Faculty Experts

Gladys McCormick

Associate Professor of History and the Jay and Debe Moskowitz Endowed Chair in Mexico-U.S. Relations

Gladys McCormick is an Associate Professor of History and the Jay and Debe Moskowitz Endowed Chair in Mexico-U.S. Relations in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ. McCormick’s research interests include the political and economic history of Latin America and the Caribbean, corruption, drug trafficking, and political violence.

Professor McCormick teaches a range of courses at the undergraduate and graduate levels, including survey courses on colonial, modern, and contemporary Latin America, comparative revolutions, oral history methodologies, US-Mexico relations, and drugs and drug trafficking in Mexico.

She is the author of “The Last Door: Political Prisoners and the Use of Torture in Mexico’s Dirty War,” published in the journal The Americas, January 2017, and of the book The Logic of Compromise: Authoritarianism, Betrayal, and Revolution in Rural Mexico, 1935-1965 (University of North Carolina Press, 2016). She is currently working on two book projects: one detailing the history of torture in Mexico since the 1970s and the other a co-authored overview of drug trafficking in Latin America.