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Almost citizens : Puerto Rico, the U.S. Constitution, and empire

Title
Almost citizens : Puerto Rico, the U.S. Constitution, and empire / Sam Erman, University of Southern California.
ISBN
9781108415491
1108415490
9781108246453
9781108401494
110840149X
Publication
Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA : Cambridge University Press, 2019.
Copyright Notice Date
©2019.
Physical Description
xv, 275 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Notes
Based on author's thesis (doctoral - University of Michigan, 2010), issued under title: Puerto Rico and the Promise of United States Citizenship : Struggles around Status in a New Empire, 1898-1917.
Summary
"This book tells the story of "almost citizens"-the people of Puerto Rico who were deemed neither citizens nor aliens, and who lived in a land deemed neither foreign nor domestic. For them, citizenship functioned like terrain during war. It was a prize to be won and a field of battle, whose strategic value shifted as the fight developed. This book follows the debates about the U.S. Constitution that swirled about them. It tends to the voices of federal judges and elected officials, but also follows Puerto Rican politicians, labor organizers, litigants, lawyers, administrators of government agencies, and journalists in Puerto Rico and on the mainland. People in all of these groups had a view of what citizenship should look like, and the idea of citizenship took shape and changed only as they advanced their sometimes competing concepts in media, law, and bureaucratic maneuvers. The story begins at the very end of the nineteenth century as annexation of the islands that comprise Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Guam, American Samoa, and the Philippines was bringing millions of people of African, Asian, and indigenous Pacific Island descent under U.S. control. Would these people become U.S. citizens and, if so, what would that citizenship mean? Citizenship at this time did not always or automatically guarantee full rights to participate in public life. Though women were undoubtedly citizens, only four states accorded them suffrage on an equal basis with men. Southern states were driving African American citizens from the ballot box and the public sphere. Among many other examples, Mexican American and Chinese American children were often required to attend segregated schools. Most of those whose rights were thus constrained were nonetheless deemed "Americans"-- Provided by publisher.
Other formats
ebook version :
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
April 30, 2019
Series
Studies in legal history.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 162-265) and index.
Contents
Introduction
1898 : "The constitutional lion in the path"
The Constitution and the new U.S. expansion : debating the status of the Islands
"We are naturally Americans" : Federico Degetau and Santiago Iglesias pursue citizenship
"American aliens" : Isabel Gonzalez, Domingo Collazo, Federico Degetau, and the Supreme Court, 1902-1905
Reconstructing Puerto Rico, 1904-1909
The Jones Act and the long path to collective naturalization
Conclusion.
Citation

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