1. EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND4 28. Massey, D .S., & F. Riosmena. 2010.“Undocumented Entry and Exit...

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JANUARY 2021 F ERNANDO R IOSMENA 1440 15 TH S T ., 483 UCB, B OULDER , C O . 80309-0483. P HONE +1 (303) 492-1476 F ERNANDO .R IOSMENA @ COLORADO . EDU 1. E DUCATIONAL B ACKGROUND Ph.D. in Demography. University of Pennsylvania. Dec 2005 M.A. in Demography. University of Pennsylvania. May 2003 Licenciado en Mercadotecnia. ITESM Guadalajara, Mexico. Magna cum Laude equivalent. May 2000 2. E MPLOYMENT H ISTORY 2.1. A CADEMIC E MPLOYMENT AND A PPOINTMENTS Director, Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion. Inst. of Behavioral Science. Univ. of Colorado at Boulder. 2020–Present Associate Professor, Population Program & Geography Department. Univ. of Colorado at Boulder. 2014–Present Faculty Affiliate, Latin American Studies Center, University of Colorado at Boulder. 2010–Present Faculty Affiliate, Department of Sociology (courtesy appointment). U. of Colorado at Boulder 2015–Present Associate Director, CU Population Center, University of Colorado at Boulder. 2017–2020 Assistant Professor, Population Program and Geography Department. Univ. of Colorado, Boulder. 2007–2014 2.2. OTHER R ESEARCH & MANAGEMENT E XPERIENCE University of California at San Diego. Visiting Scholar, Center for U.S.–Mexican Studies. May–Jul 2008 University of Wisconsin–Madison. Postdoctoral Research Assoc., Ctr. for Demography and Ecology. 2006–2007 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. Research Scholar, World Population Program. 2005–2006 Princeton University. Visiting Student, Office of Population Research. 2004–2005 Univ. of Pennsylvania Population Studies Ctr. Research Assistant, Latin American Migration Project. 2001–2005 ITESM Guadalajara, México. Centre for Strategic Studies. Project Manager, Marketing Centre. 2000–2001

Transcript of 1. EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND4 28. Massey, D .S., & F. Riosmena. 2010.“Undocumented Entry and Exit...

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JANUARY 2021

F E R N A N D O R I O S M E N A

1 44 0 1 5 T H S T . , 48 3 UCB , B O U L D E R , C O . 80 30 9 - 048 3 .

P H O N E + 1 ( 30 3 ) 492 - 147 6 • F E R N A N D O .R I O S M E N A @ C O L O R A D O . E D U

1. EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND

• Ph.D. in Demography. University of Pennsylvania. Dec 2005

• M.A. in Demography. University of Pennsylvania. May 2003

• Licenciado en Mercadotecnia. ITESM Guadalajara, Mexico. Magna cum Laude equivalent. May 2000

2. EMPLOYMENT HISTORY

2.1. ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT AND APPOINTMENTS

Director, Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion. Inst. of Behavioral Science. Univ. of Colorado at Boulder. 2020–Present

Associate Professor, Population Program & Geography Department. Univ. of Colorado at Boulder. 2014–Present

Faculty Affiliate, Latin American Studies Center, University of Colorado at Boulder. 2010–Present

Faculty Affiliate, Department of Sociology (courtesy appointment). U. of Colorado at Boulder 2015–Present

Associate Director, CU Population Center, University of Colorado at Boulder. 2017–2020

Assistant Professor, Population Program and Geography Department. Univ. of Colorado, Boulder. 2007–2014

2.2. OTHER RESEARCH & MANAGEMENT EXPERIENCE

University of California at San Diego. Visiting Scholar, Center for U.S.–Mexican Studies. May–Jul 2008

University of Wisconsin–Madison. Postdoctoral Research Assoc., Ctr. for Demography and Ecology. 2006–2007

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. Research Scholar, World Population Program. 2005–2006

Princeton University. Visiting Student, Office of Population Research. 2004–2005

Univ. of Pennsylvania Population Studies Ctr. Research Assistant, Latin American Migration Project. 2001–2005

ITESM Guadalajara, México. Centre for Strategic Studies. Project Manager, Marketing Centre. 2000–2001

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3. RESEARCH RECORD

3.1. RESEARCH, SCHOLARSHIP, AND POLICY INTERESTS

International migration, health, and population dynamics, social demography, population geography, Latin America.

3.2. REFEREED PUBLICATIONS * Denotes equal contribution/coauthorship. GS Denotes CU graduate student coauthor.

1. Ng, C. D., Elliott, M. R., Riosmena, F., & Cunningham, S. A. 2020. “Beyond recent BMI: BMI exposure metrics and their relationship to health.” SSM-Population Health, 100547.

2. Ervin, D., Lopéz-Carr, D., Riosmena, F., & Ryan, S. J. 2020. “Examining the relationship between migration and forest cover change in Mexico from 2001 to 2010.” Land Use Policy, 91, 104334.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2019.104334.

3. Riosmena, F. & M. Liu. 2019. “Who goes next? Mexican and Senegalese migrant sibling networks expansion over time and space.” The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1177/0002716219856544.

4. Lee-Ammons, N.GS & F. Riosmena. 2019. “Population Census in Contemporary Bangladesh: A Multilateral Effort in an Ever-Changing Delta” The Geography Teacher, 16:3, 95-102, DOI: 10.1080/19338341.2019.1624587.

5. Jones, B., F. Riosmena, D. Simon GS, & D. Balk. 2019. “Estimating Internal Migration in Contemporary Mexico and its Relevance in Gridded Population Distributions.” Data 4(2), 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/data4020050.

6. Riosmena, F., R. Nawrotzki, & L. Hunter. 2018. “Climate Migration at the Height and End of the Great Mexican Migration Era.” Population and Development Review DOI: 10.1111/padr.12158.

7. Sue, C., & F. Riosmena, & Lepree, J.GS 2018. "The Influence of Social Networks, Social Capital, and the Ethnic Community on the U.S. Destination Choices of Mexican Migrant Men." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies DOI: 10.1080/1369183X.2018.1447364.

8. Liu, M.M., F. Riosmena, & M. Creighton. 2018. “Family Position and Family Networks in Mexican and Senegalese Migration.” Population Space and Place 24(7):1-18. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/psp.2161.

9. Bacon, E.,GS F. Riosmena, & R. Rogers. 2017. "Does the Hispanic Health Advantage Extend to Better Management of Hypertension? The Role of Socioeconomic Status, Sociobehavioral Factors, and Healthcare Access." Biodemography and Social Biology 63(3):262-277. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19485565.2017.1353407.

10. Leyk S., D. Runfola, F. Riosmena, L. Hunter, and R. Nawrotzki. 2017. “Internal and International Mobility as Adaptation to Climatic Variability in Contemporary Mexico: Evidence from the Integration of Census and Satellite Data.” Population, Space, and Place 23(6):1-15, DOI: 10.1002/psp.2047.

11. Riosmena, F., R. Kuhn, & C. Jochem.GS 2017. “Explaining the immigrant health advantage: self-selection and protection among five major national-origin immigrant groups in the United States.” Demography 54(1):175-200.

12. Nawrotzki, R. D. Runfola, L. Hunter, & F. Riosmena. 2016. “Domestic and International Climate Migration in Rural Mexico.” Human Ecology 44(6):687-699.

