Gastón Espinosa, Ph.D. - Hti.ptsem.edu

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CURRICULUM VITAEGastón Espinosa, Ph.D.Arthur V. Stoughton Professor of Religious StudiesClaremont McKenna CollegeDepartment of Religious Studies850 Columbia AvenueClaremont, CA 91711-6420Princeton University, 2016-201783 Prospect StreetBobst Hall, 005Princeton, NJ 08542gaston.espinosa@cmc.edu or 427r33@gmail.comI. HIGHER EDUCATION2000Postdoctoral Studies, UCLA School of Theater, Film, Television1999Ph.D. University of California, Santa Barbara, 3.98 GPA1994M.Ed. Harvard University (Seminar w/Harvey Cox in Liberation Theology & Pentecostal Movements)1992M.Div. Princeton Seminary, History of Christianity & History of Religions (Islam & Hinduism)1989B.A.Biola University, History, B.A. thesis: “Thucydides and the Causes of the Peloponnesian War”II. ACADEMIC ceton University (NJ), James Madison Program, Department of PoliticsWilliam E. Simon Visiting Fellow in Religion and Public LifeClaremont McKenna College (CA), Department of Religious StudiesArthur V. Stoughton Professor of Religious StudiesClaremont McKenna College (CA), Department of Religious StudiesArthur V. Stoughton A s so c i a te Professor of Religious StudiesClaremont McKenna College (CA), Department of Religious StudiesAssistant ProfessorNorthwestern University (IL), Department of Religious StudiesAndrew Mellon Postdoctoral Faculty Fellow, Taught 8 Courses in 2 Years.University of California, Santa Barbara (CA), Department of Religious StudiesVisiting Scholar of Religious Studies, Taught Course on U.S. Latino ReligionsWestmont College (CA), Department of Religious StudiesAssistant Prof. of Religion. Passed mid-tenure review. Left for Andrew Mellon Post-doc at NorthwesternDartmouth College (NH), Department of Latino and Latin American StudiesCésar Chávez Dissertation Year Fellow in Latino and Latin American Studies at Dartmouth CollegeUniversity of California, Santa Barbara, Department of History & Chicano StudiesTeaching Assistant in U.S. and Mexican American HistoryIII. TEACHING EXPERIENCE – COLLEGIATE & GRADUATEField: American Religions: American Religious History; Religion in Contemporary America; U.S.Religions, 1870-Present (CGU); Religion and American Film; Race & Ethnicity in AmericanReligions; Pentecostal, Evangelical and Liberation Movements (CGU); Racism: A History (FHS)Field: U.S. Latino Religions: North American Latino Religions, U.S. Latino Religions & Politics,Latin American Religion and PoliticsField: American Religion and Politics: American Religion and Politics; Religion and the AmericanPresidency; Religion, Race, and the Civil Rights Movement; Religion, Politics & Global ViolenceField: History of Christianity – Courses on Early, Medieval, Reformation, Modern ChristianityField: History and Theories of Religion & Introduction to World ReligionsField: Leadership & Social Change: Mystics, Prophets & Social Change (FHS); Visionaries, Prophetsand Transformative Leadership (KLI Course)IV. BA, MA, PhD THESES: 38 students – 8 won best thesis/other prizes in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016* My one current CGU Ph.D. candidate whose committee I chair won 3 grants totaling 25,000

