Position Title
Associate Professor
Education
- Ph.D., History, University of Chicago, 2016
- M.A., History, University of Chicago, 2011
- M.S., Education, Mercy College, 2008
- B.A., History, Princeton University, 2005
About
Professor José Juan Pérez Meléndez is a historian of Latin America and the Caribbean who specializes on nineteenth-century Brazil in broad Atlantic and world history contexts. His research centers on political, business and migratory dynamics that have shaped governmental mechanisms of population control and transport in the Americas. Before arriving at Davis, Professor Pérez Meléndez completed a postdoctoral stay as a Max Weber Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence. His first book, titled Peopling for Profit in Imperial Brazil: Directed Migrations and the Business of Nineteenth-Century Colonization (2024), charts the formation of early migration policy in Brazil in counterpoint to global processes. He is currently working on two different book projects: one surveying the functional meanings of monarchism across post-independence Latin America, and the other detailing a company/environmental history of the leading navigation company in the Brazilian Empire.
Prof. Pérez Meléndez also focuses on the Caribbean as a secondary field of research. His current work on the region is twofold. On the one hand, he is examining nineteenth-century slavery in the context of the illegal slave trade among Puerto Rico, the Lesser Antilles and Cuba. On the other hand, he is engaged in the public history of formal debates on Puerto Rican decolonization from the 1950s onward.
Research Focus
The long nineteenth century, world history, Latin America and the Caribbean, Brazil, the Atlantic in the Age of Revolutions, migrations, slavery and the illegal slave trade, business history and companies, nineteenth-century colonization, comparative/connected histories, intellectual history, Puerto Rico, US imperialism, decolonization movements
Publications
- Peopling for Profit in Imperial Brazil: Directed Migrations and the Business of Nineteenth-Century Colonization (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024).
- "De diásporas y asambleas soberanistas," Categoría Cinco 3, nº 2 (verano/otoño 2023).
- "Outbreaks, Shares, and Contracts: The Press and the Migrant Trade in Early Imperial Brazil," in Celso Castilho, Teresa Cribelli, and Hendrik Kraay, eds. Press, Power, and Culture in Imperial Brazil (Albuquerque: New Mexico University Press, 2021).
- “Reconsidering Colonization Policy in Brazil: The Regency Years and the World Beyond,” Revista Brasileira de História (2014).
Teaching
Undergraduate Courses
- The History of Latin America (1750-1898)
- The History of Modern Brazil (1808 to the Present)
- Latin American Migration History
- Latin American Environmental History
- Islands & Empire: US Colonial Archipelagos from the Philippines to Puerto Rico
- Frantz Fanon: The Work, Times, and Afterlives of an Anti-Colonialist Paragon
Graduate Seminars
- Historiography of Brazil
- The Dark Decades: Making Sense of Latin American Post-Independences
- Settler Colonialism? Empire & Nation-Building in Latin America & Beyond
- The Company: Business Organization, Managerial Practices, and Corporate Actors in Global History
- US Colonialism in Puerto Rico: Social, Legal, and Environmental Histories from Occupation to the Calls for Reparations
Awards
- UC Davis Society of Hellman Fellowship (2022-2023)
- Bridging the Divide Fellowship, Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños, Hunter College (2022-2023)
- Davis Humanities Institute Faculty Research Fellowship (2020-2021)
- Wakeham Mentoring Fellowship (2019)
- Sherman Emerging Scholar Lectureship, University of North Carolina, Wilmington (2019)
- Max Weber Postdoctoral Fellowship, European University Institute (2016-2017)
- American Council of Learned Societies Dissertation Completion Fellowship (2015-2016)
- Fulbright-Hays DDRA Fellowship (2013-2014)