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13. Beltrán-Sánchez, H., A. Palloni, F. Riosmena, & R. Wong. 2016. “SES Gradients among Mexicans in the United States and in Mexico: A New Twist to the Hispanic Paradox?” Demography 53(5):1555-1581.

14. Liu, M-M., F. Riosmena, P. Baizán, & M. Creighton. 2016. “Prospects for the Comparative Study of International Migration using quasi-longitudinal micro-data.” Demographic Research 35(26):745-782.

15. Lawrence, E.GS, S. Mollborn, & F. Riosmena. 2016. “Early Childhood Disadvantage for Sons of Mexican Immigrants: Body-Mass Index across Ages 2-5.” American Journal of Health Promotion. 30(7):545-553.

16. Riosmena, F. 2016. “The potential and limitations of cross-context comparative research on migration.” The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 666(1):28-45.

17. Nawrotzki, R. J., Riosmena, F., Hunter, L. M., & Runfola, D. M. 2015. “Amplification or suppression: Social networks and the climate change – migration association in rural Mexico.” Global Environmental Change 35, 463-474. DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.09.002

18. Nawrotzki, R. J., Hunter, L. M., Runfola, D. M., Riosmena, F. 2015. “Climate change as migration driver from rural and urban Mexico.” Environmental Research Letters 10(11), 114023. DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/10/11/114023.

19. Nawrotzki, R., L. Hunter, F. Riosmena, & D. Runfola. 2015. “Undocumented migration in response to climate change.” International Journal of Population Studies 1(1):60-74.

20. Beltrán-Sánchez, H., F. Andrade, & F. Riosmena. 2015. “Contribution of socioeconomic factors and health care access to the awareness and treatment of diabetes and hypertension among older Mexican adults.” Salud Pública de México 57 (Suppl. 1): S6-S14.

21. Riosmena, F., B. Everett,GS R. Rogers, & J. Dennis. 2015. “Negative Acculturation and Nothing More? Cumulative Disadvantage and Hispanic Mortality during the Immigrant Adaptation Process.” International Migration Review 49(2):443-478. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imre.120102.

22. Hunter, L.M., S. Murray,GS and F. Riosmena. 2013. “Rainfall Patterns and U.S. Migration from Rural Mexico.” International Migration Review 47(4):874-909. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imre.12051.

23. Goldman, M and F. Riosmena. 2013. “Adaptive capacity in Tanzanian Maasailand: Changing strategies to cope with drought in fragmented landscapes.” Global Environmental Change 23(3):588-597.

24. *Sheehan, C.GS and F. Riosmena. 2013. “Migration, Business Formation, and the Informal Economy in Urban Mexico.” Social Science Research 42(4):1092-1108. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2013.01.006

25. Riosmena, F., R. Wong, & A. Palloni. 2013. “Migration, Selection, Protection, and Acculturation in Health: A Binational Perspective on Older Adults.” Demography 50(3):1039-1064. DOI 10.1007/s13524-012-0178-9.

26. Contributing author/panel member in National Research Council. 2013. Options for Estimating Illegal Entries at the U.S.–Mexico Border. A. Carriquiry and M. Majmundar, eds. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. Available at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=13498.

27. *Creighton, M. and F. Riosmena. 2013. “Migration and the Gendered Origin of Migrant Networks Among Couples in Mexico.” Social Science Quarterly (94):79–99. DOI:10.1111/j.1540-6237.2012.00928.x

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28. Nawrotzki, R.GS, F. Riosmena, & Hunter, L. 2013. “Do Rainfall Deficits Predict U.S.-bound Migration from Rural Mexico? Evidence from the Mexican Census.” Population Research and Policy Review 32(1):129-158. DOI 10.1007/s11113-012-9251-8.

29. Riosmena, F., M. Winkler-Dworak, A. Prskwetz, & G. Feichtinger. 2012. “The Impact of Policies Influencing the Demography of Age Structured Populations: Lessons from Academies of Sciences.” Genus LXVIII(2):29-59. DOI:10.4402/genus-401

30. Riosmena, F., & W.C. Jochem.GS 2012. “Vulnerability, Resiliency, and Adaptation: The Health of Latin Americans during the Migration Process to the United States.” Realidad, Datos y Espacio. Revista Internacional de Estadística y Geografía 3(2):14-31.

31. Riosmena, F., & J. Dennis.GS 2012. “Importation, SES-selective acculturation, and the weaker SES-health gradients of Mexican immigrants in the United States.” The Social Science Journal 49(3):325-329.

32. Riosmena, F., R. Frank, I.R. Akresh, R. Kroeger. 2012. “U.S. Migration, Translocality, and the Acceleration of the Nutrition Transition in Mexico.” The Annals of the Association of American Geographers 102(5):1209-1218.

33. Riosmena, F., C. González-González, & R. Wong. 2012. “El Retorno de los Adultos Mayores de Estados Unidos: Salud, Bienestar y Vulnerabilidad.” Coyuntura Demográfica 2:63-67.

34. Riosmena, F., & D.S. Massey. 2012. “Pathways to El Norte: Origins, Destinations, and Characteristics of Mexican Migrants to the United States.” International Migration Review 46(1):3-36.

35. Cunningham, S.A., F. Riosmena, J. Wang, J.P. Boyle, D.B. Rolka, & L.S. Geiss. 2011. “Decreases in Diabetes-free Life Expectancy in the U.S. and the Role of Obesity.” Diabetes Care, October 2011, 34:2225-2230.

36. Riosmena, F. 2010. “Policy Shocks: On the Legal Auspices of Latin America–U.S. Migration.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 630(1):270-293.

37. Massey, D.S., & F. Riosmena. 2010. “Undocumented Entry and Exit from Latin America in an Era of Rising Enforcement.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 630(1):294-321.

38. Riosmena, F. 2009a. “Socioeconomic Context and the Association between Marriage and Mexico–U.S. Migration.” Social Science Research 38:324-337.

39. Feichtinger, G., Winkler-Dworak, M., Freund, I., Prskawetz, A., & F. Riosmena. 2007. “On the Age Dynamics of Learned Societies—Taking the Example of the Austrian Academy of Sciences.” Vienna Yearbook of Population Research. Pp. 107-132.

40. Massey, D.S., J. Durand, & F. Riosmena. 2006. “Social Capital, Social Policy, and Migration from Traditional and New Sending Communities in Mexico.” Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas 116:97-121.

3.3. NON-REFEREED PUBLICATIONS

3.3.1. BOOK CHAPTERS

1. Simon, D. and F. Riosmena. “Environmental Migration in Latin America.” Accepted in Hunter, L., C. Gray,

and J. Veron. International Handbook of Population and Environment. Springer.

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2. Riosmena, F., H. Beltrán-Sánchez, M. Reynolds, and J. VinneauGS. In Press. How is the health of the Mexican-origin population on both sides of the border, and how is it affected by anti-immigrant sentiment? In Hinojosa-Ojeda, R., and E. Telles (Eds.) Equitable Globalization? Migration, Trade and Race in US-Mexico Relations. Berkeley: University of California Press.

