The Politics of Language in Puerto Rico. By Amilcar Antonio Barreto. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2001. 221p. $55.00
Steve C. Ropp
American Political Science Review, 2002, vol. 96, issue 2, 415-416
Abstract:
Puerto Rico has often fallen between the cracks of the subfloor that undergirds not only the study of American politics but also the field of political science in general. Although it has certain nation state-like properties, the fact that it is not a nation state de jure means that those who study international and inter-American relations have given it little attention. This also holds true for Latin American comparativists, who treat it as one of the many small and nonindependent territories that dot the Caribbean. If it had been incorporated into the federal structure of the United States, it would be studied by those within the field of American government who focus on comparative state politics. But its special status as a semiautonomous commonwealth prevents this from happening.
Date: 2002
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