Gastón Espinosa, 2V. AWARDS, FELLOWSHIPS, GRANTS, DISTINCTIONS – 43 total – samples below1. 2016-17William Simon Fellow in Religion & Public Life, Department of Politics, Princeton University2. Fall 2015 Distinguished Visiting Prof. in Religion & Politics, C luster of Excellence, Münster U, Germany3. 2012-13Kravis Leadership Institute Grant for Visionaries, Prophets and Transformative Leadership4. 2012Director, Latino Religions and Politics Survey (n 1,000 Latino likely voters)5. 2010-11National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Fellowship at the National HumanitiesCenter Institute for Advanced Studies, Raleigh-Durham Research Triangle, North Carolina6 . 2009Arthur V. Stoughton Professorship in Religious Studies, Claremont McKenna College7. 2008Director, Latino Religions and Politics National Survey (n 2,685 Latinos - 1,104 reg. voters)8. 2007-08Harvard University Tenure-Track Faculty Appointment in Religion – One of two finalists9. 2006-08Jesse Miranda Center for Hispanic Leadership Book Grant10. 2005-06 Louisville Institute for the Study of American Religions Fellowship11. 2002-04Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Faculty Fellowship, Northwestern University12. 1999-02Project Manager, Pew Trusts Hispanic Churches in American Public Life Grant ( 1.3 million)2000Research Director, Hispanic Churches in American Public Life Surveys (n 3,010 Latinos)2000Hispanic Churches in American Public Life National Survey (n 2,310)2000Hispanic Churches in American Public Life Religious Leaders Survey (n 205)2000Hispanic Churches in American Public Life Civic Leaders Survey (n 229)2000Hispanic Churches in American Public Life Community Profile Interviews with 266 peoplein 45 congregations from 25 religious traditions in 8 cities across the U.S. & Puerto Rico13. 1997-98Dartmouth College César Chávez Dissertation Year Fellowship14. 1997-98 University of California President's Dissertation Year Fellowship15. 1997-98Princeton Woodrow Wilson Charlotte W. Newcombe Dissertation Fellowship16. 1996-97Yale Pew Program in Religion & American History Summer Fellowship17. 1996-97Huggins-Quarles Award & Grant from the Organization of American Historians (OAH)18. 1996-97California Council for the Humanities (CCH) Documentary Scriptwriting Grant19. 1994-95U.C. Santa Barbara Outstanding Teaching Assistant Award in Humanities & Fine ArtsVI. BOOKS – PUBLISHED – 8 TOTALA. Monographs1. Latino Pentecostals in America: Faith and Politics in Action (Harvard University Press, 2014), 504 pages.2. William J. Seymour and the Origins of Global Pentecostalism: A Biography and Documentary History(Duke University Press, 2014), 436 pages. Foreword by Harvey Cox, Harvard University.B. Edited Books1. Religion, Race, and Barack Obama’s New Democratic Pluralism (Routledge Publishers, 2012), 288 pp.2. Religion and the American Presidency: George Washington to George W. Bush with Commentary andPrimary Sources (Columbia University Press, 2009), 543 pages.3. Religion, Race, and the American Presidency (Rowman & Littlefield Pub., 2008), hardback 361 pages.Religion, Race, and the American Presidency (2011 with capstone chapter on 2012), paperback 376 pages.4. Mexican American Religions: Spirituality, Activism, and Culture with Mario T. Garcia (Duke UniversityPress, 2008), 443 pages.5. Rethinking Latino Religions and Identity co-edited with Miguel de la Torre (Pilgrim Press, 2006), 356 pages.6. Latino Religions and Civic Activism in the United States co-edited with Virgilio Elizondo and JesseMiranda (Oxford University Press, 2005), 368 pages.C. Other Manuscript-Length projects1. Ordinary Prophet, 1 20 -pa ge screenplay (UCLA School of Theater, Film, & Television, 2002). Religion & Race.