3. Salgado de Snyder V.N., F. Riosmena, M.A. Gonzalez-Block, & R. Wong. Accepted. Migrant Health Vulnerability through the Migration Process: Implications for Health Policy in Mexico and the United States. In Escobar, A., S. Martin, & L. Lowell (Eds.). Third Binational Study on Mexican Immigrants in the US and Mexico. Washington: Georgetown University/Guadalajara: CIESAS.

4. Riosmena, F. 2016. “Selección y adaptación en salud: una mirada comparativa entre Colombia y México.” In M. G. Roa. Migración internacional: patrones y determinantes. Estudios comparados Colombia-América Latina - Proyecto LAMP". Cali (Colombia): UNIVALLE.

5. Sander, N., G. Abel, & F. Riosmena. “The Future of International Migration.” 2014. In Lutz, W.L., W. Butz, & S. KC. “World Population and Human Capital in the 21st Century.” Oxford University Press. An earlier version available as “The Future of International Migration: Developing Expert-Based Assumptions for Global Population Projections.” Vienna Institute of Demography Working Paper No. 7/13. Available at http://www.oeaw.ac.at/vid/download/WP2013_7.pdf.

6. Riosmena, F., & C. Jochem.GS 2012. “Immigrant Health and Health Care Provision in the United States: Contemporary Paradoxes and Challenges.” In LeMay, M. (Ed.) “Perspectives on US Immigration”, Volume 3 (Immigration and Superpower Status: US Immigration History and Issues, 1945 to Date). ABC-CLIO, Greenwood/Praeger Publishers.

7. Riosmena, F., & J.A. Dennis.GS 2012. “A Tale of Three Paradoxes: The Weak Socioeconomic Gradients in Health Among Hispanic Immigrants and Their Relation to the Hispanic Health Paradox and Negative Acculturation.” P.p. 95-110 in Angel, J., F. Torres-Gil, & K. Markides (Eds.). Aging, health, and longevity in the Mexican-origin population. The Netherlands: Springer. DOI:10.1007/978-1-4614-1867-2_1. http://www.springer.com/us/book/9781461418665

8. Riosmena, F. 2009b. “Implicaciones de Política Pública de la Evolución Reciente de la Migración Mexicana a Estados Unidos: Una Perspectiva Comparada” in Leite, P., & S. Giorguli (Eds.). 2009. Las políticas públicas ante los retos de la migración internacional en México. Mexico: Consejo Nacional de Población. http://www.conapo.gob.mx/en/CONAPO/Las_politicas_publicas_ante_los_retos_de_la_migracion_mexicana_a_Estados_Unidos_

9. Riosmena, F. 2006. “US Migration Dynamics in Mexico, Central America, and the Spanish-Speaking Caribbean”. In Canales, A. (Ed.) Panorama Actual de las Migraciones en Latinoamérica. Universidad de Guadalajara.

10. Riosmena, F. 2004. "Return versus Settlement among Undocumented Mexican Migrants, 1980 to 1996." In Durand, J. and Massey, DS. Crossing the Border: Research from the Mexican Migration Project. New York: Russell Sage. https://www.russellsage.org/publications/crossing-border

3.3.2. OTHER PUBLISHED WORKS

1. Saldívar, E., E. Arenas, F. Riosmena, & C. Sue. 2018. “Consideraciones teóricas y metodológicas para el conteo de la población afrodescendiente en el Censo 2020.” Policy brief. University of California – Santa Barbara & Kellogg Foundation.

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2. Wong, R., J. Angel, & F. Riosmena. 2016. “Introduction to Special Issue.” Research on Aging 38(3):259-262. doi:10.1177/0164027516636426.

3. Riosmena, F. 2016. “Guatemala-US Migration: Transforming Regions.” Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews 45(4):462-464. Book review.

4. Pederzini, C., F. Riosmena, C. Masferrer, & N. Molina. 2015. “Three decades of migration from the Northern Triangle of Central America: A historic and demographic outlook.” Policy Brief. Central and North American Migration Dialogue. Mexico City and Washington, D.C.: CIESAS and Georgetown University. See www.canamid.org.

5. Riosmena, F., E. Root, J. HumphreyGS, E. SteinerGS, & R. Stubbs.UG 2015. “The Waning Hispanic Health Paradox” Pathways. Stanford Center for Poverty and Inequality. Available at http://web.stanford.edu/group/scspi/_media/pdf/pathways/spring_2015/Pathways_Spring_2015_Riosmena_et-al.pdf.

6. Lee, A.W.GS & F. Riosmena. “Migration.” 2014. In Achieving Sustainability: Visions, Principles, and Practices. Edited by Debra Rowe. Detroit: MacMillan Reference.

7. Riosmena, F. 2013. “At the Edge of U.S. Immigration’s ‘Halt of Folly:’ Data, Information, and Research Needs in the Event of Legalization.” Journal of Migration and Human Security 1(4):148-162.

8. Riosmena, F. 2013. “A review of Bakewell, O. (Ed.). 2012. Migration and Development. Cheltenham (UK) and Northampton (USA): Edward Elgar Publishing.” Journal of Regional Science DOI: 10.1111/jors.12079 p. 944-946. Book review.

9. Riosmena, F., & W.C. Jochem.GS 2013. “Migration and Health, Latin Americans in the U.S.” in Ness, I. (Ed.). Encyclopedia of Human Migration. Malden, MA: Wiley Sons.

10. Riosmena, F., I. Prommer, A. Goujon, & S. KC. 2008. “An Evaluation of the IIASA/VID Education-specific Back-Projections.” Interim Report IR-08-019, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. Laxenburg, Austria.

3.4. FELLOWSHIPS AND AWARDS

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Austria. Luis Donaldo Colosio Fellowship. 2005–2006

University of Pennsylvania, School of Arts and Sciences. Judith Rodin Fellowship. 2004–2005

Univ. of Pennsylvania, Grad. Group in Demography Preliminary Doctoral Examinations, Distinction. 2004–2005

3.5. RESEARCH GRANTS AND CONTRACTS

3.5.1. EXTRAMURAL SUPPORT

3.5.1.1. GRANT APPLICATIONS PENDING

Principal investigator

“Health of Aging Mexicans on Both Sides of the Border.” National Institute on Aging 1 R01 AG068392-01A1. (1.7 million in direct costs). Status pending (score: 4th percentile, October 2020).

2021-2026

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3.5.1.2. GRANTS AND CONTRACTS CURRENTLY IN FORCE

Co-investigator:

▪ “¡SALE!: Social determinants of health and Adolescent pregnancy in Latinas.” Office of Population Affairs, Department of Health &Human Services 1 PHEPA000004-01-00 (PI: Blair Darney, OHSU; CU portion: ~$100,000 in direct costs).

2020–2022

Co-investigator: “Dynamics and health consequences of obesity between infancy and young adulthood in the

united states.” National Institute of Diabetes, and Digestive and Kidney Diseases R01 DK115937 01 (PI: Solveig Cunningham [Emory], CU portion: $65,000/year in direct costs).

2018-2022

3.5.1.3. COMPLETED PROJECTS

Principal Investigator:

▪ “A Cross-National Perspective in Migrant Health”. National Institute for Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health (R03, $142,816; Randall Kuhn, co-I).

2010–2013

▪ “The role of local context on the Hispanic Health Paradox and on immigrant health adaptation processes.” Stanford’s Center on Poverty and Inequality’s Hispanic Inequality Initiative ($25,000; Elisabeth Root, co-I).

