UAM Azcapotzalco

UAM Azcapotzalco is one of the five campi of the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana system, the second best ranked Mexican public university for the year 2018, according to Times Higher Education[1]. This campus is in the northern area of Mexico City, in the borough of Azcapotzalco. It is one of the three campi built shortly after Mexican President Luis Echeverría decreed the foundation of Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana in 1974.

Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Azcapotzalco
Motto"Casa Abierta al Tiempo"
TypePublic federal
EstablishedNovember 11, 1974
PresidentDr. Eduardo Peñalosa Castro
RectorDr. Óscar Lozano Carrillo
Students15,475 (2016)
Undergraduates14,923 (2016)
Postgraduates552 (2016)
Location
19°30′11″N 99°11′13″W
ColorsRed     
NicknameUAM-A
MascotPanteras Negras (Black Panthers)
Websitewww.azc.uam.mx

History

The creation of Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana was a response to the increasing demand for public higher education in the metropolitan area of Mexico City, which by those years was undergoing severe demographic changes due to a process of conurbation that started in the early 1940s. The main idea was to cope with the demand for this service throughout the outskirts of the metropolitan area, locating the university's campi in the outlying boroughs. Following this principle, UAM Azcapotzalco was one of the first three campi built between 1974 and 1975, along with UAM Xochimilco and UAM Iztapalapa.

Undergraduate studies

UAM Azcapotzalco hosts 17 majors, lasting between 12 and 15 quarter-terms or four and five years respectively. These programs are organized in three academic divisions as follows:

Basic Sciences and Engineering Division

  • Environmental Engineering
  • Civil Engineering
  • Computer Engineering
  • Electrical Engineering
  • Electronics Engineering
  • Engineering Physics
  • Industrial Engineering
  • Mechanical Engineering
  • Metallurgic Engineering
  • Chemical Engineering

Social Sciences and Humanities Division

Design Sciences and Arts Division

Graduate studies

As of 2017, UAM Azcapotzalco offers 22 graduate programs.[2] They are divided as follows:

Basic Sciences and Engineering Division

  • MSc in Computer Science
  • Graduate Studies in Science and Engineering: Specialization, MSc and PhD with Environmental or Materials sciences applications
  • MSc/PhD in Structural Engineering
  • MSc/PhD in Process Engineering
  • MSc/PhD in Optimization

Social Sciences and Humanities Division

  • Specialization in Mexican Literature of the 20th century
  • Specialization in Higher Education Sociology
  • MA in Law
  • MSc in Economics
  • MA in Contemporary Mexican Literature
  • MSc in Metropolitan Planning and Policies
  • Graduate Studies in Historiography: Specialization, MA and PhD
  • MSc/PhD in Economic Sciences
  • MA/PhD in Sociology
  • Graduate Studies in Historiography
  • Graduate Studies in Managerial Sciences

Design Sciences and Arts Division

  • Graduate Studies in Ecological Design
  • Graduate Studies in Urbanism
  • Graduate Studies in Product Design and Development
  • Graduate Studies in Information Design and Visualization
  • Graduate Studies in Landscape Design, Planning and Conservation
  • Graduate Studies in Rehabilitation, Restoration and Conservation of Tangible Heritage

Notable people

Faculty

  • Celso Garrido Noguera, founding member of CLACSO's (Latin American Council of Social Sciences) "Entrepreneurs and State in Latin America" project and CEPAL collaborator[3]
  • Edmundo Jacobo Molina, executive secretariat for Electoral Federal Institute (IFE) since 2008
  • Rosa Albina Garavito Elías, Mexican politician
  • Lucia Tomasini Bassols, notable translator and foreign language teaching specialist

Alumni

  • Rafael Tovar y de Teresa, Mexican diplomat, lawyer and historian. Served as Ambassador of Mexico in Italy from 2001 to 2007[4], was president of CONACULTA from 1992 to 2000, and Secretariat of Culture from 2015 to 2016.
  • Pablo Moctezuma Barragán, Mexican politician, writer and scholar
  • Francisco Alfonso Durazo Montaño, spokesperson for Mexican President Vicente Fox Quesada
  • Jesús Humberto Ramos Rosario, The Spectacular Spider-Man illustrator
  • Arturo Sánchez Gutiérrez, Mexican sociologist and current counselor of the Electoral Federal Institute (2003- )

References

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