Stateside Puerto Ricans

A Stateside Puerto Rican,[2][3] also ambiguously Puerto Rican American (Spanish: puertorriqueño-americano,[4][5] puertorriqueño-estadounidense),[6][7] or Puerto Ricans in the United States is a term for residents in the continental United States and Hawaii who were born in or trace family ancestry to the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico.[8][9]

Stateside Puerto Ricans
Total population
5,791,453[1]
1.77% of the U.S. population (2018)[1]
Regions with significant populations
The Northeast (particularly New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Massachusetts), Florida, the Midwest (particularly Chicago, Cleveland, and Milwaukee), Georgia and smaller numbers in many other areas throughout the United States
Languages
Spanish and English
Religion
majority Roman Catholic and Protestant, minority African diasporic religions
Related ethnic groups
Criollos, Mestizos, Mulattos, Taíno, Europeans, Africans

Puerto Ricans who were born in Puerto Rico are US citizens[lower-alpha 1] as if they were born in the United States proper. Consequently, using the term "Puerto Rican American" only for those living in a U.S. state or incorporated territory is inaccurate and misleading.

At 9.7% of the Latino population in the United States, Puerto Ricans are the second-largest Latino group nationwide, after Mexican Americans and are 1.77% of the entire population of the United States.[1][10]

Although the 2010 Census counted the number of Puerto Ricans living in the States at 4.6 million, estimates in 2018 show the Puerto Rican population to be 5.8 million.[1][11][12]

Despite newer migration trends, New York City continues to be home by a significant margin to the largest demographic and cultural center for Puerto Ricans in the United States, with Philadelphia having the second-largest community. The portmanteau "Nuyorican" refers to Puerto Ricans and their descendants in the New York City metropolitan area. A large portion of the Puerto Rican population in the United States resides in the Northeast and Florida,[13] with Holyoke, Massachusetts and Buenaventura Lakes, Florida having the highest percentages of Puerto Rican residents of any municipalities in the country. There are also significant Puerto Rican populations in the Chicago metropolitan area and the South Atlantic states, from Maryland to Georgia and other states like Ohio, Texas and California.

Identity

Teatro Puerto Rico (1950s) in the South Bronx, New York City.

Puerto Ricans have been migrating to the United States since the 19th century and migrating since 1898 (after the island territory was transferred from Spain to the United States) and have a long history of collective social advocacy for their political and social rights and preserving their cultural heritage. In New York City, which has the largest concentration of Puerto Ricans in the United States, they began running for elective office in the 1920s, electing one of their own to the New York State Assembly for the first time in 1937.[14]

Important Puerto Rican institutions have emerged from this long history.[15] ASPIRA was established in New York City in 1961 and is now one of the largest national Latino nonprofit organizations in the United States.[16] There is also the National Puerto Rican Coalition in Washington, DC, the National Puerto Rican Forum, the Puerto Rican Family Institute, Boricua College, the Center for Puerto Rican Studies of the City University of New York at Hunter College, the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, the National Conference of Puerto Rican Women and the New York League of Puerto Rican Women, Inc., among others.

Ricky Martin at the annual Puerto Rican parade in Manhattan.

The government of Puerto Rico has a long history of involvement with the stateside Puerto Rican community.[17] In July 1930, Puerto Rico's Department of Labor established an employment service in New York City.[18] The Migration Division (known as the "Commonwealth Office"), also part of Puerto Rico's Department of Labor, was created in 1948, and by the end of the 1950s, was operating in 115 cities and towns stateside.[19]

The strength of stateside Puerto Rican identity is fueled by a number of factors. These include the large circular migration between the island and the mainland United States, a long tradition of the government of Puerto Rico promoting its ties to those stateside, the continuing existence of racial-ethnic prejudice and discrimination in the United States, and high residential and school segregation.[20][21][22] Notable attributes that set the stateside Puerto Rican population apart from the rest of the US Hispanic community, is facts such as, Puerto Ricans have the highest military enrollment rates compared to other Hispanics, Puerto Ricans are more likely to be proficient in English than any other Hispanic/Latino group, and Puerto Ricans are also more likely to intermarry other ethnic groups, and far more likely to intermarry or reproduce specifically with blacks than any other Hispanic/Latino group, especially African American males with Puerto Rican females.[23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31]

Migration history

Since 1898, Puerto Rico has been under the control of the United States, fueling migratory patterns between the mainland and the island. Even during Spanish rule, Puerto Ricans settled in the US. However, it was not until the end of the Spanish–American War in 1898 that a significant influx of Puerto Rican workers to the US began. With its 1898 victory, the United States acquired Puerto Rico from Spain and has retained sovereignty since. The 1917 Jones–Shafroth Act made all Puerto Ricans US citizens, freeing them from immigration barriers. The massive migration of Puerto Ricans to the mainland United States was largest in the early and late 20th century,[32] prior to its resurgence in the early 21st century.

U.S. political and economic interventions in Puerto Rico created the conditions for emigration, "by concentrating wealth in the hands of US corporations and displacing workers."[33] Policymakers "promoted colonization plans and contract labor programs to reduce the population. U.S. employers, often with government support, recruited Puerto Ricans as a source of low-wage labor to the United States and other destinations." [34]

Puerto Ricans migrated in search of higher-wage jobs, first to New York City, and later to other cities such as Chicago, Philadelphia and Boston.[35] However, in more recent years, there has been a significant resurgence in migration from Puerto Rico to New York and New Jersey, with an apparently multifactorial allure to Puerto Ricans, primarily for economic and cultural considerations;[36][37] with the Puerto Rican population of the New York City Metropolitan Area increasing from 1,177,430 in 2010 to a Census-estimated 1,494,670 in 2016,[38] maintaining its status as the largest metropolitan concentration and cultural center for Puerto Rican Americans by a significant margin on Continental America. The absolute increase in the size of the Puerto Rican population of the New York metropolitan area between 2010 and 2016 roughly approximates the total Puerto Rican population of the Orlando Metropolitan Area, which enumerated over 320,000 in 2013. The Puerto Rican populations of the Orlando and Philadelphia metropolitan areas approximate each other in following a distant second and third only to the New York metropolitan area in size.

New York City neighborhoods such as East Harlem in Upper Manhattan, the South Bronx and Bushwick in Brooklyn are often the most associated with the stateside Puerto Rican population. However, several neighborhoods in eastern North Philadelphia, especially Fairhill, have some of the highest concentrations of Puerto Ricans in the United States, Fairhill having the highest when being compared to other big city neighborhoods.[39]

New York City

National Puerto Rican Parade in New York City, 2005.

Between the 1950s and the 1980s, large numbers of Puerto Ricans migrated to New York, especially to Brooklyn, The Bronx and the Spanish Harlem and Loisaida neighborhoods of Manhattan. Labor recruitment was the basis of this particular community. In 1960, the number of stateside Puerto Ricans living in New York City as a whole was 88%, with most (69%) living in East Harlem.[40] They helped others settle, find work, and build communities by relying on social networks containing friends and family.

For a long time, Spanish Harlem (East Harlem) and Loisaida (Lower East Side) were the two major Puerto Rican communities in the city, but during the 1960s and 1970s predominately Puerto Rican neighborhoods started to spring up in the Bronx because of its proximity to East Harlem and in Brooklyn because of its proximity to the Lower East Side. There are significant Puerto Rican communities in all five boroughs.

Philippe Bourgois, an anthropologist who has studied Puerto Ricans in the inner city, suggests that "the Puerto Rican community has fallen victim to poverty through social marginalization due to the transformation of New York into a global city."[41] The Puerto Rican population in East Harlem and New York City as a whole remains the poorest among all migrant groups in US cities. As of 1973, about "46.2% of the Puerto Rican migrants in East Harlem were living below the federal poverty line."[42] However, more affluent Puerto Rican American professionals have migrated to suburban neighborhoods on Long Island and in Westchester County, New Jersey and Connecticut.

The struggle for legal work and affordable housing remains fairly low and the implementation of favorable public policy fairly inconsistent. New York City's Puerto Rican community contributed to the creation of hip hop music, and to many forms of Latin music including Boogaloo, Salsa, Latin house and Freestyle. Puerto Ricans in New York created their own cultural movement and cultural institutions such as the Nuyorican Poets Cafe.