Gastón Espinosa, 3VII. PUBLICATIONS – JOURNAL ARTICLES, BOOK CHAPTERS, REVIEWS, REPORTS – 118 totalA. JOURNAL ARTICLES, SCHOLARLY REVIEWS, AND MAJOR REPORTS – 19 total1 . Gastón Espinosa, Harold Morales, and Juan Galvan, “Latino Muslims the United States: Reversion,Politics, and Islamidad,” Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Religion, Vol. 8, Issue 1 (June 2017): 1-48.2 . “Latino Religion, Ethnicity, and Demographic Shifts in American Public Life,” Politique AméricaineN o . 2 1 (France) (Spring 2013), 71-96.3. “Mexican American and Latino Religions,” Oxford Annotated Bibliographies in Latino Studies (NewYork: Oxford University Press, Spring 2013), 27 pages.4. “Latino Religions and Politics Survey: Voter Report: Pre-2012 Election Findings” (Claremont, CA,November 1, 2012). Survey results of 1,075 Latino likely voters across U.S.5. “Barack Obama’s Political Theology: Pluralism, Deliberative Democracy, and the ChristianFaith,” Journal of Political Theology, 1 3 /5 ( O cto b er/N o ve mb er 2 0 1 2 ) : 6 1 0 -6 3 3 .6. Invited Review of David Watt, Farmworkers and the Churches: The Movement in California and Texas,The American Historical Review 117 (4) (October 2012): 1251-1252.7. “Righteousness and Justice”: Latino Catholics and Protestants, Barack Obama, and the 2008Election,” Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Religion, Vol. 3, Issue 5 (September 2012): 1-44.8. “Latinos and Religion in the 2008 Presidential Election,” Hemisphere, Vol. 19 (Spring 2010) (LatinAmerican & Caribbean Center, School of International & Public Affairs, Florida International Univ.), 19-21.9. Latino Religions and Politics: Catholics, Protestants, the 2008 Election and Beyond (Claremont, CA:Claremont McKenna College, 2009), 70 pages.10. “Latino Religion, Education, & Marriage in the United States,” Marriage & Family Review 43 (2008):205-225.11. Invited Review of Paul Barton, Hispanic Methodists, Presbyterians, and Baptists in Texas,Reviews in Religion and Theology, Vol. 15, No. 4 (September 2008): 506-511.12. “’The Other Within’: The Case for Mexican American Religious Studies,” American Academy ofReligion Spotlight on Teaching (October 2007): iv, xi.13. “’Today We Act, Tomorrow We Vote’: Latino Religions, Politics, and Activism in U.S. CivilSociety,” Annals of American Academy of Political & Social Science (July 2007): 151-171.14. Invited Review of Segundo Pantoja, Religion and Education Among Latinos in New York City.Latino Studies Journal (Spring 2007), 377-380.15. Invited Review of Arlene Sánchez Walsh, Latino Pentecostal Identity: Evangelical Faith, Self,and Society, Church History Vol. 74, No. 3 (Fall 2005): 651-653.16. “The Pentecostalization of Latin American and U.S. Latino Christianity,” Pneuma: The Journal forthe Society of Pentecostal Studies, Vol. 26, No. 2 (Academic Brill Publishers, Fall 2004): 262-292.17. “Changements démographiques et religieux chez les hispaniques des Etats-Unis,”Social Compass: International Review of Sociology of Religion, 51(3) (2004): 309-327.18. Gastón Espinosa, Virgilio Elizondo, and Jesse Miranda, Hispanic Churches in American PublicLife (Notre Dame: Institute for Latino Studies at the University of Notre Dame, 2003).Gastón Espinosa, Virgilio Elizondo, and Jesse Miranda, Las Iglesias Hispanas en la VidaPública Ameicana: Resumen de los Hallazgos (Notre Dame: Institute for Latino Studies atthe University of Notre Dame, 2003).19. "'El Azteca:' Francisco Olazábal and Latino Pentecostal Charisma, Power, and Healing in theBorderlands," Journal of the American Academy of Religion 67/3 (September 1999): 597-616.

