Latinos are a large and growing population in the United States, which has prompted race and immigration scholars to theorize about Latinos’ chances at integration as well as their place in the U.S. racial hierarchy. Several researchers have argued that Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, and other Latinos are reshaping or changing how race is understood in the country by rejecting common understandings of race in the U.S. I argue that by focusing on racial self-identification rather than on racial beliefs, these claims oversell the ability of Latinos to affect the U.S. racial hierarchy. Instead, I examine Latinos’ racial ideologies, which may be more indicative of a group’s impact on racial stratification, and how these ideologies are shaped by col...
The question of race and racial identity among Puerto Ricans has been one of great confusion and mis...
Scholarly work and media coverage both point to the negative effect that the rhetoric and policy of ...
As a group comprised of mostly immigrants and their descendants, Latinos’ eventual “assimilation” an...
Latinos are a large and growing population in the United States, which has prompted race and immigra...
Latinos are a large and growing population in the United States, which has prompted race and immigra...
Conversations in the United States around Latinx populations often discuss Latinx racial identity as...
Latinxs have increasingly settled in both traditional migrant destinations and emerging destinations...
Recentstudies haveexaminedthe implications ofexposure to u.s. race relations for the racial and ethn...
This dissertation investigates how colonialism, citizenship, migration, and racialization intersect ...
The dissertation develops our theorizing about the dynamics of racialization, and the role of race a...
Puerto Ricans are racially characterized by a mix of three races (Spaniard, Taíno, and African). In ...
The Spanish first colonized Puerto Rico in the 16th century. The implementation of slavery shaped cu...
This dissertation examines the consequences of race on birth outcomes for Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, a...
Race, class and identity -- key ethnic issues of the 1980s -- have been analyzed from various discip...
The “ethnic competition model” (Bonacich 1972; Cunningham and Phillips 2007; Medrano 1994, Olzak 198...
The question of race and racial identity among Puerto Ricans has been one of great confusion and mis...
Scholarly work and media coverage both point to the negative effect that the rhetoric and policy of ...
As a group comprised of mostly immigrants and their descendants, Latinos’ eventual “assimilation” an...
Latinos are a large and growing population in the United States, which has prompted race and immigra...
Latinos are a large and growing population in the United States, which has prompted race and immigra...
Conversations in the United States around Latinx populations often discuss Latinx racial identity as...
Latinxs have increasingly settled in both traditional migrant destinations and emerging destinations...
Recentstudies haveexaminedthe implications ofexposure to u.s. race relations for the racial and ethn...
This dissertation investigates how colonialism, citizenship, migration, and racialization intersect ...
The dissertation develops our theorizing about the dynamics of racialization, and the role of race a...
Puerto Ricans are racially characterized by a mix of three races (Spaniard, Taíno, and African). In ...
The Spanish first colonized Puerto Rico in the 16th century. The implementation of slavery shaped cu...
This dissertation examines the consequences of race on birth outcomes for Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, a...
Race, class and identity -- key ethnic issues of the 1980s -- have been analyzed from various discip...
The “ethnic competition model” (Bonacich 1972; Cunningham and Phillips 2007; Medrano 1994, Olzak 198...
The question of race and racial identity among Puerto Ricans has been one of great confusion and mis...
Scholarly work and media coverage both point to the negative effect that the rhetoric and policy of ...
As a group comprised of mostly immigrants and their descendants, Latinos’ eventual “assimilation” an...