New York City also became the mecca for freestyle music in the 1980s, of which Puerto Rican singer-songwriters represented an integral component.[43] Puerto Rican influence in popular music continues in the 21st century, encompassing major artists such as Jennifer Lopez.[44]

Philadelphia

As of the 2010 U.S. Census, there was an estimate of 121,643 Puerto Rican Americans living in Philadelphia, up from 91,527 in 2000. Representing 8% of Philadelphia's total population and 75% of the city's Hispanic/Latino population, as of 2010. Puerto Ricans are the largest Latino group in the city and that, outside Puerto Rico, Philadelphia now has the second largest Puerto Rican population, estimated at over 130,000.[45] Since 2010, Philadelphia replaced the city of Chicago as the city with the second-largest Puerto Rican population, Chicago's slightly shrunk and Philadelphia's continued to grow, more than ever before, not only having the second largest Puerto Rican population, but also one of the fastest-growing.[46] Most sources, including the most reliable, the United States Census Bureau, estimated that as of 2010, Puerto Ricans made up between 70-80 percent of Philadelphia's Hispanic/Latino population.[47][48][48] Other sources put the percentage Puerto Ricans make up of Philadelphia's Hispanic population, as high as 90% and others as low as 64%.[49][50][51][52] The influx of other Latino and Hispanic groups between 2000 and 2010, may have slightly decreased the proportion Puerto Ricans make up of the city's total Latino and Hispanic population. Though, unlike many other large northern cities, which have declining or slow-growing Puerto Rican populations, Philadelphia has one of the fastest-growing Puerto Rican populations in the country.

Chicago

Division Street (Paseo Boricua) in Chicago, facing east from Mozart Street, one-half block west of California Avenue.

Puerto Ricans first arrived in the early part of the 20th century from more affluent families to study at colleges or universities. In the 1930s there was an enclave around 35th and Michigan. In the 1950s two small barrios emerged known as la Clark and La Madison just North and West of Downtown, near hotel jobs and then where the factories once stood. These communities were displaced by the city as part of their slum clearance. In 1968, a community group, the Young Lords mounted protests and demonstrations and occupied several buildings of institutions demanding that they invest in low income housing.[53] Humboldt Park is home to the one of the largest Puerto Rican communities in Chicago and is known as "Little Puerto Rico" or Paseo Boricua.[54][55]

Orlando

Orlando and the surrounding area has had a sizable Puerto Rican population since the 1980s, as Florida as a whole has always had a decent sized Puerto Rican population. A big contributing factor for the growth of the Puerto Rican community in Central Florida was Walt Disney World, who heavily recruited employees in Puerto Rico. Central Florida's Puerto Rican population began to skyrocket starting in the early 2000s and accelerating in the 2010s, with many New Yorkers of Puerto Rican ancestry (Nuyoricans) began moving to Florida, joining the island-born Puerto Ricans.[56]

During this time, the 1990s and early 2000s, the overall migration patterns out from Puerto Rico to the US mainland began to switch and Orlando became the main destination from Puerto Rico by far, replacing New York City. Puerto Ricans are largely spread out in the Orlando area, but the heaviest concentration is in the southern portions, like Kissimmee, Poinciana and many other areas in Osceola County, where Puerto Ricans make up the majority of the population.[57][58]

Demographics of Stateside Puerto Ricans

In 1950, about a quarter of a million Puerto Rican natives lived "stateside", or in one of the U.S. states. In March 2012 that figure had risen to about 1.5 million. That is, slightly less than a third of the 5 million Puerto Ricans living stateside were born on the island.[11][12] Puerto Ricans are also the second-largest Hispanic group in the US after those of Mexican descent.[10]

Historical population
YearPop.±%
19101,513    
192011,811+680.6%
193052,774+346.8%
194069,967+32.6%
1950226,110+223.2%
1960892,513+294.7%
19701,391,463+55.9%
19802,014,000+44.7%
19902,728,000+35.5%
20003,406,178+24.9%
20104,623,716+35.7%
20155,372,759+16.2%
20175,588,664+4.0%
Source: The Puerto Rican Diaspora: Historical Perspectives[59]

Population by state

Relative to the population of each state

The Puerto Rican population by state, showing the percentage of the state's population that identifies itself as Puerto Rican relative to the state/territory population as a whole is shown in the following table.

State/TerritoryPuerto Rican-American
Population (2010 Census)[60][61]
Percentage
(2010)[note 1]
Most recent estimate
(2017)[62]
Percentage
(2017)
 Alabama12,2250.320,0270.5
 Alaska4,5020.67,6371.0
 Arizona34,7870.541,9010.6
 Arkansas4,7890.26,0880.2
 California189,9450.5212,5000.6
 Colorado22,9950.527,8720.6
 Connecticut252,9727.1298,6038.2
 Delaware22,5332.531,5143.2
 District of Columbia3,1290.56,3200.9
 Florida847,5504.51,120,2255.4
Georgia71,9870.799,0850.9
 Hawaii44,1163.245,9953.2
 Idaho2,9100.23,4450.2
 Illinois182,9891.4202,0461.6
 Indiana30,3040.545,7460.7
 Iowa4,8850.27,5450.2
 Kansas9,2470.311,7340.4
 Kentucky11,4540.319,3120.5
 Louisiana11,6030.317,1090.3
 Maine4,3770.36,0910.3
 Maryland42,5720.760,7811.0
 Massachusetts266,1254.1327,9594.9
 Michigan37,2670.442,9520.4
 Minnesota10,8070.214,3440.3
 Mississippi5,8880.27,7660.2
 Missouri12,2360.215,5770.2
 Montana1,4910.22,1360.2
 Nebraska3,2420.26,7650.3
 Nevada20,6640.828,0461.0
 New Hampshire11,7290.916,3311.2
 New Jersey434,0924.9470,6405.3
 New Mexico7,9640.49,8950.5
 New York1,070,5585.51,112,1235.7
 North Carolina71,8000.8101,9211.0
 North Dakota9870.12,0990.3
 Ohio94,9650.8125,5541.1
 Oklahoma12,2230.317,3340.4
 Oregon8,8450.29,9040.3
 Pennsylvania366,0822.9472,4423.7
 Rhode Island34,9793.340,0653.9
 South Carolina26,4930.638,0250.8
 South Dakota1,4830.22,5140.3
 Tennessee21,0600.331,2950.5
 Texas130,5760.5189,6430.7
 Utah7,1820.39,1760.4
 Vermont2,2610.42,3350.3
 Virginia73,9580.9106,4721.3
 Washington25,5660.328,3460.4
 West Virginia3,7010.26,4940.4
 Wisconsin46,3230.856,0280.9
 Wyoming1,0260.21,0020.2
USA4,623,7161.55,588,6641.7

Out of all 50 states, the ones with the highest net inflow of Puerto Ricans moving there from the island of Puerto Rico between 2000 and 2010 included Florida, Pennsylvania, Texas, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Ohio, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland.[10] New York, which has joined this list since 2010, remains a major destination for Puerto Rican migrants, though only a third of recent Puerto Rican arrivals went to New York between 2000 and 2010.[63] There is also a notable number of stateside-born Puerto Ricans moving from the Northeastern states to South Atlantic states, especially to Florida, but to a lesser degree many are also going to Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia as well.[61] The Northeast Corridor remains a major destination for Puerto Ricans, however the population is also growing throughout the United States, particularly in the South.[23][64] From 2010–17, Florida's Puerto Rican population increased from 847,000 to 1.120 million, increasing by nearly 300,000, allowing Florida to replace New York as the state with the largest Puerto Rican population. Puerto Ricans have been heavily increasing in many other parts of the country too, such as Texas and Ohio.[65]

Despite Puerto Rican populations in New York and New Jersey being relatively stagnant, other parts of the Northeast continue to see very strong growth, particularly Pennsylvania and Lower New England (Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island). Pennsylvania easily having the second largest numerical increase of Puerto Ricans for the past 10–15 years, showing an increase of over 110,000 from 2010-17 second only to Florida. Connecticut having the highest percentage of Puerto Ricans in the United States, from 2010 to 2017 (Pre-Maria) the percentage went up about 1.1 percentage points which is a percentile increase more than any other state, and currently over 8 percent of the state is of Puerto Rican ancestry, sitting nearly three whole percentage points above the second highest percentage. Of smaller states with populations under 3 million, Rhode Island has the fastest growing number of Puerto Ricans.[66] New York is still a relatively popular destination for those migrating from Puerto Rico, though not as much as in the past, as said earlier Florida and other Northeast states are now receiving larger numerical growth. However, much of the stagnant population growth is due to an equal number of Puerto Ricans leaving New York as there is Puerto Ricans moving to New York, as many people of Puerto Rican ancestry now living in other states are originally from the New York City area.

