own position.

One of the many reasons I love Mexico

Friday, Brian and I went to Coyoacan, as we always do on Fridays. We stopped at the main market to get a fruit salad from our favorite fruit stand. The same brothers have been working there since we lived in Coyoacan in 1998, and they still listen to disco and wear tight shirts at 10 in the morning. They are very cute. But really, I go there because they wash their hands, don’t touch the money with their bare hands, and have never made me sick.

And you can get a fruit salad like this for less than $1.50 US$.

You can’t really tell from the picture, but it’s in one of those square plastic to-go containers, and it’s overflowing.

Why is Mexico so economically underdeveloped?

Because of three hour lunches on Friday with wine where no one returns to work in the afternoon. Grrr.

New template

I’m working out the bugs in the new template. Please excuse any goofiness in the layout over the weekend.

Another AMLO constituency: Aging prostitutes

In a strange irony, NPR’s ATC ran a story on Mexican Mother’s Day about aging prostitutes in Mexico City. (Some of the prostitutes have 11 or 12 children.) The women organized, and in response, Lopez Obrador donated an old building to create a shelter for prostitutes over 65, though funding is still needed to remodel the old building for use.

Thanks to Schroeder for the link.

I also have an earlier post about another organization working with sex workers in Mexico City.

Mexican politics update

That’s why you’re all here, after all. While I’ve been busy waiting for and interviewing politicians, politics as usual has continued. An update of the three biggest stories of the last two days:

1. Continued finger pointing and accusations.

The PRI claimed that there is a secret agreement now between the PAN and the PRD to punish the PRI. The President’s office replied by disputing any vendetta against the PRI.

The PRI is so defensive not only because of the administrations turn-around on the AMLO desafuero issue, but also because new fines have been announced in the Pemexgate case. [Yes, it is really called Pemexgate. Some political linguist would enjoy that.]

2. Pemexgate.

Pemex is the state-owned petroleum company. Pemexgate is the revelation that funds from the company were embezzled and/or used for PRI campaign expenses in 2000. The penalties in the case were finally announced: more than $2,000 million pesos ($US 181,000,000) in fines and prohibition of holding public office for 5-20 years for various Pemex functionaries.

The PRI claims that the case began during a bad period of PAN-PRI relations and then was left stagnant once the two parties began working together. The PRI claims that the recent announcement only occured because the PAN is now looking to form a political alliance with the PRD.

According to one of the articles, the PRI claims that the prohibitions against holding public office in the ruling were designed to exclude certain PRIistas from participating in elections, a la AMLO-desafuero. I’m not sure anyone will really buy that comparison. I doubt many will be sympathetic to the PRI’s complaints about political persecution.

The Secretary of State says its absurd to suggest that Fox and Lopez Obrador “arranged” the fines and other penalties. At the same time, it does seem convenient that AMLO has been calling for clean election financing in 2006. And then, a big case of dirty campaign financing by the PRI re-surfaces days later.

3. The First Lady’s children have been accused of financial improprieties, and the Chamber of Deputies is investigating whether the First Lady has used her position improperly. [I’m not going to bother with the links for this one….maybe later.]

Mance as a favicon

Brian made me a very cute favicon of our dog Mance. And, I’m very annoyed because apparently the GATech servers do not support fave icons. Errrggg.

Here it is:

(If you don’t see it, you have a lame browser. Upgrade to Firefox.)

I am auctioning off Brian’s favicon abilities to the highest bidder.
Update: It works now! Had to add code.

PRI trivia

Today, I interviewed a member of the CEN of the PRI. It’s the highest governing body. I can’t publicly share most of the things he told me, but I can tell you this. According to my source, Lopez Obrador wrote the only hymn (fight song, whatever) that the PRI has. Unfortunately, I could not find the words online. Even better would have been a video of humans dressed as some obscure bird singing the hymn.

The point of this trivia for my interviewee: to emphasize how many of the PRD leadership came from the PRI.

Mexico’s Dirty War

Students of Latin American politics regularly learn about the Dirty Wars of the Southern Cone military regimes in the 1970s. The learn that Mexico had a different type of authoritarianism, dominated by electoral fraud with an absence of military leadership. But Mexico had its own Dirty War, too, especially in the 1970s.

