Miami University
 
 
 
 
 
  Josiah McConnell Heyman is Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Texas at El Paso. A long time student of the U.S.-Mexico border, he is the author or editor of three books and thirty articles on border culture, states, migration, labor, and consumption. He was honored by the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland with the Curl Essay Prize for his article, “Respect for Outsiders? Respect for the Law? The Moral Evaluation of High-Scale Issues by US Immigration Officers” (2000). Heyman’s books include Finding a Moral Heart for U.S. Immigration Policy (American Anthropological Association, 1998); States and Illegal Practices (Berg Publishers, 1999); and Life and Labor on the Border: Working People of Northeastern Sonora, Mexico, 1886-1986 (University of Arizona Press, 1991).

Altagracia Sánchez was born in the Dominican Republic and migrated with her family to the Cincinnati area in 1994. After entering Miami University in 2001, Sánchez became a member of the Black Student Action Association (BSAA) and the Minority Students Professional Association; was the International Outreach Chair for Circle K; and served as secretary, then President, of the Association of Latin and American Students (ALAS), where she promoted community service with immigrants and sparked political activism by bringing in speakers like Rosa Clemente. Sánchez is currently on leave of absence from Miami University while serving a City Year with Americorps in Philadelphia, where she is focusing on minority family involvement with the community and its outreach programs. In 2005-6 she will complete her final year at Miami with a major in Spanish and minor in Latin American Studies, and then pursue Law School.

Baldemar Velásquez is a human and labor rights activist and founding president of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC) AFL-CIO. Influenced by Mennonite and Gandhian philosophies, Mr. Velásquez has led several historical fights for farm workers’ rights over the last three decades, including negotiations with Campbell’s Soup and Vlasic for immigrant workers’ rights. Under his leadership, FLOC established a U.S.-Mexico commission to oversee joint organizing and negotiation efforts, and in 1991 he co-founded the Farm Worker Network for Economic and Environmental Justice in order to increase collaboration between U.S. and international farm worker organizations. He has received a MacArthur Fellowship (1989), the Hispanic Heritage Leadership Award (1994), and Mexico's Aguila Azteca Award (1994). Velásquez served as co-chair of the U.S. Labor Party, and in 2002, led a delegation to the White House to discuss the Freedom Act legislation. As a child, Mr. Velásquez worked in the fields with his Mexican migrant family, and later worked in canneries. He is an accomplished song-writer and musician who writes ballads about the struggles of farm workers for a better life, and sings them with his Aguila Negra Band.

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