Although Puerto Ricans constitute over 9 percent of the Hispanic population in the United States, there are some states where Puerto Ricans make up over half of the Hispanic population, including Connecticut, where 57 percent of the state's Hispanics are of Puerto Rican descent and Pennsylvania, where Puerto Ricans make up 53 percent of the Hispanics. Other states where Puerto Ricans make up a remarkably large portion of the Hispanic community include Massachusetts, where they make up 40 percent of all Hispanics, Rhode Island at 39 percent, New York at 34 percent, New Jersey at 33 percent, Delaware at 33 percent, Ohio at 27 percent and Florida at 21 percent of all Hispanics in each respective state.[60] The U.S. States where Puerto Ricans were the largest Hispanic group were New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Hawaii.[60] U.S. states with higher percentages of Puerto Ricans then the national average (1.5%) as of 2010, are Connecticut (7.1%), New York (5.5%), New Jersey (4.9%), Florida (4.5%), Massachusetts (4.1%), Rhode Island (3.3%), Hawaii (3.2%), Pennsylvania (2.9%) and Delaware (2.5%).[66]

Historically, Puerto Ricans were the largest Hispanic/Latino group in the New York metropolitan area, however the Puerto Rican population in the area began to decrease due to rising cost of living and in turn the overall Hispanic/Latino population began to diversify with increases in other Latino groups. During the same time, the Puerto Rican population has increased in many other areas throughout the country and in areas with large Hispanic/Latino communities, Puerto Ricans represent the majority of Latinos in the following; Central Florida around Orlando, but also some areas in the Tampa and Jacksonville areas, southwest New England especially around Hartford and Springfield, South Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania including the Philadelphia area and various smaller metro areas like Allentown among others, and the stretch from Western New York to Northeast Ohio including the metropolitan areas of Rochester, Buffalo and Cleveland.[66] Hispanic/Latino populations in the Northeast Ohio and Western New York areas in particular, tend to be 80-90% Puerto Rican.[61] However, Central Florida and Southwestern New England, which is Connecticut and western Massachusetts, have the highest concentrations of Puerto Ricans by percentage of the total populations of these areas as a whole.[61]

The Puerto Rican population in the United States, 2000 (graphic by Angelo Falcón).

Relative to the Puerto Rican population nationwide

Puerto Rican population by state, showing the percentage of Puerto Rican residents in each state relative to the Puerto Rican population in the United States as a whole.

State/TerritoryPuerto Rican-American
Population (2010 Census)[60][61]
Percentage[note 2]
New York1,070,55823.15
Florida847,55018.33
New Jersey434,0929.39
Pennsylvania366,0827.92
Massachusetts266,1255.76
Connecticut252,9725.47
California189,9454.11
Illinois182,9893.96
Texas130,5762.82
Ohio94,9652.05
Virginia73,9581.60
Georgia71,9871.56
North Carolina71,8001.55
Wisconsin46,3231.00
Hawai'i44,1160.95
Maryland42,5720.92
Michigan37,2670.81
Rhode Island34,9790.76
Arizona34,7870.75
Indiana30,3040.66
South Carolina26,4930.57
Washington25,8380.56
Colorado22,9950.50
Delaware22,5330.49
Tennessee21,0600.46
Nevada20,6640.45
Missouri12,2360.27
Alabama12,2250.26
Oklahoma12,2230.26
New Hampshire11,7290.25
Louisiana11,6030.25
Kentucky11,4540.25
Minnesota10,8070.23
Kansas9,2470.20
Oregon8,8450.19
New Mexico7,9640.17
Utah7,1820.16
Mississippi5,8880.13
Iowa4,8850.11
Arkansas4,7890.10
Alaska4,5020.10
Maine4,3770.10
West Virginia3,7010.08
Nebraska3,2420.07
DC3,1290.07
Idaho2,9100.06
Vermont2,2610.05
Montana1,4910.03
South Dakota1,4830.03
Wyoming1,0260.02
North Dakota9870.02
USA4,623,716100
The Puerto Rican flag in East Harlem in New York City, outside of the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center, winter 2005 (photo by Angelo Falcón).

Even with such movement of Puerto Ricans from traditional to non-traditional states, the Northeast continues to dominate in both concentration and population.

The largest populations of Puerto Ricans are situated in the following metropolitan areas (Source: Census 2010):

  1. New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA MSA – 1,177,430
  2. Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL MSA – 269,781
  3. Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD MSA – 238,866
  4. Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, FL MSA – 207,727
  5. Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, IL-IN-WI MSA – 188,502
  6. Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL MSA – 143,886
  7. Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, MA-NH MSA – 115,087
  8. Hartford-East Hartford-Middletown, CT MSA – 102,911
  9. Springfield, MA MSA – 87,798
  10. New Haven-Milford, CT MSA – 77,578

Communities with the largest Puerto Rican populations

  • New York City: 723,621 Puerto Rican residents, as of 2010;[60] compared to 789,172 in 2000, decrease of 65,551; representing 8.9% of the city's total population and 32% of the city's Hispanic population, are the city's largest Hispanic group.
  • Philadelphia: 121,643 Puerto Rican residents, as of 2010;[60] compared to 91,527 in 2000, increase of 30,116; representing 8.0% of the city's total population and 68% of the city's Hispanic population, are the city's largest Hispanic group.
  • Chicago: 102,703 Puerto Rican residents, as of 2010;[60] compared to 113,055 in 2000, decrease of 10,352; representing 3.8% of the city's total population and 15% of the city's Hispanic population, are the city's second largest Hispanic group.

The top 25 US communities with the highest populations of Puerto Ricans (Source: Census 2010)

  1. New York City, NY – 723,621
  2. Philadelphia, PA – 121,643
  3. Chicago, IL – 102,703
  4. Springfield, MA – 50,798
  5. Hartford, CT – 41,995
  6. Newark, NJ – 35,993
  7. Bridgeport, CT – 31,881
  8. Orlando, FL – 31,201
  9. Boston, MA – 30,506
  10. Allentown, PA – 29,640
  11. Cleveland, OH – 29,286
  12. Reading, PA – 28,160
  13. Rochester, NY – 27,734
  14. Jersey City, NJ – 25,677
  15. Waterbury, CT – 24,947
  16. Milwaukee, WI – 24,672
  17. Tampa, FL – 24,057
  18. Camden, NJ – 23,759
  19. Worcester, MA – 23,074
  20. Buffalo, NY – 22,076
  21. New Britain, CT – 21,914
  22. Jacksonville, FL – 21,128
  23. Paterson, NJ – 21,015
  24. New Haven, CT – 20,505
  25. Yonkers, NY – 19,875

Communities with high percentages of Puerto Ricans

The top 25 US communities with the highest percentages of Puerto Ricans as a percent of total population (Source: Census 2010)

  1. Holyoke, MA – 44.70%
  2. Buenaventura Lakes, FL – 44.55%
  3. Azalea Park, FL – 36.50%
  4. Poinciana, FL – 35.82%
  5. Meadow Woods, FL – 35.11%
  6. Hartford, CT – 33.66%
  7. Springfield, MA – 33.19%
  8. Kissimmee, FL – 33.06%
  9. Reading, PA – 31.97%
  10. Camden, NJ – 30.72%
  11. New Britain, CT – 29.93%
  12. Lancaster, PA – 29.23%
  13. Vineland, NJ – 26.74%
  14. Union Park, FL – 25.81%
  15. Allentown, PA – 25.11%
  16. Windham, CT – 23.99%
  17. Lebanon, PA – 23.87%
  18. Perth Amboy, NJ – 23.79%
  19. Southbridge, MA – 23.08%
  20. Amsterdam, NY – 22.80%
  21. Harlem Heights, FL – 22.63%
  22. Waterbury, CT – 22.60%
  23. Lawrence, MA – 22.20%
  24. Dunkirk, NY – 22.14%
  25. Bridgeport, CT – 22.10%

The 10 large cities (over 200,000 in population) with the highest percentages of Puerto Rican residents include (2010 Census):[60]

  1. Rochester, NY – 13.2%
  2. Orlando, FL – 13.1%
  3. Newark, NJ – 13.0%
  4. Jersey City, NJ – 10.4%
  5. New York City, NY – 8.9%
  6. Buffalo, NY – 8.4%
  7. Philadelphia, PA – 8.0%
  8. Cleveland, OH – 7.4%
  9. Tampa, FL – 7.2%
  10. Boston, MA – 4.9%

Dispersion before 2000

Like other groups, the theme of "dispersal" has had a long history with the stateside Puerto Rican community.[67] More recent demographic developments appear at first blush as if the stateside Puerto Rican population has been dispersing in greater numbers. Duany had described this process as a “reconfiguration” and termed it the “nationalizing” of this community throughout the United States.[68]

New York City was the center of the stateside Puerto Rican community for most of the 20th century. However, it is not clear whether these settlement changes can be characterized as simple population dispersal. Puerto Rican population settlements today are less concentrated than they were in places like New York City, Chicago and a number of cities in Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Jersey.

New York State has resumed its net in-migration of Puerto Rican Americans since 2006, a dramatic reversal from being the only state to register a decrease in its Puerto Rican population between 1990 and 2000. The Puerto Rican population of New York State, still the largest in the United States, is estimated by the U.S. Census Bureau to have increased from 1,070,558 in 2010 to 1,103,067 in 2013.