Gastón Espinosa, 4B. BOOK CHAPTERS & MAJOR INTRODUCTIONS, CONCLUSIONS– 29 total20. “Let the Spirit Fly:” Marilynn Kramar and the History of the Latino Catholic Charismatic Movement inthe U.S.-Mexico Borderlands,” in Ronald Wells, ed., California Dreaming: Society and Culture in theGolden State (Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2017), 30-52.21. “Religion, Politics, and American Society,” in Gastón Espinosa, ed., Religion, Race, and BarackObama’s New Democratic Pluralism (Routledge Publishers, 2012), 1-36.22. “Latinos, Religion, and the 2008 Election,” in Gastón Espinosa, ed., Religion, Race, and BarackObama’s New Democratic Pluralism (Routledge Publishers, 2012), 213-232.23. “Conclusion,” in Gastón Espinosa, ed., Religion, Race, and Barack Obama’s New DemocraticPluralism (Routledge Publishers, 2012), 257-266.24. “’Salvation and Transformation’: Latino Evangelical Political Activism and the Struggle overComprehensive Immigration Reform,” in Harold Recinos, ed., Wading Through Many Voices:Toward A Theology of Public Conversation (Rowman & Littlefield, 2011), 133-151.25. “Campaigning for Justice: Religious and Legal Activism in Challenging Illegal Immigration as aSocial Problem in the U.S.,” in Titus Hjelm, ed. Religion & Social Problems (Routledge Pub, 2010),122-141.26. “Latino Pentecostal Healing in the North American Borderlands," in Global Pentecostal andCharismatic Healing, ed., Candy Gunther Brown (Oxford University Press, Fall 2010).27. “Religion, Race, and the 2008 Election,” in Gastón Espinosa, ed., Religion, Race, and the AmericanPresidency, 2nd & paperback edition (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2009).28. “Les Latinos et l’élection présidentielle de 2008 aux Etats-Unis,” et Religions des Amériques du milieudu xxe siècle à nos jours. Un demi-siècle d’effervescence et de recompositions, dir., Nathalie Caron etal (Paris, FR: Presses de l’Institut des Amériques, 2009), 1-31.29. “Religion and the Presidency of William Jefferson Clinton,” in Gastón Espinosa, ed., Religion andthe American Presidency George Washington to George W. Bush with Commentary and PrimarySources (Columbia University Press, 2009), 430-475.30. “Introduction” and “Conclusion,” in Gastón Espinosa, ed., Religion and the American Presidency:George Washington to George W. Bush with Commentary and Primary Sources (ColumbiaUniversity Press, 2009), 1-44, 514-522.31. “Latinos, Religion, and the American Presidency,” in Gastón Espinosa, ed., Religion, Race, andthe American Presidency, ed., (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2008), 230-274, 318-323.32. "'Third Class Soldiers': A History of Hispanic Pentecostal Clergywomen in the Assemblies ofGod," in Amos Yong & Estrelda Alexander, eds., Philip’s Daughters: Women in PentecostalCharismatic Leadership (Princeton Monograph Series/Pickwick, 2008), 95-111.33. “History and Theory in the Study of Mexican American Religions,” in Gastón Espinosa and MarioT. García, eds., Mexican American Religions: Spirituality, Activism, and Culture (Duke UniversityPress, 2008), 17-56.34. “Mexican Madonna: Selena and the Politics of Cultural Redemption,” in Gastón Espinosa andMario T. García, eds., Mexican American Religions: Spirituality, Activism, and Culture (DukeUniversity Press, 2008), 359-379.35. “Brown Moses: Francisco Olazábal and Mexican American Pentecostal Healing in the Borderlands,”in Gastón Espinosa and Mario T. García, eds., Mexican American Religions: Spirituality, Activism,and Culture (Duke University Press, 2008), 263-295.36. “History and Theory in the Study of Mexican American Religions,” in Miguel de la Torre & GastónEspinosa, eds., Rethinking Latino Religions and Identity (Pilgrim Press, 2006), 69-100.

