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

Part of the Studies in Legal History series
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'Almost Citizens' lays out the tragic story of how the United States denied Puerto Ricans full citizenship following annexation of the island in 1898.

As America became an overseas empire, a handful of remarkable Puerto Ricans debated with US legislators, presidents, judges, and others over who was a citizen and what citizenship meant.

This struggle caused a fundamental shift in constitution law: away from the post-Civil War regime of citizenship, rights, and statehood and toward doctrines that accommodated racist imperial governance.

Erman's gripping account shows how, in the wake of the Spanish-American War, administrators, lawmakers, and presidents together with judges deployed creativity and ambiguity to transform constitutional meaning for a quarter of a century.

The result is a history in which the United States and Latin America, Reconstruction and empire, and law and bureaucracy intertwine.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108244734 / 9781108244732
eBook (EPUB)
31/10/2018
English
355 pages
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