Puerto Rican migration trends since 2006 have been highly complex: New York State gained more Puerto Rican migrants from Puerto Rico (31% of the mainland total) as well as from elsewhere on the mainland (20% of interstate moves) between 2006 and 2012 than any other U.S. state, in absolute numbers, even while the southern United States gained the highest number as an overall national region.[64] Also, unlike the initial pattern of migration several decades ago, this second significant Puerto Rican migration into New York and surrounding states is being driven by movement not only into New York City proper, but also into the city's surrounding suburban areas, including areas outside New York State, especially Northern New Jersey, such that the New York City metropolitan area gained the highest number of additional Puerto Rican Americans of any metropolitan area between 2010 and 2016, from 1,177,430 in 2010 to 1,494,670 in 2016.[38]

Florida witnessed an even larger increase than New York State between 2010 and 2013, from 847,550 in 2010 to 987,663 in 2013,[69] with significant migration from Puerto Rico, as well as some migration from Chicago and New York to Florida.[64] However, most of the Puerto Rican migration to Florida has been to the central portion of the state, surrounding Orlando. Orlando and to a lesser degree Philadelphia and Tampa have witnessed large increases in their Puerto Rican populations between 2010 and 2013 and now have some of the fastest growing Puerto Rican populations in the country. According to the Pew Research Center, Puerto Rican arrivals from the island since 2000 are also less well off than earlier migrants, with lower household incomes and a greater likelihood of living in poverty.[64] After Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico in September 2017, devastating the infrastructure of the island, New York, Florida and New Jersey were expected to be the three likeliest destinations for Puerto Rican migrants to the U.S. mainland, when premised upon family ties.[70]

Since Hurricane Maria in September 2017, about 400,000 Puerto Ricans (and counting) have left the island for the US mainland, either permanently or temporarily. Nearly half of which went to the state of Florida alone, especially to the metropolitan areas of Orlando and Miami, and to a lesser degree Tampa and Jacksonville. The other half are spreading out throughout the country, but went mostly to the metropolitan areas of Philadelphia, New York, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland and numerous smaller cities across the US Northeast. The 2017 population count was 5.5 million, now with the migration boom due to Hurricane Maria, as well as live births taken into account, the US Puerto Rican population is now estimated at 6 million as of 2018.

Concentration

Residential segregation is a phenomenon characterizing many stateside Puerto Rican population concentrations. While blacks are the most residentially segregated group in the United States, a 2002 study shows that stateside Puerto Ricans are the most segregated among US Latinos.[71]

  • Bridgeport, Connecticut (score of 73)
  • Hartford, Connecticut (70)
  • New York City (69)
  • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (69)
  • Newark, New Jersey (69)
  • Cleveland-Lorain-Elyria, Ohio (68)

Stateside Puerto Ricans are disproportionately clustered in what has been called the "Boston-New York-Philadelphia-Washington Corridor" and in Florida along the East Coast. The U.S. Northeast Corridor, coined a "megalopolis" by geographer Jean Gottman in 1956, is the largest and most affluent urban corridor in the world, being described as a "node of wealth ... [an] area where the pulse of the national economy beats loudest and the seats of power are well established."[72] With major world class universities clustered in Boston and stretching throughout this corridor, the economic and media power and international power politics in New York City, and the seat of the federal government in Washington, DC, also a major global power center.

Segmentation

These shifts in the relative sizes of Latino populations have also changed the role of the stateside Puerto Rican community.[73] Thus, many long-established Puerto Rican institutions have had to revise their missions (and, in some cases, change their names) to provide services and advocacy on behalf of non-Puerto Rican Latinos.

Race

Puerto Ricans in the United States – 2010 U.S Census [74]
Self-identified Race Percent of population
White alone
53.1%
Black
8.7%
Asian
0.5%
American Indians and Alaska Natives
0.9%
Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders
0.2%
Two or more races
8.7%
Some Other Race
27.8%
Total
100%

According to the 2010 US census, of the stateside Puerto Rican population, about 53.1% self-identified as white, about 8.7% self-identified as black, about 0.9% as American Indian, about 0.5% as Asian, and 36.7% as mixed or other.[60] Though over half self-identified as white, the Puerto Rican population is largely made up of multi-racials, most Puerto Ricans are mixed to varying degrees, usually of white European/North African, black West African and indigenous Taino ancestry.[75][75][76][77][78][79] The average genomewide individual ancestry proportions have been estimated as 56% European, 28% West African and 16% Native American.[78] However, there are significant numbers of (pure or nearly pure) blacks and whites within the Puerto Rican population as well.[80] Historically, under Spanish and American rule, Puerto Rico underwent a whitening process, in particular, the island had laws like the Regla del Sacar, in which people of mixed-race origin were identified as "white", the opposite of the one-drop rule in the United States.[76][81][82][83]

Culture

Puerto Rican culture is a blend of Spanish, Taíno and West African cultures, with recent influences from the United States and neighboring Latin American and Caribbean countries. Due to Puerto Rico's status as a US territory, people in Puerto Rico have the most exposure to US culture and Puerto Ricans in the mainland United States tend to be the most "American-ized" of all major Hispanic groups. Though, 1st-generation Puerto Rico-born migrants tend to be more traditional, while people born in the US mainland of Puerto Rican ancestry tend to merge traditional Puerto Rican culture with mainland American culture.

Language

The Puerto Rican variant of Spanish is mainly derived from the Spanish spoken in southern Spain and the Canary Islands. It also has noticeable influences from numerous languages, including Taíno and various West African languages. It is very similar to other Caribbean Spanish variants.

About 83% of Puerto Ricans living in the United States ages 5 and older speak English proficiently, of whom 53% are bilingual in Spanish and English, and another 30% speak only English fluently with little proficiency in Spanish. The other 17% speak only Spanish fluently and report speaking English "less than very well" with little proficiency in English, compared to 34% of Hispanics overall who report doing so.[66][84] According to a 2014 poll, only 20% of Puerto Ricans living in the mainland United States speak Spanish at home, and only 78% chose to answer the poll in English instead of Spanish, significantly more than other Latino groups polled.[85]

Many first- and second- generation Puerto Ricans living in New York speak "Nuyorican English", a mix of local New York English with Puerto Rican Spanish influences, while many Puerto Ricans living in other US cities speak with a similar English accent. More Americanized Puerto Ricans speak the local English accent with little to no Spanish traces, sounding similar to other local groups including Black Americans or assimilated Italian Americans.

Religion

The vast majority of Puerto Ricans in the United States are adherents of Christianity. Though, Catholics are the largest in number, there are also significant numbers of followers of numerous Protestant denominations. Protestants make up a larger proportion of the Stateside Puerto Rican population then they do of the population of Puerto Rico. Many Puerto Rican Catholics also cohesively practice Santería, a Yoruba-Catholic syncretic mix. Smaller portions of the population are non-religious. A very small number of assimilated stateside Puerto Ricans practice other religions, particularly in the inner city neighborhoods of Philadelphia and New York.

Sports

The most popular sports among stateside Puerto Ricans are Baseball and Boxing, with sports like American football and Basketball also having a strong following. Roberto Clemente and Hector Camacho are some Puerto Rican sports legends. Some stateside Puerto Ricans who recently emerged as pro athletes include Carmelo Anthony and Victor Cruz.

Music

Salsa and Merengue are most popular among older Puerto Ricans. Most popular among stateside Puerto Rican youth are Reggaeton, Latin trap and Bachata. Other genres like Hip Hop, R&B, Club, Rock and Pop are popular with Puerto Ricans who mainly use English. New York Puerto Ricans helped form many genres including Boogaloo and Salsa in the 1960s and 1970s and Hip Hop, Latin house and Latin Freestyle in the 1980s, usually with help of other ethnic groups. Some stateside Puerto Ricans who emerged as popular musicians include Marc Anthony, Jennifer Lopez and Big Pun.

Intermarriage

Puerto Ricans have a 38.5% intermarriage rate, the highest amongst Latino groups in the United States.[86] Puerto Rican intermarriage and procreation rates are highest with Dominican Americans, another Caribbean Latino group with very similar culture, high US population numbers, and that usually live in the same neighborhoods. There are also relatively high rates with other groups such as African Americans, Jewish Americans, Italian Americans, Irish Americans, Mexican Americans, Cuban Americans, Trinidadian Americans, Haitian Americans and Jamaican Americans.[62]

Contributions

Jennifer Lopez, a Nuyorican, is one of the highest-grossing and most multi-faceted entertainers in U.S. history.