Gastón Espinosa, 537. “Methodological Reflections on Social Science Research on Latino Religions,” in Miguel de laTorre & Gastón Espinosa, eds., Rethinking Latino Religions and Identity (Pilgrim, 2006), 13-45.38. “Ordinary Prophet: William J. Seymour and the Azusa Street Revival,” in Cecil Robeck & HaroldHunter, eds., The Azusa Street Revival and Its Legacy (Pathway Press, 2006), 29-60.39. “Latino/a Clergy and Churches in Political and Social Action in the United States,” in Edwin I.Hernández, Milagros Peña, et al, eds., Emerging Voices, Urgent Choices: Essays on Latino/aReligious Leadership (Leiden, Netherlands: Brill Academic Publishers, 2005).40. “Latino Clergy and Churches in Faith-Based Political and Social Action in the United States,” inGastón Espinosa, Virgilio Elizondo, and Jesse Miranda Latino Religions and Civic Activism inthe United States (Oxford University Press, 2005), 279-306.41. “Introduction: U.S. Latino Religions and Faith-Based Political, Civic, and Social Action,” in GastónEspinosa, Virgilio Elizondo, and Jesse Miranda, eds., Latino Religions and Civic Activism in theUnited States (Oxford University Press, 2005), 3-16.42. “Conclusion: Assessing and Interpreting 150 Years of U.S. Latino Faith-Based Civic Activism,”in Gastón Espinosa, Virgilio Elizondo, and Jesse Miranda, eds., Latino Religions and CivicActivism in the United States (Oxford University Press, 2005), 307-314.43. “’God Made a Miracle in My Life’: Latino Pentecostal Healing in the Borderlands,” in Linda Barnes& Susan Sered, eds., Religious Healing in America (Oxford Univ. Press, 2004), 123-138.44. “Francisco Olazábal and Latino Pentecostal Revivalism in the North American Borderlands” inMichael McClymond, ed., New Directions in North American Revivalism (Johns Hopkins Press,2004), 172-200.45. "'Your Daughters Shall Prophesy': A History of Women in Ministry in the Latino PentecostalMovement in the United States," in Margaret Lamberts Bendroth and Virginia Lieson Brereton, eds.,Women Twentieth-Century Protestantism (University of Illinois Press, 2002), 25-48.46. “Francisco Olazábal: Charisma, Power, & Faith Healing in the Borderlands,” James Goff & GrantWacker, eds., Portraits of a Generation: Early Pentecostal Leaders (Univ. of Arkansas, 2002), 257-288.47. "Tongues and Healing at the Azusa Street Revival," in Colleen McDannell, eds., The Religions of theUnited States in Practice (Princeton University Press, 2001), 209-215.48. "Selena and the Politics of Cultural Redemption," in Karin Ikas & Francisco Lomeli, eds., U.S.Latino Literatures & Cultures: Transnational Perspectives (Germany: Peter Lang, 2000), 53-60.49. "El Azteca: Francisco Olazábal and Latino Pentecostal Charisma, Power, and Faith Healing in theBorderlands," in Mario T. García, ed., Bridging Cultures: An Introduction to Chicano/Latino Studies(Kendall/Hunt Publishers, 2000), 171-187.C. SCHOLARLY PUBLICATIONS IN NON-PEER REVIEWED JOURNALS – 8 total50. “Can Obama Win the Latino Protestant Vote?” Religion & Politics (October 15, 2012).51. “Obama Threaded the Moral Needle of Latino Evangelicals in ’08,” Religion Dispatches (6/28/09).52. “’Liberated and Empowered’: The Uphill History of Hispanic Assemblies of God Women inMinistry, 1915-1950,” AG Heritage Journal (Spring 2008).53. “Latinizing American Christianity: Pluralism, Pentecostalism, and the Future of AmericanCatholicism,” Conscience: The Journal of Catholic Opinion XXVIII / 2 (Summer 2007): 28-31.54. “’The Holy Ghost Is Here on Earth:’ The Latino Contributions to the Azusa Street Revival,”Enrichment Journal Vol. 11, No. 2 (Spring 2006): 118-126.“’El Espíritu Santo está aquí, en la tierra: Las contribuciones de los latinos alAvivamiento de la Calle Azusa” Gastón Espinosa, Enrichment (Spring 2006): 118125. Translation by the Jesse Miranda Center for Hispanic Leadership.

