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Martin Guevara Urbina : ウィキペディア英語版 | Martin Guevara Urbina
Martin Guevara Urbina (1972) is a Mexican-born American author, writer, researcher, professor, and speaker who, as a sociologist and criminologist, works on Latina and Latino issues in the United States.〔(Martin Guevara Urbina ), Rio Grande College.〕〔(Youtube Video ), Youtube Video.〕 ==Biography== Urbina was born (February 25, 1972) in San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico to Felipa Guevara and Salvador Urbina. At the age of seven, he was taken to the United States, spending his childhood in various places in Texas before settling in Ozona, Texas in 1982.〔"New CJ faculty member: When dreams become realty."〕〔(Western Michigan University News ), News.〕 In 1980, he entered the first grade in Carta Valley, Texas, moving to Ozona, Texas in 1982, during his fourth grade year; he later attended the Rocksprings, Texas High School, and eventually graduated from Ozona High School in 1991.〔(Martin Guevara ), Rio Grande College.〕〔"New CJ faculty member: When dreams become realty."〕 He then attended Western Texas College in Snyder, Texas, transferring in 1993 to Sul Ross State University in Alpine, Texas, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1995. While at Sul Ross he studied under Felipe de Ortego y Gasca, considered the principal scholar of the Chicano Renaissance and founder of Chicano literary history with his book ''Backgrounds of Mexican American Literature'' (1971).〔Urbina, Martin Guevara (2003). “Good Teachers Never Die.” ''Hispanic Outlook in Higher Education'', 13: 31-32.〕 Influenced by Ortego, he pursued graduate studies at New Mexico State University, where he graduated with a Master’s degree (M.C.J.) in 1997.〔 At New Mexico, he started researching the sociological elements of the U.S. judicial system. In the summer of 1997, he began further graduate work at Western Michigan University, graduating with a Ph.D. in sociology in 2000. At Western Michigan, he began to examine the implications, utility, and significance of various social issues in research and publication, especially in the areas of race and ethnic relations, capital punishment, law and society, and social justice. While at Western Michigan, he began formulating his theory on the scope and nature of the death penalty, “the four-threat theory of death sentence outcomes,” as published in his first book, ''Capital Punishment and Latino Offenders: Racial and Ethnic Differences in Death Sentences'' (2003).
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