Numerous Puerto Ricans born and raised in the United States made notable cultural contributions in government, military, television, music, sports, art, law enforcement, modeling, education, journalism, religion, science, among other areas. Conversely, cultural ties between New York and Puerto Rico are strong. In September 2017, following the immense destruction wrought upon Puerto Rico by Hurricane Maria, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo led an aid delegation to San Juan,[87] including engineers from the New York Power Authority to help restore Puerto Rico's electrical grid;[88] subsequently, on the one-year anniversary of the storm, in September 2018, Governor Cuomo announced plans for the official New York State memorial to honor the victims of Hurricane Maria, to be built in Battery Park City, Manhattan, citing the deep cultural connections shared between New Yorkers and Puerto Rican Americans.[89]

Socioeconomics

Income

The stateside Puerto Rican community has usually been characterized as being largely poor and part of the urban underclass in the United States. Studies and reports over the last fifty years or so have documented the high poverty status of this community.[90] However, the picture at the start of the 21st century also reveals significant socioeconomic progress and a community with a growing economic clout.[91] Middle-class neighborhoods predominately populated by Puerto Ricans are mostly found throughout Central Florida, including Orlando, Tampa and their suburbs.[92] Though, significant numbers of middle-class Puerto Ricans can also be found in the Philadelphia metropolitan area, in upper North Philadelphia, particularly around the Olney-Juniata-Lawncrest area and in Camden County, New Jersey outside the city of Camden, and in the New York City metropolitan area, particularly in the eastern portion of the Bronx and Westchester County, as well as many suburbs of Miami and Boston and throughout New Jersey and southern New England. Smaller, more scattered numbers of well-off Puerto Ricans can be seen throughout the United States, in both traditional Puerto Rican settlements in the Northeast and Midwest, and in progressive sunbelt cities of the South and West.[93]

The Latino market and remittances to Puerto Rico

The combined income for stateside Puerto Ricans is a significant share of the large and growing Latino market in the United States and has been attracting increased attention from the media and the corporate sector. In the last decade or so, major corporations have discovered the so-called "urban markets" of blacks and Latinos that had been neglected for so long. This has spawned a cottage industry of marketing firms, consultants and publications that specialize in the Latino market.

One important question this raises is the degree to which stateside Puerto Ricans contribute economically to Puerto Rico. The Puerto Rico Planning Board estimated that remittances totaled $66 million in 1963.[94]

The full extent of the stateside Puerto Rican community's contributions to the economy of Puerto Rico is not known, but it is clearly significant. The role of remittances and investments by Latino immigrants to their home countries has reached a level that it has received much attention in the last few years, as countries like Mexico develop strategies to better leverage these large sums of money from their diasporas in their economic development planning.[95]

The income disparity between the stateside community and those living on the island is not as great as those of other Latin-American countries, and the direct connection between second-generation Puerto Ricans and their relatives is not as conducive to direct monetary support. Many Puerto Ricans still living in Puerto Rico also remit to family members who are living stateside.

Gender

The average income in 2002 of stateside Puerto Rican men was $36,572, while women earned an average $30,613, 83.7 percent that of the men. Compared to all Latino groups, whites, and Asians, stateside Puerto Rican women came closer to achieving parity in income to the men of their own racial-ethnic group. In addition, stateside Puerto Rican women had incomes that were 82.3 percent that of white women, while stateside Puerto Rican men had incomes that were only 64.0 percent that of white men.

Stateside Puerto Rican women were closer to income parity with white women than were women who were Dominicans (58.7 percent), Central and South Americans (68.4 percent), but they were below Cubans (86.2 percent), "other Hispanics" (87.2 percent), blacks (83.7 percent) and Asians (107.7 percent).

Stateside Puerto Rican men were in a weaker position in comparison with men from other racial-ethnic groups. They were closer to income parity to white men than men who were Dominicans (62.3 percent) and Central and South Americans (58.3 percent). Although very close to income parity with blacks (65.5 percent), stateside Puerto Rican men fell below Mexicans (68.3 percent), Cubans (75.9 percent), other Hispanics (75.1 percent) and Asians (100.7 percent).

Educational attainment

Stateside Puerto Ricans, along with other US Latinos, have experienced the long-term problem of a high school dropout rate that has resulted in relatively low educational attainment.[15]

According to the Pew Hispanic Center, while in Puerto Rico more than 20% of Hispanics have a bachelor's degree, only 16% of stateside Puerto Ricans did as of March 2012.[10]

Social issues

According to U.S. Census figures, the Puerto Rican population has one of the highest poverty and incarceration rates among all ethnic groups in the United States.[96] The Puerto Rican community is also one of the most segregated ethnic groups in the country.[97][98][99][100] The stateside Puerto Rican community has partnered with the African American community, particularly in cities such as New York and Philadelphia, not only because of cultural similarities, but also to combat racism and disenfranchisement of the mid to late 20th century in their communities as a unified force.[101][102][103] Though, often perceived as largely poor, there is evidence of growing economic clout, as stated earlier.[91][104]

Political participation

Puerto Rican Democratic members of the United States Congress Luis Gutiérrez (left), José Enrique Serrano (center) and Nydia Velázquez speaking at the Encuentro Boricua Conference at Hostos Community College in New York City, 2004
U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, also known as AOC, representing parts of The Bronx and Queens, became at age 29 the youngest woman ever to be elected to Congress in November 2018.

The Puerto Rican community has organized itself to represent its interests in stateside political institutions for close to a century.[105] In New York City, Puerto Ricans first began running for public office in the 1920s. In 1937, they elected their first government representative, Oscar Garcia Rivera, to the New York State Assembly.[106] In Massachusetts, Puerto Rican Nelson Merced became the first Hispanic elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives, and the first Hispanic to hold statewide office in the commonwealth.[107]

There are three Puerto Rican members of the United States House of Representatives: Democrats Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, José Enrique Serrano of New York and Nydia Velázquez of New York, complementing the one Resident Commissioner elected to that body from Puerto Rico. Puerto Ricans have also been elected as mayors in three major cities: Miami, Hartford and Camden. Luis A. Quintana, born in Añasco, Puerto Rico, was sworn in as the first Latino mayor of Newark, New Jersey in November 2013, assuming the unexpired term of Cory Booker, who vacated the position to become a U.S. Senator from New Jersey.[108]

On June 26, 2018, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a Puerto Rican millennial, won the Democratic primary in New York's 14th congressional district covering parts of The Bronx and Queens in New York City, defeating the incumbent, Democratic Caucus Chair Joe Crowley, in what has been described as the biggest upset victory in the 2018 midterm election season.[109] Ocasio-Cortez is a member of the Democratic Socialists of America and has been endorsed by various politically progressive organizations and individuals.[110] She is the youngest woman ever elected to Congress.[111]

There are various ways in which stateside Puerto Ricans have exercised their influence. These include protests, campaign contributions and lobbying, and voting. Compared to the United States, voter participation by Puerto Ricans in Puerto Rico is very large. However, many see a paradox in that this high level of voting is not echoed stateside.[112] There, Puerto Ricans have had persistently low voter registration and turnout rates, despite the relative success they have had in electing their own to significant public offices throughout the United States.

To address this problem, the government of Puerto Rico has, since the late 1980s, launched two major voter registration campaigns to increase the level of voter participation of stateside Puerto Rican. While Puerto Ricans have traditionally been concentrated in the Northeast, coordinated Latino voter registration organizations such as the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project and the United States Hispanic Leadership Institute (based in the Midwest), have not concentrated in this region and have focused on the Mexican-American voter. The government of Puerto Rico has sought to fill this vacuum to insure that stateside Puerto Rican interests are well represented in the electoral process, recognizing that the increased political influence of stateside Puerto Ricans also benefits the island.

This low level of electoral participation is in sharp contrast with voting levels in Puerto Rico, which are much higher than that not only of this community, but also the United States as a whole.[113]

The reasons for the differences in Puerto Rican voter participation have been an object of much discussion, but relatively little scholarly research.[114]

Voter statistics

Breakdown of Latinos by voting registration stage in 2000. C-VAP stands for Citizen Voting Age Population (Citizens 18 years of age and older)

When the relationship of various factors to the turnout rates of stateside Puerto Ricans in 2000 is examined, socioeconomic status emerges as a clear factor.[115] For example, according to the Census:

  • Income: the turnout rate for those with incomes less than $10,000 was 37.7 percent, while for those earning $75,000 and above, it was 76.7 percent.
  • Employment: 36.5 percent of the unemployed voted, versus 51.2 percent for the employed. The rate for those outside of the labor force was 50.6 percent, probably reflecting the disproportionate role of the elderly, who generally have higher turnout rates.
  • Union membership: for union members it was 51.3 percent, while for nonunion members it was 42.6 percent.
  • Housing: for homeowners it was 64.0 percent, while it was 41.8 percent for renters.

There were a number of other socio-demographic characteristics where turnout differences also existed, such as:

  • Age: the average age of voters was 45.3 years, compared to 38.5 years for eligible nonvoters.
  • Education: those without a high school diploma had a turnout rate of 42.5 percent, while for those with a graduate degree, it was 81.0 percent.
  • Birthplace: for those born stateside it was 48.9 percent, compared to 52.0 percent for those born in Puerto Rico.
  • Marriage status: for those who were married it was 62.0 percent, while those who were never married managed 33.0 percent.
  • Military service: for those who ever served in the US military, the turnout rate was 72.1 percent, compared to 48.6 percent for those who never served.