Gastón Espinosa, 655. “The Impact of Pluralism on Trends in Latin American and U.S. Latino Religions and Society,”Perspectivas Journal of the Hispanic Theological Initiative (Fall 2003): 9-55.56. “The Silent Pentecostals,” Christian History Vol. XVII, No. 2 (Fall 1999): 23-24.D.ENCYCLOPEDIA / DICTIONARY ARTICLES – 62 total (publications # 57 – 118)Encyclopedia of Environmental Ethics and Philosophy (2009) – 1 entryEncyclopedia of Hispanic American Religious Cultures, ed. Miguel de la Torre (2009) – 7 entriesEncyclopedia of Religious Revivalism in America, ed. Michael McClymond (2005) – 7 entriesThe Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America, ed. Keller & Ruether (2004) – 1 entryNew Int’l Dictionary of Pentecostal & Charismatic Movements, ed. Stanley Burgess (2002) –42Contemporary American Religion, ed. Wade Clark Roof (1999) – 4 entriesReligious Denominations, Movements, Institutes: Roman Catholic Evangelization in New Spain,Demographic Shifts in U.S. Latino Religions, Catholic Charismatic Movement, Catholic CharismaticRenewal, Charisma in Missions, Latino Protestant and Pentecostal Revivalism in North America,Pentecostalism, Hispanic Pentecostal Women, Latin American District Council of the Assemblies of God,Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, Victory Outreach International, Spanish-speaking BibleInstitutes, Congregation Mita, Apostolic Assembly of Faith in Jesus Christ, Apostolic Church ofFaith in Jesus Christ of Mexico, Assemblies of God of Mexico, Church of God in the Republic of Mexico,Interdenominational Christian Church (Mexico), Independent Evangelical Church (MIEPA) (Mexico).Religious Biographies: Oscar Romero, César Chávez Francisco Olazábal, Juan Lugo, FranciscoLlorente, Marilynn Kramar, Leoncia Rosado Rousseau, Roberto Fierro, A.C. Valdez, SonnyArguinzoni, Demetrio Bazán, Nellie Bazán, Francisca Blaisdell, Benjamin Cantú, Antonio CastañedaNava, Marcial de la Cruz, Robert Fierro, Edwin Paul Finkenbinder, Frank O. Finkenbinder, MiguelGuillén, Marilynn Kramar, Rosa and Abundio López, Jesse Miranda, Concepción Morgan Howard,Francisco Ortiz, Carlos Sepúlveda, Ricardo Tañon, Eldin Villafañe, Juanita García Peraza, Axel& Esther Andersson, Casáreo Buciaga, Romanita Carbajal Valenzuela, Modesto Escobedo, ManuelJesús Gaxiola, David Ruesga, Ana Sanders, Rodolfo Orozco, Aimee García Cortese.VIII. SCHOLARLY PRESENTATIONS, RESPONSES, INTERVIEWS – 163 total 4 confirmed in future1. Keynote, “Emerging Trends in American Religions,” National Conference on Ministry to the U.S.Armed Forces, Washington, D.C./Alexandria, VA, January 10, 2017.2. Presentation, “Religion & Politics in U.S. Presidential Election of 2016,” Linköping University, Linkoping,October 18, 2016.3. Presentation, “Understanding ISIS,” Linköping University, Linkoping, Sweden, October 18, 2016.4. Presentation, “Religion and the American Presidency,” Linköping University, Linkoping, Sweden,October 17, 2016.5. Presentation, “Recent Trends in World Christianity,” Johannelunds Theological College & Seminary,Uppsala, October 17, 2016.6. Presentation, “Understanding American Protestantism and Evangelicalism in American Society,” The PublicUnderstanding of Religion Session, American Academy of Religion, Atlanta, GA, November 20, 2016.7. Keynote, “Race, Religion and the 2016 Election,” Lecture for National Hispanic Heritage Month, Departmentof Politics, Princeton University, October 12, 2016.8. Presentation – “Religion, Race, and the 2016 Election,” Athenaeum, Claremont McKenna College, April 2016.9. Keynote Presentation, “Trends in U.S. Latino Religions and Politics,” Cluster on Excellence in Religion andPolitics, University of Münster, Münster, Germany, October 28, 2015.