2013

▪ “The role of local context on the Hispanic Health Paradox and on immigrant health adaptation processes.” Network on Life Course Health Dynamics (subcontract via University of Michigan, $11,000). 2016

Co-investigator:

▪ “University of Colorado Population Center.” National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development 5 P2C HD066613 09 (PI: Lori Hunter [UCB], $325,510/year in direct costs).

▪ “Annual Conferences on Climate-Migration-Health.” National Institute for Child Health and Human Development, 5R13HD078101 (PI: Lori Hunter [UCB], $55,000/year in direct costs).

2014–2019

2014–2019

▪ “Multi-Scale Processes Determining Population Distribution.” National Science Foundation Interdisciplinary Behavioral and Social Sciences Research competition Grant No. 1416860 (PI: Deborah Balk, CU portion: $30,000/year in direct costs).

2014–2018

▪ “Sistemas Migratorios en Perspectiva Comparada: Mexico–Estados Unidos y Africa Subsahariana–Europa (MIGRASYS).” Spanish Ministry of Economics and Competitiveness, Program on Basic Research (PI: Pau Baizán, Universitat Pomeu Fabra, EUR173,000; CU Portion EUR5,000).

2013–2017

3.5.2. INTRAMURAL SUPPORT

3.5.2.1. GRANTS CURRENTLY IN FORCE

Principal Investigator

▪ “Hispanic health in the COVID Era.” University of Colorado Population Rapid Response Grant Program ($2,000).

2020

3.5.2.2. COMPLETED PROJECTS

Principal Investigator. 2018

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▪ “Hispanic health in an Era of rising immigration enforcement and anti-immigrant sentiment.” University of Colorado Population Center Pilot Grant Program ($11,000, M. Reynolds co-I)

▪ “International Migration and the Informal Economy in Latin America”. University of Colorado at Boulder, Population Program Pilot Grant ($8,100, C. Sheehan co-I). 2009–2010

▪ “Evaluating the SES Health Gradients of Mexicans, Migration Selection, and Acculturation Hypotheses Using Clinically-Reported Measures”. University of Colorado’s Population Program Pilot Grant ($7,500), Council on Research and Creative Writing, Junior Faculty Development Awards (5,000), and Center to Advance Research and Teaching in the Social Sciences ($2,000).

2007–2009

Co-Investigator

▪ “The Environmental Dimensions of International Migration from Rural Mexico” (P.I. Lori Hunter) University of Colorado Population Center Rapid Response Small Grants Program ($3,000 awarded for Supplementing Ongoing Quantitative Modeling with Qualitative Interviews); and summer graduate student fellowship funding by Center for Environment and Population ($5,000).

2011

▪ “Vulnerability and Adaptation to Drought: New Trends and Emerging Patterns among East African Pastoralists.” (P.I. Mara Goldman) University of Colorado Population Center Rapid Response Small Grants Program ($3,000).

2011

▪ “Immigration Policy and the Settlement Decisions of Mexican Immigrants in the U.S.”(PI: Christina Sue). University of Colorado Innovative Seed Grant Program ($38,250) and Center to Advance Research and Teaching in the Social Sciences ($2,500).

2009–2011

3.6. ACADEMIC PRESENTATIONS

3.6.1. INVITED INDIVIDUAL TALKS

• “A re-appraisal of thinking on and the empirical evaluation of migration theories.” Presented at CEDEPLAR, UMFMG (Brazil, September 2020); Harokopio University Population Studies Seminar (Athens Greece, May 2018); the California Center for Population Research jointly with UCLA International Migration Seminar Series, University of California – Los Angeles (March 2018); the Institute for Population Research Seminar Series, The Ohio State University (January 2017); and University of California Santa Barbara (May 2016).

• “Depressive symptoms & disparities therein among Mexican immigrants over the 21st Century: a binational examination.” Presented at the Health & Behavioral Sciences Seminar, University of Colorado – Denver (Sept. 13, 2019); and the Population Studies Center Colloquium, University of Pennsylvania (Sept 16, 2019).

• “Identifying explanations of the Hispanic Health Paradox, immigrant adaptation, and neighborhood effects on health.” Presented at the University of Michigan’s Population Studies Center Brown Bag Seminar (November 2018).

• “Climate Migration at the Height and End of the Great Mexican Migration Era.” Presented at the Population & Health Seminar Series. College of Social and Behavioral Science, The University of Utah (February 2018); and at the Climate Science Center Seminar Series, Texas Tech University (March 2018).

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• “Methodological challenges in identifying explanations of the Hispanic Health Paradox and immigrant adaptation.” Center for Demography and Ecology Seminar Series, University of Wisconsin – Madison (February 2017).

• "Una revaloración de las teorías de migración y su evaluación." Keynote address. Symposium on Emerging Population Problems in the Mexican Borderlands. El Colegio de la Frontera Norte (Tijuana, Mexico, November 2016).

• “The Role of (Drought-related) Climate Change on Mexico-US Migration.” Asian Demographic Research Institute, Shanghai University (June 2016).

• “A reflection on the association between (precipitation) variability and US migration out of rural Mexico.” Presented at the Temporary Migration Cluster and the Gifford Center for Population Research, University of California, Davis (October 2015).

• “Sources and Mechanisms of Favorable Neighborhood “Effects” on Mexican-American Health.” Presented at the Maryland Population Research Center (September 2015); Brown University’s Population Studies and Training Center (February 2015); and the University of Colorado at Boulder’s Population Center Colloquium Series (February 2015).

• “La reforma migratoria en EU y el eterno retorno: un comentario sobre propuestas legislativas recientes.” Presented at the Ongoing Seminar Series in Migration Studies at CIESAS Occidente, Guadalajara, México (May 2014).

• “Situated ex situ adaptations: U.S. migration from rural Mexico as a response to climatic variability.” Presented at the Colloquium of the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs (November 2014); and the Tod Spieker Colloquium Series, UCLA Department of Geography (Los Angeles, February 2014).

• “U.S. Migration from Rural Mexico as an Adaptation Strategy to Climatic Variability: A Look across Contexts.” Presented at the Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology, University of Washington (Seattle. November 2013).

• “Migration Selection, Protection, and Acculturation in Health: A Binational Perspective on Older Adults.” Presented at the Population Studies Center Colloquium. University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia. February 2013).

• “Selección, Protección y Aculturación: la Salud de los Migrantes en Estados Unidos.” Presented at the Demography Section Seminar of the Mexican National Actuarial College (Mexico City. October 2011).

• “Pathways to El Norte: Networks, Economic Restructuring, and Origin-Destination Flows in Mexico–U.S. Migration.” Presented at the University of Colorado’s Center for Latin American Studies (Boulder, CO, January 2011).

• “Selectividad, Protección "Cultural" y Aculturación en El Norte: Una Perspectiva Binacional sobre la Salud de los Migrantes Mexicanos en Estados Unidos.” Presented at the Ongoing Seminar Series in Migration Studies at CIESAS Occidente, Guadalajara, México (May 2010).

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• “On the Legal Auspices of Latin America–U.S. Migration.” Presented at the Seminar Series of the Institutt for sosiologi og samfunnsgeografi. Universitetet i Oslo (August 2009) and the Geography Department Colloquium, University of Colorado at Boulder (December 2008).