Notable people

See also

  • Puerto Rican citizenship
  • List of Puerto Ricans
  • List of Puerto Rican-American communities
  • Puerto Rican culture
  • Puerto Rican immigration to Hawaii
  • Puerto Rican people
  • Demographics of Puerto Rico
  • Outline of Puerto Rico
  • Hispanic and Latino Americans
  • Hispanics and Latinos in New Jersey
  • Cultural diversity in Puerto Rico
    • Corsican immigration to Puerto Rico
    • French immigration to Puerto Rico
    • Crypto-Judaism
    • German immigration to Puerto Rico
    • Irish immigration to Puerto Rico
    • Royal Decree of Graces of 1815
  • Index of Puerto Rico-related articles
  • History of women in Puerto Rico
  • Military history of Puerto Rico
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Puerto Rico
  • 51-star flag
  • Piragua
  • Young Lords
  • Teatro Puerto Rico

Footnotes

  1. They are also Puerto Rican citizens

Notes

  1. Percentage of the state population that identifies itself as Puerto Rican relative to the state/territory" population as a whole.
  2. Percentage of Puerto Rican residents in each state relative to the Puerto Rican population in the United States as a whole. Puerto Rican population in the U.S. according to the 2010 U.S. Census: 4,623,716

References

  1. "B03001 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN - United States - 2018 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. July 1, 2018. Retrieved November 25, 2019.
  2. Atlas of Stateside Puerto Ricans: Abridged Edition without Maps. Angelo Falcon. Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Administration. ca. 2002. Page 3. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  3. Promociones SMS y Dibella Entertainment firman al puertorriqueño americano Christopher "Golden" Galeano. BOXEOMUNDIAL.COM. Posted on August 29, 2013.
  4. La Reforma social: Lessons from the War and the Peace Conference Reforma Social: Revista mensual de cuestiones sociales, Volumes 20-21. p232.
  5. Yonquis y yanquis salvajes. José Luis Alonso de Santos and César Oliva. p20. Ediciones Castalia. 2012.
  6. Isabela. Wagner Ortega González. p123. Editorial de la Universidad de Costa Rica. 2005.
  7. Boxeo Telemundo Regresa el 21 de Junio a las 11:35PM/10:35C con una Segunda Temporada que incluye a Orlanda Cruz y una pelea por el titulo mundial. Archived 2014-03-23 at the Wayback Machine Telemundo Press Release. 10 June 2013.
  8. "Stateside". Collins Online Dictionary. Glasgow, Scotland: HarperCollins Publishers. 2019. Retrieved 6 Sep 2019.
  9. Five million Puerto Ricans now living in the mainland U.S. Archived 2013-12-18 at the Wayback Machine Caribbean Business. 27 June 2013. Vol 41. Issue 24. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  10. "Puerto Rico's population exodus is all about jobs". USA Today. March 11, 2012.
  11. Llorente, Elizabeth (June 21, 2013). "Salvadorans Overtaking Cubans As Third-Largest Hispanic Group In The U.S." FoxNews.com. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  12. "1.5 million Dominicans live in the U.S.: Pew study". dominicantoday.com. June 20, 2013. Archived from the original on June 24, 2013. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  13. "Key findings about Puerto Rico". Pew Research Center. March 29, 2017.
  14. Falcón in Jennings and Rivera 1984: 15-42
  15. Nieto 2000
  16. Pantoja 2002: 93-108
  17. Duany 2002: Ch. 7
  18. Chenault 1938: 72
  19. Lapp 1990
  20. Manuel Ortiz (1993). The Hispanic Challenge: Opportunities Confronting the Church. InterVarsity Press. Page 37.
  21. Luis o. Reyes. Mending the Puerto Rican Education Pipeline in New York City. Centro Journal: volume xxv, number ii. Posted in fall 2012.
  22. Jorge Duany. Mobile Livelihoods: The Sociocultural Practices of Circular Migrants between Puerto Rico and the United States. The International Migration Review. Vol. 36, No. 2 (Summer, 2002). Published by Center for Migration Studies of New York, Inc. Page 355.
  23. "Chapter 1: Puerto Ricans on the U.S. Mainland". Pewhispanic.org. 11 August 2014. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
  24. English Proficiency Lower Among Mexicans Than Puerto Ricans in U.S. Education Week. Posted by Mary Ann Zehr on September 21, 2009.
  25. Sharon M. Lee and Barry Edmonston (June 2015). New Marriages, New Families: U.S. Racial and Hispanic Intermarriage Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine. Population Bulletin. Vol. 60, No. 2.
  26. Nancy S. Landale, R. Salvador Olopesa, and Christina Bradatan. Hispanic Families in the United States: Family Structure and Process in an Era of Family change.
  27. Jeffrey S. Passel, Wendy Wang and Paul Taylor. 755 Marrying Out – Pew Research Center: Marrying Out. One-in-Seven New U.S. Marriages is Interracial or Interethnic Archived 2016-01-31 at the Wayback Machine. RELEASED JUNE 4, 2010.
  28. Nathan Glazer (1997/Fourth printing: 2003). We are All Multiculturalists Now. Harvard University Press. Page 129.
  29. Multiracial population Orlando grows: Multiracial population. Posted by Jeff Kunerth, Orlando Sentinel (June 21, 2011).
  30. Pamo, Maitri (December 6, 2012). "How interracial relationships shape the Latino community". Being Latino Online Magazine. Archived from the original on November 2, 2014.
  31. "Explorations in Black and Tan". IMDiversity. Posted on Oct 16, 2012 by Carol Amoruso, Hispanic American Village Editor.
  32. Clara E. Rodríguez; Introduction by Joseph Monserrat. "Puerto Ricans: Immigrants and Migrants" (PDF). Americans All. Retrieved October 27, 2014.
  33. Padilla, Elena. 1992. Up From Puerto Rico. New York: Columbia University Press.
  34. Whalen, Carmen Teresa; Vázquez-Hernández, Victor (2005). Puerto Rican Diaspora: Historical Perspectives. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  35. "Cleveland city, Ohio: ACS Demographic and Housing Estimates: 2006–2008". Factfinder.census.gov. Archived from the original on February 11, 2020. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
  36. Cindy Y. Rodriguez (March 22, 2014). "Why more Puerto Ricans are living in mainland U.S. than in Puerto Rico". CNN. Retrieved March 22, 2014.
  37. Dolores Prida (June 8, 2011). "The Puerto Ricans are coming!". New York Daily News. Retrieved March 22, 2014.
  38. "SELECTED POPULATION PROFILE IN THE UNITED STATES 2016 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates". United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on February 14, 2020. Retrieved September 22, 2017.
  39. 2010 Census New York, NY 10029. Zip-codes.com.
  40. Cayo-Sexton, Patricia. 1965. Spanish Harlem: An Anatomy of Poverty. New York: Harper and Row
  41. Bourgois, Philippe. In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in El Barrio. New York: Cambridge University Press. 2003
  42. Salas, Leonardo. "From San Juan to New York: The History of the Puerto Rican". America: History and Life. 31: 1990.
  43. Joey Gardner. "The History of Freestyle Music". Reproduced with permission of Tommy Boy Music & Timber! Records. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
  44. "López, Jennifer – Music of Puerto Rico". Copyright © 2006, Evan Bailyn, All rights reserved. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
  45. Bureau, U.S. Census. "American FactFinder – Results". Factfinder.census.gov. Archived from the original on 13 February 2020. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
  46. Bureau, U.S. Census. "American FactFinder – Results". Factfinder2.census.gov. Archived from the original on 12 February 2020. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  47. Bureau, U.S. Census. "American FactFinder – Results". Factfinder2.census.gov. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
  48. Vázquez-Hernández, p. 88.
  49. "Looking for Work in the Global Economy: An Introduction" (PDF). Temple.edu. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  50. "The new era of Latino politics". Axisphilly.org. Archived from the original on 8 February 2014. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
  51. "Latinos have region's highest poverty rate". Articles.philly.com. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
  52. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-10-26. Retrieved 2014-10-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  53. "Young Lords in Lincoln Park collection, RHC-65". Grand Valley State University. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  54. "The Division Street Business Development Association Welcomes You!". paseoboricua.org. 2016. Archived from the original on February 1, 2017. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  55. "Humboldt Park". thechicagoneighborhoods.com. Archived from the original on October 27, 2016. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  56. Carmen Teresa Whalen; Víctor Vázquez-Hernández (2005). "The Puerto Rican Diaspora: Historical Perspectives" (PDF). Temple University Press. p. 3. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 November 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  57. "2010 Census". Medgar Evers College. Archived from the original on June 11, 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-13.
