The Development of a Graduate Social Anthropology Program in an Systematization Environment: The Social Anthropology Program, at the Iberoamericana University, Mexico City
With the luhmannian model this paper analyses the history of a graduate program in a Mexican Jesuit university. It considers universities as modern organizations interrelated within and outside systems, such as university programs, the State, financial centres and the Company of Jesus. These relationships engender conflict between the different social actors involved in the process: academicians, students, managers and patrons. In such a process actors confront themselves and settle differences so as to reproduce the organization.
Keywords:
University, Organization, Systematization, Mexico, Graduate Program
Author Biography
Marisol Pérez Lizaur, Universidad Iberoamericana
Departamento de Ciencias Sociales y Políticas, Universidad Iberoamericana, México
Pérez Lizaur, M. (2013). The Development of a Graduate Social Anthropology Program in an Systematization Environment: The Social Anthropology Program, at the Iberoamericana University, Mexico City. MAD, (29), 35–47. Retrieved from https://revistamad.uchile.cl/index.php/RMAD/article/view/27344