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Changing Forms of U.S. Hegemony in Puerto Rico: The Impact on the Family and Sexuality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 April 2010

Extract

It has been over a hundred years since the U.S. took control of Puerto Rico. In that time, the way in which the U.S. perceived Puerto Rico has changed from a colony requiring Americanisation to, in the 1950s, its showcase of democracy in the Caribbean, to today, an island that still retains geopolitical importance for the U.S., but represents an increasing economic burden. The failure of Operation Bootstrap, as the Puerto Rican industrialization program was known, resulted in permanent large-scale unemployment, with a population dependent on federal transfers for a living, and a constant source of migration to the mainland, where over half of Puerto Ricans now live. I shall trace the outline of these three stages in U.S. hegemony over Puerto Rico, and argue that throughout the U.S. Congress was reluctant to fully incorporate Puerto Rico, because its population was deemed racially and socially inferior to that of the mainland. Though the removal of Spain from Puerto Rico, Cuba and the Philippines was considered part of the its ‘manifest destiny’, the United States never intended to incorporate these people so different from the U.S. as part of the American nation, as was done with its earlier acquisitions in Texas, Alaska or even Hawaii.

Type
Conference: ‘Costs and Benefits of Independence in the Caribbean’
Copyright
Copyright © Research Institute for History, Leiden University 2001

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References

Notes

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39 Ibid., 15.

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41 Ibid., 299.

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44 Ibid., chapter 5.

45 Ibid., 94

46 Since the 1980 study was conducted outside the San Juan Metropolitan Area and half the sample lived in rural towns, this would also have made marriage and reproductive patterns more conservative. Female heads of household whose consensual unions have dissolved usually list themseles as ‘separated’, not single.

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57 Rivera-Batiz and Santiago, Island Paradox, 127.

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60 Colón, ‘Reestructuración industrial’, 135–188.

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66 For a full comparison, see my book, The Myth of the Male Breadwinner.

67 Safa, The Myth of the Male Breadwinner, and from the same author: ‘Female-Headed Households’, and: ‘Women Coping with Crisis: Social Consequences of Export-Led Industrialization in the Dominican Republic’ (Agenda paper, Miami 1999) 36. (In press in revised form as ‘Questioning Globalization: Gender and Export Processing in the Dominican Republic’ in special issue edited by Cecilia Menjivar, Journal of Developing Areas (Macomb 2002.)

68 Safa, ‘Female-Headed Households’.

69 Gainesville Sun, 21 February 2001.

70 Hernandez-Angueira, Mujeres Puertorriqueñas.

71 Safa, ‘Female-Headed Households’.

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76 Duany, ‘Nation on the Move’, 5–30.