Puerto Rican New Yorkers: Workers, Unions and
Politics in the Struggle for a Better Life, 1910s-1960s

The research presented in these blog entries represents an advance on various books that I have been working on for the last decade. When I embarked on this project on the history of Puerto Ricans in New York as workers I knew that a traditional labor history approach would not suffice. But I did not understand how the stories and “data points” I encountered would become so rich and complex, requiring many different skills and questions ranging from urban, cultural, social, economic, political and migration history. I also learned how many pieces of the history of our community remained poorly understood even though hundreds of research reports, theses and other pieces of work had accumulated over the years. More...


Puerto Rican Labor

When the Depression began in October 1929 few programs were in place to assist the...
Puerto Ricans organized through the International Workers Order, the community’s largest...
The Depression unleashed a torrent of working class organizing and protest in New York...
For a few years, the Communist Party had led and supported a parallel union movement. In...
Hand-rolled cigars continued to be produced in New York during the 1930s in a small...

Puerto Rican Labor

Aldo Lauria Santiago

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Resources by the Author

Books
To Rise in Darkness
Landscapes of Struggle
Una República Agraria
An Agrarian Republic
Identity and Struggle at the Margins of the Nation-State
The Social-Historical Construction of Repression in El Salvador

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