  58. "QT-P10 Hispanic or Latino by Type: 2010, Census Summary File 1". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved January 22, 2012.
  59. "American FactFinder – Results". Archived from the original on 2020-02-14.
  60. "Puerto Rico's population exodus is all about jobs". USA Today. September 16, 2008.
  61. D’Vera Cohn, Eileen Patten, and Mark Hugo Lopez (August 11, 2014). "Puerto Rican Population Declines on Island, Grows on U.S. Mainland". Pew Research Center. Retrieved August 29, 2015. However, New York has been the single biggest state magnet for migrants: According to a Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data, among Puerto Ricans between 2006-2012, 31% of moves from the island to the mainland and 20% of moves from one state to another state were to the Empire State.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  62. "DP05: ACS DEMOGRAPHIC AND HOUSING ESTIMATES: 2013 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  63. Rivera-Batz and Santiago 1996: 131-135; Maldonado 1997 :Ch. 13; Briggs 2002: Ch. 6
  64. Duany 2002: Ch. 9
  65. "Geographies: State – ACS Demographic and Housing Estimates 2013 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved October 27, 2014.
  66. Alexandre Tanzi and Wei Lu (October 9, 2017). "New York and Florida Would Be Top States for Puerto Rican Migration". Bloomberg L.P. Retrieved October 22, 2017.
  67. Baker 2002: Ch. 7 and Appendix 2
  68. Shaw 1997: 551
  69. De Genova and Ramos-Zayas 2003
  70. "The Hispanic Population: 2010 Census Brief" (PDF). Census.gov. Retrieved November 16, 2012.
  71. Martínez Cruzado, Juan C. (2002). "The Use of Mitochondrial DNA to Discover Pre-Columbian Migrations to the Caribbean: Results for Puerto Rico and Expectations for the Dominican Republic" (PDF). The Journal of Caribbean Amerindian History and Anthropology. ISSN 1562-5028. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 22, 2004. Retrieved September 25, 2006.
  72. Falcón in Falcón, Haslip-Viera and Matos-Rodríguez 2004: Ch. 6
  73. "DP-1: Profile of General Demographic Characteristics: Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF 1) 100-Percent Data". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  74. Tang, H; Choudhry, S; Mei, R; Morgan, M; Rodriguez-Cintron, W; Burchard, EG; Risch, NJ (2007). "Recent genetic selection in the ancestral admixture of Puerto Ricans". Am. J. Hum. Genet. 81 (3): 626–33. doi:10.1086/520769. PMC 1950843. PMID 17701908. The average genomewide individual ancestry proportions have been estimated as .56, .28, and .16, for European, West African and Native American, respectively
  75. Bonilla C, Shriver MD, Parra EJ, Jones A, Fernández JR (2004). "Ancestral proportions and their association with skin pigmentation and bone mineral density in Puerto Rican women from New York city" (PDF). Hum. Genet. 115 (1): 57–68. doi:10.1007/s00439-004-1125-7. PMID 15118905. Retrieved 30 May 2008.
  76. "Ancestry in Puerto Rico". FindArticles.com – CBSi.
  77. Loveman, Mara; Jeronimo O. Muniz (2007). "How Puerto Rico Became White: Boundary Dynamics and Intercensus Racial Reclassification". American Sociological Review. 72 (6): 915–939. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.563.9069. doi:10.1177/000312240707200604.
  78. Kinsbruner, Jay (1996). Not of Pure Blood: The Free People of Color and Racial Prejudice in Nineteenth-century Puerto Rico. Duke University Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-8223-1842-2. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  79. (Spanish) Real Cédula de 1789 "para el comercio de Negros". Proyecto Ensayo Hispánico. Retrieved July 20, 2007
  80. Hispanics of Puerto Rican Origin in the United States, 2011. Posted by Anna Brown and Eileen Patten.
  81. "English Only? For Mainland Puerto Ricans, The Answer Is Often 'Yes'". NPR.org. Retrieved 2018-05-07.
  82. Aquino, Gabriel Puerto Rican Intermarriages: The Intersectionality of Race, Gender, Class and Space State University of New York at Albany, ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 2011
  83. Adam Shrier, Glenn Blain, and Rich Schapiro (September 22, 2017). "Cuomo says Puerto Rico faces 'long road' to recovery after assessing Maria's damage to island with relief workers". New York Daily News. Retrieved September 22, 2017.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  84. "N.Y. Power Company Sends Crew to Aid Puerto Rico After Hurricane". Reuters and U.S. News & World Report. September 22, 2017. Retrieved September 27, 2017.
  85. Tanay Warerkar (September 20, 2018). "Hurricane Maria memorial will be built in Battery Park City". Retrieved September 20, 2018. New Yorkers have always had a deep connection with our brothers and sisters in Puerto Rico and this memorial will show that this country loves and respects our fellow Americans in Puerto Rico and we will never allow what happened to happen again.
  86. Baker 2002
  87. Rivera-Batiz and Santiago 1996
  88. The Orlando Ricans: overlapping identity discourses among middle-class Puerto Ricans Immigrants MIDDLE-CLASS PUERTO RICAN IMMIGRANTS. Posted by DUANY, JORGE (April 2010). Information of article is based in the Centro Journal (Spring2010, Vol. 22 Issue 1, p84).
  89. Varsovia Fernandez leads the booming Greater Philadelphia Latino community in Empowerment. Posted by Susana G Baumann. Latinasinbusiness.us
  90. Senior and Watkins in Cordasco and Bucchioni 1975: 162-163
  91. DeSipio, et al. 2003
  92. Dominicans, Puerto Ricans Face The Highest Levels Of Poverty Among Hispanics In The United States. The Huffington Post. Posted on February 21, 2013.
  93. William Goldsmith, Edward Blakely (second edition: 2010). Separate Societies: Poverty and Inequality in U.S. Cities. Temple University Press, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Page 135.
  94. PRRAC: "American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass Archived 2014-12-08 at the Wayback Machine." Posted by Douglas Massey (September 1992), issue of Poverty & Race.
  95. Rosenblum, D; Castrillo, FM; Bourgois, P; Mars, S; Karandinos, G; Unick, GJ; Ciccarone, D (2014). "Urban segregation and the US heroin market: A quantitative model of anthropological hypotheses from an inner-city drug market". International Journal of Drug Policy. 25 (3): 543–555. doi:10.1016/j.drugpo.2013.12.008. PMC 4062603. PMID 24445118.
  96. Dan W. Dodson. The North, too, has segregation problems. Ascd.org
  97. Remember The Young Lords? Neither Does The NYPD, Which Is Odd... Archived 2014-08-14 at the Wayback Machine. HBO Now. Posted by Gothamist in News on August 12, 2014 1:15 pm.
  98. New York State Association of Black and Puerto Rican Legislators.
  99. Andrés Torres, José Emiliano Velázquez (1998). The Puerto Rican Movement: Voices from the Diaspora. Page 212. Temple University Press, Philadelphia.
  100. New York's Puerto Ricans Split in Economic Success. Published By Sam Roberts (December 28, 1993). New York Times.
  101. Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños 2003; Jennings and Rivera 1984
  102. Falcón in Jennings and Rivera 1984: Ch. 2
  103. Susan Diesenhouse (21 November 1988). "From Migrant to State House in Massachusetts". The New York Times.
  104. Ted Sherman (November 4, 2013). "Luis Quintana sworn in as Newark's first Latino mayor, filling unexpired term of Cory Booker". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved November 10, 2013.
  105. Seitz-Wald, Alex (June 26, 2018). "High-ranking Democrat ousted in stunning primary loss to newcomer Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez". NBC News. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  106. "Bernie Sanders weighs in on Ocasio-Cortez's victory". MSNBC. June 27, 2018. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  107. Remnick, David (September 20, 2018). "Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's Historic Win and the Future of the Democratic Party". The New Yorker.
  108. Falcón in Heine 1983: Ch. 2; Camara-Fuertes 2004
  109. Camara-Fuertes 2004
  110. Falcón in Heine 1983: Ch. 2
  111. Vargas-Ramos examines this relationship for Puerto Ricans in New York City in Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños 2003: 41-71