Gastón Espinosa, 710. Keynote Presentation, “The Spiritual Impulse of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement,” Cluster onExcellence in Religion and Politics, University of Münster, Germany, October 27, 2015.11. Keynote Presentation, “Latinos and the Future of American Religion and Politics,” Cluster on Excellence inReligion and Politics, University of Münster, Germany, October 26, 2015.12. Keynote Presentation, “Latino Pentecostals in American Public Life: Faith & Politics in Action,” The JesseMiranda Center for Hispanic Leadership, La Puente, CA, September 21, 2015.8. Presentation, “Conflicting Visions of the English Reformation in the film Cromwell,” at Protestantism on Screen:Religion, Politics & Aesthetics Conference University of Halle-Wittenberg, Germany, May 22, 2015.9. Plenary Panel Discussant, “Latino Pentecostalism and Immigration Reform,” Society for Pentecostal Studies,Southeastern University, Lakeland, Florida, March 13, 2015.10. Presentation, “Trends, Diversity, and Developments in American Protestant Christianities,” AmericanAcademy of Religion, San Diego, November 21, 2014.11. Keynote, “Francisco Olazábal and Latino Pentecostal Leadership,” Latin American Council of ChristianChurches Conference, El Paso, Texas, August 30, 2014.12. Keynote, “Silent No More: Latino Assemblies of God History, Politics and Leadership in the U.S.” CentennialCelebration of the Southern Pacific District of the Assemblies of God, Garden Grove, August 28, 2014.13. Keynote P le na r y Presentation, “Religion, Politics, and Presidential Elections: Pentecostalism and Politics inthe USA,” Heidelberg University, Germany, February 2, 2013.14. Presentation, “Racial-Ethnic Demographic Shifts and the Future of American Religion and Politics,” SwedishTheological Institute, Jerusalem, Israel, January 30, 2013.15. Keynote Presentation, “Latinos, Religion and the 2008-2012 Presidential Elections,” John F. Kennedy Schoolof Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, December 5, 2012.16. Keynote Presentation, “Latinos and Electoral Politics,” Harvard University Divinity School, Dec. 5, 2012.17. Seminar Presentation, “Impact of Religion on the Modern Presidency,” St. Laurentii Foundation, UniversityLund, Sweden, December 2, 2012.18. Keynote Presentation, “Religion, Race, and the American Presidency,” Department of Theology, University ofLund, Sweden, December 2, 2012.19. Keynote Presentation, “Religion, Race, and the American Presidency, 2000-2012,” University of LinkopingStudent Foreign Policy Association, Sweden, November 28, 2012.20. Class presentation, “Osama bin Laden’s Religious Justification for Jihad against the U.S.,” University ofLinkoping, Department of Religious Studies, Sweden, November 28, 2012.21. Class Presentation, “The Israeli-Palestianian Muslim Conflict,” University of Linkoping, Sweden, Nov 28, 2012.22. Faculty Seminar, “Religion, Seculars, and the Reported Growth of No Religion in America,” University ofLinkoping, Department of Religious Studies, Sweden, November 28, 2012.23. Seminar, “Religion, Race, and the 2012 Presidential Election,” Swedish Parliament, Sweden, Nov. 27, 2012.24. Keynote Presentation, “Racial-Ethnic Demographic Shifts and the Future of American Religion and Politics,”Whittier College, CA, November 14, 2012.25. Keynote P r es e nt at io n , Tipple-Vosburgh Endowed Lecture Series in Faith, Race, & Politics "Racial EthnicDemographic Shifts & the Future of American Politics,” Drew University, NJ, Oct. 17, 2012.26. Keynote Presentation, “Religion and the Race to the White House,” University of Miami Forum on Religionand Public Life, University of Miami, FL October 8, 2012.27. Class Presentation, “Latinos, Religion and the 2008 Election,” University of Miami, FL, October 9, 2012.28. White House Briefing for Religion Scholars on Religion in Public Life, Washington D.C., May 11, 2012.29. Panelist, “Grants and Fellowships for Latino/a Graduate Students & Faculty,” f o r La Comunidad ofHispanic Scholars of Religion at the American Academy of Religion Conference, Nov. 2011.30. Panelist, Getting Published: Negotiating the Publishing World,” American Academy of ReligionCommittee on Racial & Ethnic Minorities, San Francisco, CA, November 20, 2011.31. “Trends in American Evangelicalism and Pentecostalism,” Public Understanding of Religion, American