• “SES Gradients among Mexicans in the U.S. and in Mexico: A New Twist to the Hispanic Paradox?” Presented at the Center for U.S.–Mexican Studies Colloquium Series. University of California–San Diego (May 2008)

• “Contextual Influence in the Association between Marriage and US Migration”. Presented at the Demography and Ecology Training Seminar, University of Wisconsin. Madison, WI (January 2007); and the Joint IBS/Geography Seminar. University of Colorado. Boulder, CO. (December 2006).

• “International Migration, Regional Variation, and Human Capital Formation in Mexico.” Presented at the Vienna Institute of Demography Colloquium. Vienna, Austria (December 2006).

• “Mexico–U.S. Migration Dynamics: A Sequential, Duration-Period Approach.” Presented at the Race and Ethnicity Seminar, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin. Madison, WI. (January 2007); and the ERCOMER Seminar Series, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Utrecht (April 2006).

3.6.2. INVITED TALKS AT MINI-CONFERENCES AND WORKSHOPS

• “Challenges to Immigrant Health and its Study in an Era of Rising Anti-immigrant Sentiment.” Keynote speech, Immigration Research Symposium, UCSB (October 18, 2019).

• “El posible impacto de la migración en la depresión de los adultos mayores de origen mexicano: un enfoque binacional.” Presented at the Fourth Users Meeting of the Mexican Health and Aging Study. Mexico City, November 2019.

• “Do (environmental) shocks alter the quantum or tempo of migration? An examination in contemporary Mexico.” Presented at Environmental Demography Conference, University of Wisconsin (Oct 24-25, 2019).

• “A re-appraisal of thinking on and the empirical evaluation of migration theories.” Presented at Second Asian Population Forum, Shanghai University (October 11-12, 2019).

• “Challenges to understanding the (re-)adaptation of displaced people with population-based data.” Presented at the National Academies Workshop on Forced Migration Research: From Theory to Practice in Promoting Migrant Wellbeing. Washington, DC (May 22, 2019).

• “Health and wellbeing of Mexican older adults by migration status: a preliminary look towards disentangling selectivity vs. post-migration changes.” Presented at workshop on Cognition, Mortality, and Mortality Determinants in Latin America. UC – Berkeley (Feb 23, 2019).

• “Identifying Explanations for the Health Advantages and Disadvantages Experienced by Hispanics in the United States.” Presented at the Geographies of Poverty Conference, University of California – Davis (November 2018).

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• “Cambios en la salud y bienestar de los adultos mayores de acuerdo con sus experiencias de migración internacional y retorno.” Presented at the Mexican Health and Aging Study users’ conference. Mexico City (September 2018).

• “Who goes next? Comparative Perspective on the Pacing and Sequencing of Mexican and Senegalese sibling migration.” Presented at Conference to commemorate the 30th Anniversary of the Mexican Migration Project. El Colegio de México (October 2017).

• “Contemporary changes in the health of Mexican migrants in the U.S.: a look across an Era of rising enforcement and anti-immigrant sentiment.” Presented at the UCSB Milestone Conference Expanding Bridges Overcoming Walls. University of California – Santa Barbara (Aug 25-26, 2017).

• “A re-appraisal of the formulation of and empirical evaluation of migration theories.” Presented at the Conference “Shifting Contexts and Patterns of Migration - Comparing Europe and Central-North America.” co-organized by the Humboldt Chair & El Colegio de México. (May 2017).

• “A reflection on the association between (precipitation) variability and US migration out of rural Mexico.” Mini-conference, Broom Center for Demography, University of California at Santa Barbara (April 2015).

• “Contextos de emigración internacional y selección en salud: una mirada comparativa de México, El Salvador y Colombia.” Presented at Colombia en la encrucijada: el Proyecto LAMP – Colombia sobre migración. Universidad del Rosario, Bogotá (March 2015).

• “¿Negro o Moreno?: Factores que Influyen la Identidad Negra en Contraposición a la Identidad Morena (Afro) en la Costa Chica de Guerrero y Oaxaca.” Presented at Imaginarios Nacionales en México y América Latina: Mestizos, Indígenas y Afrodescendientes. National Anthropology Museum. Mexico City (February 2015).

• “The potential and limits of using the ethnosurvey across settings (& over time).” Presented at “The Ethnosurvey in Global Contexts” Conference. Vanderbilt University (Nashville, TN, January 2015).

• “Resiliency, Vulnerability, and Adaptation: The Health of Latin Americans during the Migration Process to the United States.” Presented at Seminario de Medición de Grupos Sociales Vulnerables, National Autonomous University of Mexico, (Mexico City. October 2011).

• “The Environmental Dimensions of U.S Migration from Rural Mexico.” Presented at the Second Meeting of the Integrative Assessment Modeling Group, National Center for Atmospheric Research (Boulder, CO, July 2011).

• “Pathways to El Norte: Networks, Economic Restructuring, and Origin-Destination Flows in Mexico–U.S. Migration”. Presented at the Conference “New Realities of Mexican Immigration to the United States” (Princeton University, April 2011).

• “Migration Selection, Protection, and Acculturation: A Bi-national Perspective on Older Adults”. Presented at the 2010 International Conference on Aging in the Americas (Austin, TX, September 2010).

• “Understanding Migrant Health: Selection, Protection, and Adaptation Processes.” Presented at the University of Denver’s Center on Rights Development's 11th Annual Symposium (April 2010).

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• “On the Legal Auspices of Latin America–U.S. Migration.” Presented at the Publication Colloquium “Migration in the Americas: Mexico and Latin America in Comparative Context”. Center for the Americas, Vanderbilt University (May 2008).

• “Características de la Migración Mexicana a Estados Unidos en Perspectiva Comparada.” Presented at the Conference “Las Políticas Públicas ante los Retos de la Migración Internacional en México” (Public Policy and the Challenges of International Migration in Mexico) organized by the Mexican National Population Council. Mexico City (August 2008).

• “Undocumented Entry and Exit from Latin America in an Era of Rising Enforcement.” Presented at the U.S.–Mexico Binational Conference on Migration and Social Policy. University of California–San Diego (November 2007).

• “A Reflection on SES and Health Selectivity in Mexico–U.S. Migration Dynamics”. Presented at the workshop “Migration and Cardio-metabolic Risk: Obesity and Diabetes among Foreign-born People in the United States”. Emory University Global Health Institute. (April 2007).

• “The Evolution of Learned Societies: Comparative Perspective.” Presented at the Demography of Learned Societies Meeting. Vienna, Austria (November 2006).

• "Return versus Settlement among Undocumented Mexican Migrants, 1980 to 1996." Presented at the Binational Conference on Mexico–U.S. Migration, Puerto Vallarta, México (March 2002).

3.6.3. PRESENTATIONS AT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS

• “Depressive symptoms & disparities therein among Mexican immigrants over the 21st Century.” Presented at the 2019 Meetings of the Population Association of America (Austin, TX).

• “Operationalizing Trapped Populations.” Presented at the 2019 Meetings of the American Association of Geographers (Washington, DC).

• “Una revaloración de la formulación, comparación, y evaluación de las teorías de migración en el contexto de los movimientos entre Mesoamérica y Estados Unidos.” Presented at the XXXVI International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association (Barcelona, Spain, May 2018).

