ANNA
SAMPAIO
CAREER AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS /
STATEMENT OF VIEWS
Anna Sampaio is associate
professor of political science at the University
of Colorado at Denver
and Health Sciences Center,
where she teaches and researches in the areas of Latina/o politics, gender
politics, immigration, post-colonialism, and transnationalism.
She received her BS in Political Science with a minor in Ethnic Studies from Santa Clara University
and her MA and PhD in Political Science from the University
of California at Riverside. Prior to coming to Denver in 1998 she taught at CSU Hayward, at Santa Clara University,
and at the University of California, Santa
Cruz.
Sampaio served as the
President of the APSA Latino/a Caucus and is the current President of the WPSA
Women’s Caucus. She is active in both the WPSA and APSA where she has served as
a member of the APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos and Latinas in the
Profession, as section chair for the 2006, 2004, and 2003 WPSA Annual Meetings,
as an Executive Council member of the section on Race, Ethnicity and Diversity,
in addition to other committee appointments. She is currently a member of the editorial
board of PS: Political Science and
Politics and Latin American
Perspectives
Sampaio’s research is driven largely by questions of intersectionality; namely work that brings together
analyses of race, gender, class, as well work that transgresses traditional
geographic, political and disciplinary boundaries. She recently published “Theorizing Women of
Color in a New Global Matrix,” (2004) in the International Journal of Feminist Politics highlighting
transnational political
organizing between Latinas in the U.S.
and Mexico
and “Crossing Disciplinary Borders: Re-examining Latino/a Studies and Latin
American Studies in the 1990s,” (2003) in The
Journal of Latino-Latin American Studies. Similarly her co-edited book, Transnational Latino/a
Communities: Politics, Processes and Cultures (2002) from Rowman and Littlefield, examines the formation of
bi-national and transnational Latino/a communities and their political
expressions. Sampaio’s current research centers on the
impact of post 9-11 immigration policies on Latino/a immigrants.
Sampaio was twice recognized
by the APSA Pi Sigma Alpha National Honor Society for excellence in teaching. In addition, she has received awards for
teaching, research, and service from the University
of California, the University of Colorado,
and from community organizations in Colorado.
Outside the university, Sampaio works as a political consultant on candidate
races and statewide initiatives and serves on the board of non-profit
organizations supporting the political empowerment of women and ethnic minority
populations locally and nationally.