Gastón Espinosa, 8Academy of Religion, San Francisco, CA, November 19, 2011.32. Religion Grant and Fellowship Panel and Workshop, La Comunidad of Hispanic Scholars of ReligionPanel Discussion, San Francisco, CA, November 19, 2011.33. Chaired and Ran La Comunidad of Hispanic Scholars of Religion (AAR & SBL) Elections. AmericanAcademy of Religion Conference, San Francisco, CA, November 19, 2011.34. Respondent: “Divino Campañero: Toward an Hispanic Pentecostal Christology,” HispanicTheological Initiative First Book Award Respondent, Princeton Seminary, NJ, June 25, 2011.35. “Righteousness and Justice”: Barack Obama, Pentecostals, and the 2008 Election,” InternationalSociety for Pentecostal Studies, Minneapolis, MN, March 6, 2010.36. Presentation, “Religion & Presidential Politics: The Faith Factor in Barack Obama’s 2008 ElectionCampaign,” Claremont Discourse-CUC Library, Claremont, Mar. 10, 2010.37. Radio Interview, “Counterintuitive Findings in Religion, Barack Obama, and the 2008Election,” for KSPC Pomona College Radio, 45-minute interview. November 2009.38. Presentation, “Latino Evangelicals, Barack Obama, and the 2008 Election,” American Academy ofReligion Conference, Montreal, Canada, November 7, 2009. I organized the panel on “BarackObama, Evangelicals, and the 2008 Election.”39 Keynote, “Barack Obama, Evangelicals, and the 2008 Presidential Election,” Linköping Universitet,Sweden, October 19, 2009.40. Presentation, “Religion, Barack Obama, and the 2008 Presidential Election,” Swedish Parliament,October 15, 2009. eynote, “Trends and Shifts in Latin American Pentecostalism,” Uppsala University,Uppsala, Sweden, October 16, 2009.41. Keynote, “The Pentecostalization of Latin American and U.S. Latino Christianity,” LinköpingUniversity, Sweden, October 14, 2009.42. Presentation, “Barack Obama, Religion, and the 2008 Election,” Centre d’etudes et de recherchesinternationals (CERI), Sciences Po, Paris, France, October 13, 2009.43. Keynote, “Selena and the Politics of Cultural Redemption,” University of Paris XII, Paris, France,October 12, 2009.44. Presentation, “Religion, Latinos, and the 2008 Election,” University of Paris VII, Paris, France,October 12, 2009.45. Panelist, European Pentecostal Charismatic Research Association Conference, Oxford Center for,Missio n S tu d ie s, Oxford, England, August 16, 2009.46. Commencement Celebration Address, “Brown Moses: Latino Pentecostal Charisma, Power, andHealing in the Borderlands,” Latin American Council of Christian Churches Teología Seminario,East Los Angeles, CA, May 16, 2009.47. Keynote, “Latino Religions and the 2008 Presidential Election: Catholics, Protestants, and PoliticalChange,” 18th Annual Hispanic Lecture in Religion and Theology, Drew University, April 16, 2009.48. Keynote, “Latinos and the 2008 Presidential Election,” Claremont Graduate University, Schoolof Politics and Economics, February 12, 2009, Claremont, CA.49. Keynote, “The Historical and Religious Significance Barack Obama’s Presidential Election,”Claremont Colleges, January 20, 2009.50. Respondent, “Pentecostalism and Prosperity: Changing Discourses,” American Academy ofReligion Conference, Chicago, IL, November 1, 2008.51. Panelist, “Ethics and the 2008 Presidential Election,” American Academy of Religion Conference,Chicago, IL, November 2, 2008.52. Conference Call with National Media, “Latino Religion, Immigration, and the 2008 Election,”

Gastón Espinosa, 9October 16, 2008. National Conference Call and report findings from the Latino Religions andPolitics National Survey (n 1,104) call with 34 media, including The New York Times, TheLos Angeles Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Miami Herald, the Mexican Embassy,Christianity Today, Politico, and La Opinion.53. Keynote, “Latino Religions, Politics, and the 2008 Presidential Election,” University ofPennsylvania, September 15, 2008.54. Interview, National Public Radio (NPR), “

Claremont McKenna College Princeton University, 2016-2017 . 83 Prospect Street 850 Columbia Avenue Bobst Hall, 005 Claremont, CA 91711-6420 Princeton, NJ 08542 gaston.espinosa@cmc.edu or 427r33@gmail.com I. HIGHER EDUCATION . History of Christianity - Courses on Early, Medieval, Reformation, Modern Christianity