Bibliography

  • Acosta-Belén, Edna, et al. (2000). "Adíos, Borinquen Querida": The Puerto Rican Diaspora, Its History, and Contributions (Albany, NY: Center for Latino, Latin American and Caribbean Studies, State University of New York at Albany).
  • Acosta-Belén, Edna, and Carlos E. Santiago (eds.) (2006). Puerto Ricans in the United States: A Contemporary Portrait (Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers).
  • Baker, Susan S. (2002). Understanding Mainland Puerto Rican Poverty (Philadelphia: Temple University Press).
  • Bell, Christopher (2003). Images of America: East Harlem (Portsmouth, NH: Arcadia).
  • Bendixen & Associates (2002). Baseline Study on Mainland Puerto Rican Attitudes Toward Civic Involvement and Voting (Report prepared for the Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Administration, March–May).
  • Bourgois, Philippe. In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in El Barrio. New York: Cambridge University Press. 2003
  • Braschi, Giannina (1994). Empire of Dreams. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Braschi, Giannina (1998). Yo-Yo Boing! Pittsburgh: Latin American Literary Review Press.
  • Briggs, Laura (2002). Reproducing Empire (Berkeley: University of California Press).
  • Camara-Fuertes, Luis Raúl (2004). The Phenomenon of Puerto Rican Voting (Gainesville: University Press of Florida).
  • Cayo-Sexton, Patricia. 1965. Spanish Harlem: An Anatomy of Poverty. New York: Harper and Row
  • Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños (2003), Special Issue: "Puerto Rican Politics in the United States," Centro Journal, Vol. XV, No. 1 (Spring).
  • Census Bureau (2001). The Hispanic Population (Census 2000 Brief) (Washington, DC: U.S. Bureau of the Census, May).
  • Census Bureau (2003). 2003 Annual Social and Economic (ASEC) Supplement: Current Population Survey, prepared by the Bureau of the Census for the Bureau of Labor Statistics (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Bureau of the Census).
  • Census Bureau (2004a). Global Population Profile: 2002 (Washington, D.C.: International Programs Center [IPC], Population Division, U.S. Bureau of the Census) (PASA HRN-P-00-97-00016-00).
  • Census Bureau (2004b). Ancestry: 2000 (Census 2000 Brief) (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Bureau of the Census).
  • Chenault, Lawrence R. (1938). The Puerto Rican Migrant in New York City: A Study of Anomie (New York: Columbia University Press).
  • Constantine, Consuela (1992). "Political Economy of Puerto Rico, New York". The Economist. 28.
  • Cortés, Carlos (ed.)(1980). Regional Perspectives on the Puerto Rican Experience (New York: Arno Press).
  • Cruz Báez, Ángel David, and Thomas D. Boswell (1997). Atlas Puerto Rico (Miami: Cuban American National Council).
  • Christenson, Matthew (2003). Evaluating Components of International Migration: Migration Between Puerto Rico and the United States (Working Paper #64, Population Division, U.S. Bureau of the Census).
  • Del Torre, Patricia (2012). "Los grandes protagonistas de Puerto Rico: Caras 2012, Editorial Televisa Publishing International: Special edition on Jennifer Lopez, Calle 13, Giannina Braschi, Ricky Martin, et al.
  • Cordasco, Francesco and Eugene Bucchioni (1975). The Puerto Rican Experience: A Sociological Sourcebook (Totowa, NJ: Littlefied, Adams & Co.).
  • Dávila, Arlene (2004). Barrio Dreams: Puerto Ricans, Latinos, and the Neoliberal City (Berkeley: University of California Press).
  • De Genova, Nicholas and Ana Y. Ramos-Zayas (2003). Latino Crossings: Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and the Politics of Race and Citizenship (New York: Routledge).
  • de la Garza, Rodolfo O., and Louis DeSipio (eds) (2004). Muted Voices: Latinos and the 2000 Elections (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.).
  • DeSipio, Louis, and Adrian D. Pantoja (2004). "Puerto Rican Exceptionalism? A Comparative Analysis of Puerto Rican, Mexican, Salvadoran and Dominican Transnational Civic and Political Ties" (Paper delivered at The Project for Equity Representation and Governance Conference entitled "Latino Politics: The State of the Discipline," Bush Presidential Conference Center, Texas A&M University in College Station, TX, April 30-May 1, 2004)
  • DeSipio, Louis, Harry Pachon, Rodolfo de la Garza, and Jongho Lee (2003). Immigrant Politics at Home and Abroad: How Latino Immigrants Engage the Politics of Their Home Communities and the United States (Los Angeles: Tomás Rivera Policy Institute)
  • Duany, Jorge (2002). The Puerto Rican Nation on the Move: Identities on the Island and in the United States (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press).
  • Falcón, Angelo (2004). Atlas of Stateside Puerto Ricans (Washington, DC: Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Administration).
  • Puerto Ricans: Thirty Years of Progress & Struggle, Puerto Rican Heritage Month 2006 Calendar Journal (New York: Comite Noviembre). (2006).
  • Fears, Darry (2004). "Political Map in Florida Is Changing: Puerto Ricans Affect Latino Vote," Washington Post (Sunday, July 11, 2004): A1.
  • Fitzpatrick, Joseph P. (1996). The Stranger Is Our Own: Reflections on the Journey of Puerto Rican Migrants (Kansas City: Sheed & Ward).
  • Gottmann, Jean (1957). "Megalopolis or the Urbanization of the Northeastern Seaboard," Economic Geography, Vol. 33, No. 3 (July): 189–200.
  • Grosfoguel, Ramón (2003). Colonial Subjects: Puerto Ricans in a Global Perspective (Berkeley: University of California Press).
  • Haslip-Viera, Gabriel, Angelo Falcón, and Felix Matos-Rodríguez (eds) (2004). Boricuas in Gotham: Puerto Ricans in the Making of Modern New York City, 1945-2000 (Princeton: Marcus Weiner Publishers).
  • Heine, Jorge (ed.) (1983). Time for Decision: The United States and Puerto Rico (Lanham, MD: The North-South Publishing Co.).
  • Hernández, Carmen Dolores (1997). Puerto Rican Voices in English: Interviews with Writers (Westport, CT: Praeger).
  • Jennings, James, and Monte Rivera (eds) (1984). Puerto Rican Politics in Urban America (Westport: Greenwood Press).
  • Lapp, Michael (1990). Managing Migration: The Migration Division of Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans in New York City, 1948-1968 (Doctoral Dissertation: Johns Hopkins University).
  • Maldonado, A.W. (1997). Teodoro Moscoso and Puerto Rico’s Operation Bootstrap (Gainesville: University Press of Florida).
  • Mencher, Joan. 1989. Growing Up in Eastville, a Barrio of New York. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Meyer, Gerald. (1989). Vito Marcantonio: Radical Politician 1902-1954 (Albany: State University of New York Press).
  • Mills, C. Wright, Clarence Senior, and Rose Kohn Goldsen (1950). The Puerto Rican Journey: New York's Newest Migrants (New York: Harper & Brothers).
  • Moreno Vega, Marta (2004). When the Spirits Dance Mambo: Growing Up Nuyorican in El Barrio (New York: Three Rivers Press).
  • Nathan, Debbie (2004). "Adios, Nueva York," City Limits (September/October 2004).
  • Negrón-Muntaner, Frances (2004). Boricua Pop: Puerto Ricans and the Latinization of American Culture (New York: New York University Press).
  • Negrón-Muntaner, Frances and Ramón Grosfoguel (eds) (1997). Puerto Rican Jam: Essays on Culture and Politics (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press).
  • Nieto, Sonia (ed.) (2000). Puerto Rican Students in U.S. Schools (Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates).
  • Padilla, Elena. 1992. Up From Puerto Rico. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Pérez, Gina M. (2004). The Near Northwest Side Story: Migration, Displacement, & Puerto Rican Families (Berkeley: University of California Press).
  • Pérez y González, María (2000). Puerto Ricans in the United States (Westport: Greenwood Press).
  • Ramos-Zayas, Ana Y. (2003). National Performances: The Politics of Class, Race, and Space in Puerto Rican Chicago (Chicago: University of Chicago Press).
  • Ribes Tovar, Federico (1970). Handbook of the Puerto Rican Community (New York: Plus Ultra Educational Publishers).
  • Rivera Ramos. Efrén (2001). The Legal Construction of Identity: The Judicial and Social Legacy of American Colonialism in Puerto Rico (Washington, DC: American Psychological Association).
  • Rivera-Batiz, Francisco L., and Carlos E. Santiago (1996). Island Paradox: Puerto Rico in the 1990s (New York: Russell Sage Foundation).
  • Rodriguez, Clara E. (1989). Puerto Ricans: Born in the U.S.A. (Boston: Unwin Hyman).
  • Rodríguez, Clara E. (2000). Changing Race: Latinos, the Census, and the History of Ethnicity in the United States (New York: New York University Press).
  • Rodríguez, Victor M. (2005). Latino Politics in the United States: Race, Ethnicity, Class and Gender in the Mexican American and Puerto Rican Experience (Dubuque, IW: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company) (Includes a CD)
  • Safa, Helen (1990). "The Urban Poor of Puerto Rico: A Study in Development and Inequality". Anthropology Today. 24: 12–91.
  • Salas, Leonardo (1990). "From San Juan to New York: The History of the Puerto Rican". America: History and Life. 31.
  • Sánchez González, Lisa (2001). Boricua Literature: A Literary History of the Puerto Rican Diaspora (New York: New York University Press).
  • Shaw, Wendy (1997). "The Spatial Concentration of Affluence in the United States," The Geographical Review 87 (October): 546–553.
  • Torres, Andres. (1995). Between Melting Pot and Mosaic: African Americans and Puerto Ricans in the New York Political Economy (Philadelphia: Temple University Press).
  • Torres, Andrés and José E. Velázquez (eds) (1998). The Puerto Rican Movement: Voices from the Diaspora (Philadelphia: Temple University Press).
  • Vargas and Vatajs -Ramos, Carlos. (2006). Settlement Patterns and Residential Segregation of Puerto Ricans in the United States, Policy Report, Vol. 1, No. 2 (New York: Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños, Hunter College, Fall).
  • Wakefield, Dan. Island in the City: The World of Spanish Harlem. New York: Houghton Mifflin. 1971. Ch. 2. pp. 42–60.
  • Whalen, Carmen Teresa (2001). From Puerto Rico to Philadelphia: Puerto Rican Workers and Postwar Economics (Philadelphia: Temple University Press).
  • Whalen, Carmen Teresa, and Víctor Vázquez-Hernández (eds.) (2006). The Puerto Rican Diaspora: Historical Perspectives (Philadelphia: Temple University Press).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.