This dissertation explores the relationship between race and democratization. Through the examination of the case of the Dominican Republic, this study challenges mainstream explanations of democratic transitions. At its core, this dissertation aims at calling attention to the absence of race and ethnic allegiances as explanatory variables of the democratic processes and debates in the region. By focusing on structural variables, the analysis shies away from elite and actor-centered explanations that fall short in predicting the developments and outcomes of transitions. The central research questions of this study are: Why is there an absence of the treatment of race and ethnic allegiances during the democratic transitions in Latin America ...
This dissertation’s principal objective is to examine the relationship between race and national bel...
This independent study examines the different American perceptions of Dominican race during three im...
The definitive version was published in Latin American Politics and Society, 53 (1): 1-32. www.wiley...
This dissertation explores the relationship between race and democratization. Through the examinatio...
This dissertation explores the relationship between race and democratization. Through the examinatio...
The spread of democracy is one of the most important and impressive occurrences in Latin American po...
This thesis analyses the importance of race for the construction of nation and ethnicity in the Domi...
The first step to solving any problem is admitting you have one. The Dominican government is in deni...
In 2013, new Dominican legislation left approximately a quarter-million Haitians and Dominicans of H...
The demise of authoritarian military regimes throughout Latin America has generated significant inte...
The goal for the research in this dissertation is to shed light on race construction and its connect...
My dissertation is titled "Ethnogenesis, Identity, and the Dominican Republic, 1844-Present." The to...
The article discusses race, racism, and self-concept in the Dominican Republic. It explains the reas...
In the Dominican Republic, a 2013 Constitutional Tribunal ruling retroactively revoked the citizensh...
In 2013, the Dominican Republic’s highest court ruled to revoke birthright citizenship for over 200,...
This dissertation’s principal objective is to examine the relationship between race and national bel...
This independent study examines the different American perceptions of Dominican race during three im...
The definitive version was published in Latin American Politics and Society, 53 (1): 1-32. www.wiley...
This dissertation explores the relationship between race and democratization. Through the examinatio...
This dissertation explores the relationship between race and democratization. Through the examinatio...
The spread of democracy is one of the most important and impressive occurrences in Latin American po...
This thesis analyses the importance of race for the construction of nation and ethnicity in the Domi...
The first step to solving any problem is admitting you have one. The Dominican government is in deni...
In 2013, new Dominican legislation left approximately a quarter-million Haitians and Dominicans of H...
The demise of authoritarian military regimes throughout Latin America has generated significant inte...
The goal for the research in this dissertation is to shed light on race construction and its connect...
My dissertation is titled "Ethnogenesis, Identity, and the Dominican Republic, 1844-Present." The to...
The article discusses race, racism, and self-concept in the Dominican Republic. It explains the reas...
In the Dominican Republic, a 2013 Constitutional Tribunal ruling retroactively revoked the citizensh...
In 2013, the Dominican Republic’s highest court ruled to revoke birthright citizenship for over 200,...
This dissertation’s principal objective is to examine the relationship between race and national bel...
This independent study examines the different American perceptions of Dominican race during three im...
The definitive version was published in Latin American Politics and Society, 53 (1): 1-32. www.wiley...