• “Racial Identification of Black Mexicans and its Effects on Measurements of Population Size and Ethno-racial Inequality.” Presented at the 2018 Meetings of the American Sociological Association (Philadelphia, PA).

• “Evaluating the dynamics and drivers of internal migration using alternative classification systems: a look at contemporary Mexico.” Presented at the 2018 Meetings of the American Association of Geographers (New Orleans, LA) and the 2018 Meetings of the Population Association of America (Denver, CO).

• “Climate Migration at the Height and End of the Great Mexican Migration Era.” Presented at the XXVIII International Population Conference (IUSSP). Cape Town, South Africa (November 2017).

• “Complejidades sobre la medición estadística de la Población Negra en México.” Presented at the Fifth Conference on Ethnicity, Race, and Indigenous Peoples (ERIP, LASA). Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo

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(October 2017) and at the XXXVI International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association (Barcelona, Spain, May 2018).

• “Situated ex situ adaptations: U.S. migration from rural Mexico as a response to climatic variability.” Presented at the 2014 Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society (Mexico City; May 2014).

• “Migrant Health Vulnerability through the Migration Process: Implications for health policy in Mexico and the United States.” Presented at the 2014 Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society (Mexico City; May 2014).

• “Disentangling "barrio effects" in Mexican American Health.” Presented at the 2014 Meetings of the Association of American Geographers (Tampa, Fl; April 2014).

• “Migrant Health Selection from Five Major Sources of U.S. Immigration.” Presented at the 2013 Population Association of America Meetings (New Orleans, April 2013). Prior version presented (with Randall Kuhn) at the University of Colorado’s Institute of Behavioral Science colloquium series (sponsored by the Population Program, December 2012).

• “Migration, Retirement, and Aging in Stable Populations.” Presented at the 2012 European Population Conference (Stockholm, Sweden. June 2012).

• “Paradox Lost (Over Time)? Duration of Stay, Language, Citizenship, and Adult Mortality among Hispanic Immigrants in the United States.” Presented at the XI Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society (Aguascalientes, Mexico. May 2012).

• “Climatic Variability and U.S. Migration from Rural Mexican Livelihoods.” Presented at the XI Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society (Aguascalientes, Mexico. May 2012).

• “The Role of U.S Migration Translocality in the Epidemiological Transition in Mexico: A Look at Diabetes and Hypertension.” Presented at the 2012 Population Association of America Meetings (San Francisco, May 2012).

• “Pathways to El Norte: Networks, Economic Restructuring, and Origin-Destination Flows in Mexico–U.S. Migration.” Presented at the 2011 Meetings of the Association of American Geographers (Seattle, WA, April) and at Plenary Session at the Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society (Mexico City, November 2010).

• “The Impact of Policies Influencing the Demography of Age-structured Populations: the Case of Academies of Sciences.” Presented at the XXVI International Population Conference. Marrakesh, Morocco (September 2009).

• “Health Selectivity and SES Gradients in Mexico–U.S. Migration at the Ecological Level.” Presented at the 2009 Meetings of the Population Association of America, Detroit, MI (April 2009).

• “Gradientes Educativos en Salud de Mexicanos en los E.U. y México.” Presented at the IX Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society. Mérida, México (October 2008).

• “Health Selectivity in Mexico–U.S. Migration and Return: A Bi-national Perspective on Older Adults.” Presented at the 2008 Meetings of the Population Association of America. New Orleans, LA (April 2008).

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• “A Look at Recent Trends in Contemporary Mexico–U.S. Migration Dynamics.” Presented at the Population Reference Bureau Policy Communications Program’s Workshop. Los Angeles, CA (March 2006).

• “Stocks de Capital Humano: Tendencias Recientes y Perspectivas a Futuro.” Presented at the VIII Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society. Guadalajara, Jalisco (September 2006).

• “Analyzing First Marriage-Migration/Migration-Marriage Sequences in Mexico.” Presented at the Vienna Institute of Demography Seminar Series (October 2005) and the XXV International Population Conference. Tours, France (July 2005).

• “There and Back Again: A Comparison of the Determinants of and Selectivity in Return Migration of Latin Americans in the U.S.” Presented at the 2004 Meetings of the Latin American Population Association, Caxambú, Brazil (September 2004).

• “Determinantes de la Migración Puertorriqueña de Retorno.” Presented at the VII Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society. Guadalajara, Mexico (December 2003).

3.6.4. POSTERS AT CONFERENCES AND MEETINGS

• Riosmena, F., D. Balk, & A. Clark. “Refining internal migration statistics in Mexico: an analysis across the urban-rural continuum and according to distance/neighbor-based regional zoning.” 2017 Meetings of the Population Association of America (Chicago).

• Riosmena, F., E. Steiner, J. Humphrey, and E. Root. “Selection vs. Protection, Composition vs. Context: Identifying the Mechanisms of Favorable Barrio “Effects” on Mexican-American Health.” 2015 Meetings of the Population Association of America (San Diego).

• Steiner, E., R. Rogers, and F. Riosmena. “Race/ethnic disparities in the hypertension management process: diagnosis, intervention, treatment, and control.” 2014 Meetings of the Population Association of America (Boston).

• Stubbs, R.W., F. Riosmena, E. Root, J. Humphrey, and E. Steiner “Using Python to Capture Neighborhood Demographics Surrounding Participants in Restricted-data Health Surveys.” 2014 Meetings of the Association of American Geographers (Tampa).

• Riosmena, F. “Regional Variation in International Migration from Mexico 1995 – 2004.” 2007 Meetings of the Population Association of America Meetings (New York City).

• Riosmena, F. “Analyzing Marriage-Migration/Migration-Marriage Sequences in Mexico.” 2005 Meetings of the Population Association of America Meetings (Philadelphia).

• Riosmena, F. “A Multi-Country Comparison on the Determinants of Return for Latin Americans in the U.S.” 2004 Meetings of the Population Association of America Meetings (Boston).

4. TEACHING AND MENTORING RECORD

4.1. COURSES TAUGHT

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• (F = FALL; S = SPRING; SUM = SUMMER)

• GEOG-6732: Formal Population Geography (S2021, F2018, S2017,S2015,S2013, F2010, F2008).

• GEOG-4292/5292: Migration, Adaptation, and Development (Sum2020, Sum2019, F2017, F2016, F2014, F2013, F2011, F2009, F2008, F2007).

• GEOG-4732/5732: Population Geography (S2015; F2010, F2009).

• GEOG-4173: Undergraduate Research Seminar (F2015, S2009).

• GEOG-3812: Human Geography of Latin America (S2018, S2017, SUM2015, F2014, S2010, S2009, F2007).

• GEOG-2002: Geographies of Global Change (F2012, S2014).

• GEOG-1982: World Regional Geography (F2020, F2019, S2019).

4.2. WORKSHOPS AND SHORT COURSES TAUGHT

• Instructor, short course on Event History Analysis. Center for Demographic, Urban, and Environmental Studies, El Colegio de México (Mexico City, July 2014 and June 2015).

• Co-instructor, short course on Event History Analysis. Center for Demographic, Urban, and Environmental Studies, El Colegio de México (Mexico City, July 2009).

