Almost Citizens: Puerto Rico, the U.S. Constitution, and Empire

Author:   Sam Erman (University of Southern California)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781108415491


Pages:   290
Publication Date:   13 December 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Almost Citizens: Puerto Rico, the U.S. Constitution, and Empire


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Author:   Sam Erman (University of Southern California)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.70cm
Weight:   0.540kg
ISBN:  

9781108415491


ISBN 10:   1108415490
Pages:   290
Publication Date:   13 December 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Introduction; 1. 1898: 'The constitutional lion in the path'; 2. The Constitution and the new US expansion: debating the status of the Islands; 3. 'We are naturally Americans': Federico Degetau and Santiago Iglesias pursue citizenship; 4. 'American aliens': Isabel Gonzalez, Domingo Collazo, Federico Degetau, and the Supreme Court, 1902–1905; 5. Reconstructing Puerto Rico, 1904–1909; 6. The Jones Act and the long path to collective naturalization; Conclusion.

Reviews

Advance praise: 'More than a century after the United States announced its rise to world power by vanquishing Spain in the 'splendid little war' of 1898 and acquiring distant island possessions, the American colonial experiment in Puerto Rico endures as a test of the promise of American citizenship. Sam Erman reconstructs the first years of this experiment, exploring the understandings and misunderstandings that led Congress to grant citizenship and an elected legislature to the people of Puerto Rico in 1917. His deeply researched narrative sheds new light on how the destinies of the United States and its new colony became intertwined - a process that prefigured the continuing clamor for full and equal United States citizenship for the Puerto Ricans.' Jose A. Cabranes, United States Circuit Judge and author of Citizenship and the American Empire Advance praise: 'Erman's exploration of debates over the annexation and governance of Puerto Rico tells a powerful and long-overlooked story of constitutional transformation.' Christina Duffy Ponsa-Kraus, author of Foreign in a Domestic Sense Advance praise: 'Erman tells the story of Puerto Rico and the invention of a new constitutional category - 'unincorporated territories' - in a compelling narrative that interweaves politics, constitutional controversy, and the lives of Puerto Rican activists.' John Witt, Yale University, Connecticut Advance praise: 'Sam Erman's superb book illuminates the political and constitutional origins of the world's largest colony, Puerto Rico. His deep research and lively writing provide a ready, and altogether chastening, explanation for the fact that, a full century after the Jones Act awarded citizenship to all Puerto Ricans, all too many mainlanders, including the President, scarcely credit the reality that the island and its beleaguered citizens are truly part of a united American community with equal entitlement to our solicitude.' Sanford Levinson, author of An Argument Open to All: Reading 'The Federalist' in the 21st Century Advance praise: 'More than a century after the United States announced its rise to world power by vanquishing Spain in the `splendid little war' of 1898 and acquiring distant island possessions, the American colonial experiment in Puerto Rico endures as a test of the promise of American citizenship. Sam Erman reconstructs the first years of this experiment, exploring the understandings and misunderstandings that led Congress to grant citizenship and an elected legislature to the people of Puerto Rico in 1917. His deeply researched narrative sheds new light on how the destinies of the United States and its new colony became intertwined - a process that prefigured the continuing clamor for full and equal United States citizenship for the Puerto Ricans.' Jose A. Cabranes, United States Circuit Judge and author of Citizenship and the American Empire Advance praise: 'Erman's exploration of debates over the annexation and governance of Puerto Rico tells a powerful and long-overlooked story of constitutional transformation.' Christina Duffy Ponsa-Kraus, author of Foreign in a Domestic Sense Advance praise: 'Erman tells the story of Puerto Rico and the invention of a new constitutional category - `unincorporated territories' - in a compelling narrative that interweaves politics, constitutional controversy, and the lives of Puerto Rican activists.' John Witt, Yale University, Connecticut Advance praise: 'Sam Erman's superb book illuminates the political and constitutional origins of the world's largest colony, Puerto Rico. His deep research and lively writing provide a ready, and altogether chastening, explanation for the fact that, a full century after the Jones Act awarded citizenship to all Puerto Ricans, all too many mainlanders, including the President, scarcely credit the reality that the island and its beleaguered citizens are truly part of a united American community with equal entitlement to our solicitude.' Sanford Levinson, author of An Argument Open to All: Reading 'The Federalist' in the 21st Century


Advance praise: 'More than a century after the United States announced its rise to world power by vanquishing Spain in the 'splendid little war' of 1898 and acquiring distant island possessions, the American colonial experiment in Puerto Rico endures as a test of the promise of American citizenship. Sam Erman reconstructs the first years of this experiment, exploring the understandings and misunderstandings that led Congress to grant citizenship and an elected legislature to the people of Puerto Rico in 1917. His deeply researched narrative sheds new light on how the destinies of the United States and its new colony became intertwined - a process that prefigured the continuing clamor for full and equal United States citizenship for the Puerto Ricans.' Jose A. Cabranes, United States Circuit Judge and author of Citizenship and the American Empire Advance praise: 'Erman's exploration of debates over the annexation and governance of Puerto Rico tells a powerful and long-overlooked story of constitutional transformation.' Christina Duffy Ponsa-Kraus, author of Foreign in a Domestic Sense Advance praise: 'Erman tells the story of Puerto Rico and the invention of a new constitutional category - 'unincorporated territories' - in a compelling narrative that interweaves politics, constitutional controversy, and the lives of Puerto Rican activists.' John Witt, Yale University, Connecticut Advance praise: 'Sam Erman's superb book illuminates the political and constitutional origins of the world's largest colony, Puerto Rico. His deep research and lively writing provide a ready, and altogether chastening, explanation for the fact that, a full century after the Jones Act awarded citizenship to all Puerto Ricans, all too many mainlanders, including the President, scarcely credit the reality that the island and its beleaguered citizens are truly part of a united American community with equal entitlement to our solicitude.' Sanford Levinson, author of An Argument Open to All: Reading 'The Federalist' in the 21st Century 'More than a century after the United States announced its rise to world power by vanquishing Spain in the `splendid little war' of 1898 and acquiring distant island possessions, the American colonial experiment in Puerto Rico endures as a test of the promise of American citizenship. Sam Erman reconstructs the first years of this experiment, exploring the understandings and misunderstandings that led Congress to grant citizenship and an elected legislature to the people of Puerto Rico in 1917. His deeply researched narrative sheds new light on how the destinies of the United States and its new colony became intertwined - a process that prefigured the continuing clamor for full and equal United States citizenship for the Puerto Ricans.' Jose A. Cabranes, United States Circuit Judge and author of Citizenship and the American Empire 'Erman's exploration of debates over the annexation and governance of Puerto Rico tells a powerful and long-overlooked story of constitutional transformation.' Christina Duffy Ponsa-Kraus, author of Foreign in a Domestic Sense 'Erman tells the story of Puerto Rico and the invention of a new constitutional category - `unincorporated territories' - in a compelling narrative that interweaves politics, constitutional controversy, and the lives of Puerto Rican activists.' John Witt, Yale University, Connecticut 'Sam Erman's superb book illuminates the political and constitutional origins of the world's largest colony, Puerto Rico. His deep research and lively writing provide a ready, and altogether chastening, explanation for the fact that, a full century after the Jones Act awarded citizenship to all Puerto Ricans, all too many mainlanders, including the President, scarcely credit the reality that the island and its beleaguered citizens are truly part of a united American community with equal entitlement to our solicitude.' Sanford Levinson, author of An Argument Open to All: Reading 'The Federalist' in the 21st Century


Author Information

Sam Erman is Associate Professor at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law.

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