Center For Latin American Studies at the Watson Institute for International Studies

Concentration Adviser

R. Douglas Cope, Associate Professor of HistoryCope


Professor Cope is an associate professor in the History Department.  He is currently writing a manuscript analyzing the informal economy in eighteenth-century Mexico City.  This study represents and deepens his long-standing focus on multi-ethnic societies in the Americas, and particularly on the lived experience of the urban poor, as they dealt with their unfavorable position in the colonial hierarchy.  His teaching interests extend still further, embracing Mexico and Central America from pre-Columbian times to the present day, as well as the Atlantic world in the early modern era. 

As undergraduate concentration advisor, Professor Cope tries to encourage students to expand the scope of their interests, and to take advantage of the rich Latin American offerings at Brown: the wide array of courses in nearly two dozen disciplines, the Center’s calendar of events (movies, lectures, and workshops), and resources such as the John Carter Brown Library.

Fall 2008 Classes:

HIST 1610 - Mexico, 1700-1867
HIST 2970B - Race, Ethnicity and Identity in Colonial Latin America