Puerto Rico\u27s Commonwealth status is surrounded with much controversy. Some contend that the island is still an American colony, others argue that this is not the case. It was during the Truman administration that that peculiar political formula was adopted. This dissertation analyzes its establishment in 1952. Chapter I and II study United States\u27 colonial policy in the post-war years, and United States-Puerto Rico relations from 1898 (when the island became an American possession) until 1945. Chapter III analyzes the factors that precipitated the need to search for a solution to Puerto Rico\u27s colonial condition after 1945, the different alternatives advocated, the difficulties for implementing them, and why the Commonwealth was f...
Because Puerto Rico is not systematically consulted on issues central to its development and because...
Surendra Bhana (1939–2016) was professor of history at the University of Durban-Westville and profes...
The Peculiar Status of Puerto Rico: Neither a State, nor an Independent Nation is a study of the cr...
Puerto Rico\u27s Commonwealth status is surrounded with much controversy. Some contend that the isla...
This study traces the evolution of political status in Puerto Rico from 1936 to 1968, with special e...
This thesis attempts to understand Puerto Rico’s colonial relationship to the United States as obscu...
This study traces the evolution of political status in Puerto Rico from 1936 to 1968, with special e...
This study traces the evolution of political status in Puerto Rico from 1936 to 1968, with special e...
The purpose of this paper is to explore the political and military considerations that provided the ...
The intention of this paper is to establish why the political status of Puerto Rico is an internatio...
This study examines Puerto Rico’s role as a “bridge between the Americas” from the War of 1898 to th...
The authors analyze the socioeconomic costs and benefits of "free associated statehood" in Puerto Ri...
Almost four decades after the U.S. government announced to the United nations that Puerto Rico had c...
In the first decades of the twentieth century, Puerto Ricans became United States citizens while als...
Because Puerto Rico is not systematically consulted on issues central to its development and because...
Because Puerto Rico is not systematically consulted on issues central to its development and because...
Surendra Bhana (1939–2016) was professor of history at the University of Durban-Westville and profes...
The Peculiar Status of Puerto Rico: Neither a State, nor an Independent Nation is a study of the cr...
Puerto Rico\u27s Commonwealth status is surrounded with much controversy. Some contend that the isla...
This study traces the evolution of political status in Puerto Rico from 1936 to 1968, with special e...
This thesis attempts to understand Puerto Rico’s colonial relationship to the United States as obscu...
This study traces the evolution of political status in Puerto Rico from 1936 to 1968, with special e...
This study traces the evolution of political status in Puerto Rico from 1936 to 1968, with special e...
The purpose of this paper is to explore the political and military considerations that provided the ...
The intention of this paper is to establish why the political status of Puerto Rico is an internatio...
This study examines Puerto Rico’s role as a “bridge between the Americas” from the War of 1898 to th...
The authors analyze the socioeconomic costs and benefits of "free associated statehood" in Puerto Ri...
Almost four decades after the U.S. government announced to the United nations that Puerto Rico had c...
In the first decades of the twentieth century, Puerto Ricans became United States citizens while als...
Because Puerto Rico is not systematically consulted on issues central to its development and because...
Because Puerto Rico is not systematically consulted on issues central to its development and because...
Surendra Bhana (1939–2016) was professor of history at the University of Durban-Westville and profes...
The Peculiar Status of Puerto Rico: Neither a State, nor an Independent Nation is a study of the cr...