• Co-instructor, Short Course in Longitudinal Analysis: Hazard Models. CU Population Center (Boulder, June 2009)

• Instructor, workshop on multistate life tables. Demography Masters Program, El Colegio de la Frontera Norte (Tijuana, Mexico, June 2009).

• Co-instructor and facilitator in Short Course on the Longitudinal Analysis of Survey Data on Aging. University of Costa Rica (San Jose, July 2008).

4.3. STUDENTS ADVISED

• Dissertation Committees (in Geography, includes comprehensive examination committee)

o Current advisees: Kevin Mason (Geography, expected Spring 2022); Juan P. Ramirez (Geography, expected Spring 2024).

o Previous advisees: Aaron Malone (Geography, expected Spring 2018); K.H. Wright (Geography, 2016); B. Jones (Geography, 2012).

o Ongoing member of dissertation committees: X. Chen (Geography); J. Vinneau (Sociology); D. Rogina (Sociology).

o Previous dissertation committees (unless indicated, including comprehensive examinations [thesis defense year]): [2020]: D. Zhaxi (Geography); M. Counterman (Sociology), A. Bloodworth (School of Education) [2019]: C. Bowman (Sociology); [2018]: P. Turner (Economics, no comps.), E. Bacon (Sociology); [2017]: W. Bredemeyer (Geography), Natalia Malancu (U. Pompeu Fabra, no comps.); [2016]: A. Schubert, W.C.

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Jochem; [2015]: G. MacLaurin; J. Humphrey (Geography); R. Kemp, E. Lawrence (Sociology); E. Kosack (Economics, no comps.); K. Coleman-Minahan (Health and Behavioral Sciences, CU–Denver); D. Warren (Nursing, AMC, no comps.); [2014]: R. Nawrotzki (Sociology); C. Blalock (Sociology); K. Alexander (Sociology); A. Williams (Geography); T. Roberts (Geography); [2013]: S. Murray (Economics, no comps.); [2012]: J. Tribbia (Sociology); [2010]: J. Denney (Sociology); J. Dennis (Sociology); [2008]: M. van Riemsdijk (Geography, no comps.).

• Master’s Thesis Committees

o Current advisees: N/A.

o Prior advisees (graduation year): P. Rody (Geography, 2019); K. Mason (Geography, 2017); S.C. Green (Geography); A. Lee (Geography, 2014); C. Sheehan (Geography, 2011).

o Member, Master’s Thesis committees: R. Davies, W.C. Jochem, G. MacLaurin, A. Williams, A. Schubert (Geography, various years); D. Simon (Sociology, 2018); V. García Sánchez (El Colegio de la Frontera Norte, 2010).

• Other comprehensive and specialty Examination Committees

o Geography (not on Dissertation Committee): A. Levy (2009).

o Sociology specialty comps: C. Talbot (ongoing) J. Vinneau (2019); A. Tilstra (2017), R. Nawrotzki (2012), R. Kemp (2011), C. Blalock, J. Tribbia (2009), J. Denney, J. Dennis, B. Everett (2008).

o Other specialty comps: K. Alexander (Sociology [Health Disparities], 2011).

o Independent studies: K. Mason & B. Davies (Population Geography); G. Lang (Immigration).

• Undergraduate Honors Thesis Committees and other research-related mentoring for undergraduates

o Advisees: C. Heinze (Sociology, 2019); G. Murillo (Geography, 2017); S.C. Green (Geography, 2011); C.M. Sheehan (International Affairs and Geography, 2009).

o Committee member: H. Harris (International Affairs, 2020); L. Wiebold (Geography 2014); C. Finer (Economics, 2013); J. Sexton (Economics, 2011); A. Sielaff (History, 2011); J. Speckhals (Political Science, 2010); D. Silver, J.R. Navarro (Economics, 2010); J.C. Owen (Environmental Studies, 2009).

o Other mentorship: P. Castellon (independent study, 2020); R. D’Souza (UROP advisor, AY2014-2015); K. Mendez (UROP supervisor, AY 2014-2015); J. Sauer (UROP advisor, AY 2012–2013); S.C. Green (UROP advisor, AY 2010–2011); L. Gutierrez (McNair program supervisor, Summer 2009).

4.4. TEACHING-RELATED TRAINING

University of Colorado Faculty Teaching Excellence Program Teaching with Technologies Workshop.

2014

University of Colorado Faculty Teaching Excellence Program Assessment Workshop. 2012

University of Colorado Faculty Teaching Excellence Program Writing Workshop. 2011

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American Association of Geographers, Geography Faculty Development Alliance, Early Career Workshop.

2010

University of Colorado Faculty Teaching Excellence Program Early Career Workshop. 2010

5. SERVICE RECORD

5.1. INTRAMURAL SERVICE

• Unit (Geography Department)

o Diversity Committee (AYs 2007–2008, 2008–2009, 2013–2014, [Chair, 2016-2017 & 2017-2018]).

o Undergraduate committee (AY 2017-2018, AY 2018-2019, AY 2019-2020).

o Newsletter/alumni outreach committee (AY2018-2019).

o Reappointment committee for Prof. C. Reid (AY2019-2020).

o Reappointment committee for Instructor Sarah Kelly (AY2018-2019).

o Post-tenure review committee for Professor John O’Loughlin (Spring 2018).

o Personnel committee (AY2011–2012, 2012–2013).

o Space, fund-raising, and honors committee (AY 2010–2011).

o Colloquium committee Chair (AY 2014 – 2015 & Fall 2015).

o Graduate committee (AY 2009–2010).

o Geography Faculty Search Committees (AYs 2008–2009, 2009–2010, 2014-2015, 2015-2016, 2018-2019).

o Faculty sponsor, Gamma Theta Upsilon, The International Geographic Honor Society (AYs 2012–2013, 2013–2014).

o Class observations/peer reviews for Stefan Leyk (Spring 2019); Professors Najeeb Jan (Spring 2013), Elisabeth Root (Fall 2012), Mara Goldman (Fall 2011; Spring 2012), Joe Bryan (Fall 2009), and Emily Yeh (Fall 2008).

• Unit (Institute of Behavioral Science)

o Chair, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Committee (AY2020-2021).

o Member, IBS Board (November 2020-present).

o Member, Diversity, Inclusion & Excellence Implementation ARPAC sub-committee (2019-2020).

o Member, Graduate Student/Postdoctoral Training Committee (AY 2017-2018 & 2018-2019).

o Member, Research Strategic Planning Implementation committee (2017).

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o Member, Strategic Planning Task Force (2015-2016).

o Search committee for Problem Behavior Program Director (2014-2015).

o Committee to redesign Demography Certificate (AY2012–2013).

o Co-organizer, Short Course in Longitudinal Analysis: Hazard Models (Summer 2009).

• Campus and System

o College of Arts and Sciences. Member, Arts and Sciences Council (incl. Diversity Committee), AY2016-2017.

o College of Arts and Sciences. Member, General Education Requirements Implementation Committee, AY2016-2017 & AY2017-2018.

o Graduate School. Bev Sears Award Review Committee (Spring 2009, Spring 2011, Spring 2013, Fall 2013).

o Geography representative, Boulder Faculty Assembly & Compensation & Benefits Committee (Fall 2010).

o Member, CU System Faculty Assembly Budget Committee (Spring 2011–2014; Secretary, 2012–2013).

