"Drawing on his tireless archival investigation, Robert H. Jackson details the stories of both nonsedentary and sedentary native peoples of the colonial frontier. He narrates this history with great respect for the agencies of all parties - native and missionary alike - a respect that sets his perspective apart from those of many previous authors. Historians will be struck by the diligence and care Jackson has exercised in analyzing the demographic data he uses to reconstruct the lives that were led in these missions. Frontiers of Evangelization should find ready acceptance in history classrooms and in the developing historical discourse about native history." - Richard R. Warner Jr., Associate Professor of History, Wabash College
"Few historians can claim Robert H. Jackson's breadth of experience in researching mission environments throughout Spanish America. Frontiers of Evangelization puts this experience to work in a comparative study of missionary aims, indigenous lives, and demographic change from the lowlands of Bolivia to Northern Mexico." - Sean F. McEnroe, author of From Colony to Nationhood in Mexico: Laying the Foundations, 1560-1840