Following the demonstration and massacre of 1968, the early 1970s were a period of repression while the ruling party struggled to maintain their power. One of the key (para)military groups was Los Halcones. You can read about recent revelations about the group in La Jornada or El Universal. Or, there’s a good novel about Los Halcones by Paco Ignacio Taibo II that I assign in my Latin American politics class. Taibo II writes mystery novels (my favorite genre), though some can get too philosophical for my tastes (I’m a plot/action kind of girl).

Anyway, I mention the repression of the 1970s because two stories in La Jornada today cover recent investigations. The first discusses the role of a public attorney in the disappearance of a communist leader in 1974. The second discusses military training to counter guerilla movements in the 1970s in the state of Guerrero (home of Acapulco). The point is that Mexico had its share of leftist movements and government repression in the 1970s.

They can’t be serious

After everyone, including the NYTimes, TheEconomist, and Washington Post, has concluded that AMLO was in the clear and all that desafuero business behind us, the AG’s office announced that criminal charges against AMLO are still possible. I had said that they left the door open for future legal action.

An exchange between a reporter for La Jornada and the Attorney General following the latter’s participation in a Fox rally:

LJ: -A propósito del caso El Encino, ¿habrá desistimiento por parte de la PGR? [Has the case been dropped?]

AG: -No, no hay desistimiento, está en consulta el ejercicio de la acción penal. [No, the case has not been dropped. Criminal charges are being considered.]

LJ: -Pero el comunicado del 4 de mayo decía que no se va a ejercitar acción penal. [But the press release on May 4 said that there would not be criminal charges.]

AG: -Es la propuesta del Ministerio Público, pero no hay desistimiento. [That is the proposal of the Public Ministry, but it has not been dropped.]

LJ: -¿Y por parte de la PGR sí se espera que haya consignación? [And on the part of the AG’s office, do you expect an arrest?]

AG: -Pues se está analizando la propuesta que hizo el titular de la agencia del Ministerio Público. [Well, the proposal of the head of the Public Ministry is being analyzed.]

LJ: -¿No es tema muerto? [The topic is not dead?]

AG: -Está en proceso de consulta. [It’s in the process of being considered.]

LJ: -¿Es posible que la PGR archive el asunto de López Obrador? [Is it possible that the AG will archive/file away the Lopez Obrador issue?]

AG: -Es la propuesta del agente del Ministerio Público Federal con la cual resolveremos en su momento. [That is the proposal of the Public Ministry that we will resolve in time.]

LJ: -Algunos diputados dicen que se hizo mal el trabajo de la PGR con su antecesor, el procurador Macedo de la Concha. [Some Deputies (Representatives) say that your predecessor did a bad job.]

AG: -Se está revisando, está en consulta una propuesta de no ejercicio por parte del titular de la agencia del Ministerio Público. [It is being reviewed; the proposal of the Public Ministry to not proceed is being considered.] {At this point, you can see the conversation is not advancing….}

LJ: -¿Si hicieron mal las cosas, se integró mal el expediente? [Was the work done poorly? Is the case badly put together?]

AG: -No, eso no podemos decirlo. Eso de que está mal integrado precisamente se está revisando. [No, we cannot say that. That is what we are reviewing, whether the case was put together poorly.]

LJ: -¿Cómo ha encontrado a la PGR? [How have you found the AG’s office?]

AG: -Trabajando bien, con gente comprometida. [Working well, with committed people.]

An optimist would say that this is a case of the left hand not knowing what the right hand is doing. In this case, I’m not an optimist. This exchange occurred just after the AJ met with the President in his home state of Guanajuato.

The pessimist would say that the Fox administration is trying to eat its cake and have it, too. [The key to lame journalism: overuse of cliches.] They want to pretend to play nice and stop the mobilizations of support for Lopez Obrador, but would also like to keep AMLO in line with threats of criminal charges. I’m not sure that strategy will work. Many Mexicans may be poorly educated (underfunded schools, etc.), but they are not stupid. If anything, the strategy is likely to backfire.

Granted, La Jornada is the only paper running this story, so maybe it’s only an attempt by the leftist press to stir up trouble. Or maybe they know something we don’t know.

Not to miss a beat, the PRD denounced the comments by the AG. As did the AG for the DF.