• Guest lectures and service-related talks at CU (unless otherwise noted)

o Guest facilitator, Institute of Behavioral Science Proseminar (one session each, 2016-2017, 2017-2018).

o Speaker/facilitator, “Bililingual Publishing and International Collaboration.” Latin American Studies Center Graduate Student Research Cluster workshop (April 2014).

o Facilitator of workshop on “work-life balance: managing your job and life whether single or partnered.” University of Colorado Faculty Teaching Excellence Program (November 2013).

o Panel member on post-screening roundtable of “Mother: Caring for 7 Billion”, Food and Environmental Justice Week, CU Assembly for Sustainability and Equity (April 2012)

o Panel member on Navigating the Academic Job Market, Health and Behavioral Science Graduate Student Development Series, University of Colorado at Denver (September 2009).

o Member of international faculty panel at 2009 Diversity Summit (Spring 2009).

o Class guest lectures (Instructor, Department): Spring 2014 (Christina Sue, Sociology; Elizabeth Vaquera, Sociology [University of South Florida]); Spring 2013 (Christina Sue, Sociology); Fall 2012 (Elisabeth Root, Geography [two lectures]); Spring 2012 (Rick Rogers, Sociology; Christina Sue, Sociology); Fall 2011 (Mara Goldman, Geography; Sara Yeatman, Health and Behavioral Sciences [UCD]); Spring 2011 (Christina Sue, Sociology); Spring 2010 (Rick Rogers, Sociology; Christina Sue, Sociology); Spring 2009 (Sanyu Mojola, Sociology); Fall 2009 (Stefanie Mollborn, Sociology); Fall 2008 (Gary Gaile, Geography); Spring 2008 (Andrei Rogers, Geography).

5.2. EXTRA-MURAL SERVICE

• Service to professional organizations

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o Member, Organizing Committee, 2021 Meetings of the Population Association of America.

o Board Member, Population Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers (2011–Present; Student Paper Competition Committee 2013–Present; Vice-president 2015–2017; President 2017–2019).

o Co-editor (Wong, Angel, and Riosmena), special issue on Hispanic and L. American Health and Aging, Research on Aging 38(3), April 2016.

o Co-organizer, 2014 International Conference on Aging in the Americas (Boulder, CO, September 2014).

o Judge, poster session. 2013 Conference on Aging in the Americas (Austin, TX, September 2013).

o Member, Board of Directors and foreign affairs liaison, Mexican Demographic Society (2013–2015).

o Invited participant in Expert Meeting in the Future of Spatial Demography, University of California Santa Barbara (December 2011).

o Co-organizer, International Migration sessions and chair of plenary session on international migration. XI Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society. Aguascalientes, Mexico (May 2012).

o Organizer, Population Geography Specialty Group sessions. 2012 Meetings of the Association of American Geographers, New York City (February).

o Discussant: 2017 IPC/IUSSP meetings; 2014, 2013, 2010 Meetings of the Population Association of America; 2010 Meetings of the Latin American Population Association; 2014, 2010 Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society.

o Session organizer (1 session each): 2017 Meetings of the Population Association of America; 2014 Meetings of the American Sociological Association; 2014 Meetings of the Mexican Demographic Society (joint PAA-SOMEDE session); 2014 Meetings of the Population Association of America (Chair, joint PAA-SOMEDE session), 2009 Meetings of Population Association of America (Chair); 2010 Meetings of Latin American Population Association (Chair).

o Co-organizer, “Meta-Expert Meeting for Establishing Migration Assumptions for IIASA-Oxford Global Population Projections.” Held at the University of Colorado at Boulder (October 2011).

• Review service for academic journals and other organizations

o Social Science Review Panel, Ford Diversity Fellowships, National Research Council, National Academies (2008–2013).

o Gustavo Cabrera Demography Awards Review Panel, Center for Demographic, Urban, and Environmental Studies, El Colegio de México (2014).

o Committee member, Louis Wirth award committee (best article, International Migration Section), American Sociological Association (2015).

o Editorial Board Member, Demography (2016 – Present).

o Editorial Board Member, Irish Journal of Sociology (2018 – Present).

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o Associate Deputy Editor, Climatic Change (Aug 2016 – Aug 2017).

• Advisory role to government and non-governmental organizations

o Group co-leader of Population Working Group, Central and North American Migration Dialogue. CIESAS (Mexico) and Georgetown University (2014 – 2016).

o Invited participant in expert meeting “Gathering on Data and Information Needs on the Unauthorized,” convened by the Center for Migration Studies (Washington, D.C. September 19-20, 2013).

o Participant in Health Working Group in Binational Dialogue on Mexicans in the U.S. and in Mexico. CIESAS (Mexico) and Georgetown University (2012-2013).

o Invited participant in international migration expert meeting as part of a “Dialogue on Population Projections” (“Diálogos sobre las proyecciones de población”), convened by the Mexican National Population Council (Consejo Nacional de Población), Mexican Ministry of the Interior (September 2012).

o Member of Panel “Feasibility of Estimating the Flow of Unauthorized Crossings at the U.S.–Mexican Border using Surveys.” The National Academies (October 2011–May 2012).

o Roundtable participant on Border Metrics. Migration Policy Institute, April 2012.

o Member of ad hoc migration advisory group for evaluation of population estimates to evaluate 2010 Mexican Housing and Population Census (May 2011).

• Public talks

o Panel member, “Conversations with IMPLANT: The Cultural Legacies and Relationships of Mexico City and Denver.” Biennial of the Americas. Denver, CO. https://www.facebook.com/events/833086673474027/.

o Panel member, “Immigration: Historical Perspective and Current Trends.” Boulder Public Library (July 21 2012).

o “Factors Influencing the Internal Migration Decisions of Mexican Migrants in Colorado” (with Christina Sue). The Colorado Academy for Lifelong Learning. Boulder, CO (September 2011).

o “Differences in Migration Patterns among Latin Americans” Public talk at Science Cafe, Fort Collins, CO (April 2009).

• Interviews

o Podcast appearance, The Y Circus (December 2020).

o Radio appearance, KOA Newsradio (January 2018).

o Radio appearance, KOA Newsradio (September 2017).

o Radio appearance, KGNU’s “Morning Magazine” (September 2017).

o Radio appearance. Immigration panel participant on KGNU’s “Morning Magazine.” (as part of promotion for “Immigration: Historical Perspective and Current Trends.”). July 17, 2012.

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http://aa.kgnu.net/forcedownload.php?mp3file=MorningMagazine/2012/MorningMagazine_2012-07-17.mp3.

o Online video. “Family Dynamics in Migration.” Norton Sociology Youtube Channel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mt24nRcko4s#t=68. August 2012.

o Radio appearance. Interview in “Somos Un Pueblo Unido.” New Mexico Public Radio. July 13, 2011. http://www.somosunpueblounido.org/radioarchives.php.

• Community service

o UndocuAlly liaison for Geography Department (2017 – Present) and co-instructor in UndocuAlly Trainings, University of Colorado at Boulder (2018 – Present).

o Board member, Immigrant Legal Center of Boulder County (March 2011–Present; Vice-President, Jan 2014-October 2014; President, October 2014 - Present).

o Talk on Immigration Issues for Make a Dream Foundation of Boulder County (Summer 2011).

o Volunteer, ADELANTE program. Boulder High School (October 2010–March 2012).