1937.
1937.
In Leif Jensen’s article, “Ethnic Identities, Language, and Economic Outcomes among Dominicans in a New Destination,” Jensen observes Dominican immigrants, who migrated to Reading, Pennsylvania from the Dominican Republic, and how they identify themselves in America. He and his fellow researchers start their observations by giving some of the Dominicans, in Reading, surveys about their homes, health, stress, migration history, and other things. They find that 7.6 percent of Reading’s population is Hispanic, which is double Harrisburg’s percentage (Harrisburg is the community with the next closest percentage of Hispanics). They also used open-ended questions concerning race to give the respondents the opportunity to indicate how they classify…
When you ask somebody where they from and they answer Dominican Republic, the first thing that comes to mind is the beach, spanish food, and their worldwide known music that truly identifies them: bachata. Bachata is a very popular type music, now known among all Latinos in the United States. Bachata comes from the bars and brothels of Santo Domingo and it still stands strong after more than 40 years. However, this music was not accepted in the Dominican Republic until about ten years ago.…
Alana Lujan Mr.Tuckerman English 3-4 16 December 2014 Alana Lujan - Dominican Republic In 1492 , Columbus explored the Dominican Republic on his first voyage in 1492. It was first named La Espanola and Columbus’ son Diego was the first viceroy. The capital of Dominican Republic, Santo Domingo , was founded in 1496 and is the oldest European settlement in the Western Hemisphere.…
The Dominican Republic wanted to distance them as much from Haiti as much as possible and wanted to make an image of them being Hispanic, Catholic and…
As Dominican, i know that I'm black, i don't deny my African roots. We all black someway somehow. The solution to what is going on in Dominican Republic and Haitia is not becoming one country. On the other hand is to actually stable a government in Haitia the is well develop. Instead of giving $, is to actually go there and building school and hospitals just like how the DOMINICAN REPUBLIC did when the earthquake happend. The constitution in the Dominican Republic (R.D) says that if you are born in D.R. and your mother or father is not Dominican you are not Dominican. Is not like here, if you are born in the USA then you are American (United States citizen). If the United States wants to make D.R. to change their constitution or to make the…
The island of the Dominican Republic is located in the Caribbean Sea, and its part of the West Indies. The Dominican Republic shares the land with Haiti and the entire island is known as Hispaniola. Hispaniola as it was called when Christopher Columbus discovered it, he discovered it on his first voyage in 1492. The founding of this island was very important to European settlers and it played a major part in the economic growth that Europe had when the new world was discovered. The agriculture that is part of this island has help establish an economic structure that has led the Dominican Republic become to what it is today.…
As suggested above, the first significant immigration from the Dominican Republic to the United States was in large part the product of political and social instability at home. Those who opposed or had reason to fear the new regime in 1965 and those who were fleeing violence throughout the 1960s came to the United States in notable numbers. As time went on, however, and the political situation stabilized, Dominicans continued to emigrate, because of limited employment opportunities and poor economic conditions. Studies have shown that those who emigrate are better educated than those they left on the island and were more likely to have been employed when they left the Dominican Republic. These urban, often professional migrants left the Caribbean to find better opportunities elsewhere (Sherri Grasmuck, "Immigration, Ethnic Stratification, and Native Working Class Discipline: Comparisons of Documented and Undocumented Dominicans," International Migration Review, Volume 18, No. 3, 1984, p.…
The first reason that people came to the colonies was for religious freedom. Because in England, if you did not follow The Church of England’s beliefs you would get either get kicked out of England, or you would be killed. Groups like the Quakers came to Pennsylvania, the Puritans settled in Massachusetts, And the Pilgrims settled in Massachusetts. The second reason is for money (and/or economy). The Spanish colonists came to the Americas looking for gold and silver. Many people from England came to the Americas because their economy was unstable, and many people were in…
During the time period of the twentieth century in Europe and the Middle East there were significant changes occurring in major forced migration movements such as Muslims during the Balkan Wars and many Jews during World War II. ‘Superpower’s’ (or successful dominant European countries) citizens never migrating away from their homeland remained constant.…
What I have noticed from this reading and the internet was that in many parts of the world, prostitution is completely legal. Prostitution is commonly referred to the “world’s oldest profession”. It is something that undoubtedly does now and has always existed in every corner of the globe. My personal stance is that females, or males for that matter, should not be regulated or prohibited from selling their own bodies. It should be a moral, not a legal issue. Since, there is always an exchange of “currency “or “paso”any time two people date. So, in Sosua, Dominican Republic, clearly the law agrees with my stance. However, in the Domican Republic it is illegal to exploit into selling your body for sex. In other words, one cannot legally have a pimp.…
Considering the close proximity of Cuba to the United States, it indicates that there has always been migration between United States and Cuba. During the 1800’s, immigration had become very popular amongst Cuba and the United States. In the 1800’s Cuban merchants and businessmen generally conducted business, and casually visited United States on vacations, and vice-versa. But all that changed when Fidel Castro took over Cuba in 1959, hence, having a significant rise in immigration from Cuba to the United States. Over the years thousands of Cubans fleeing Cuba on makeshift boats has become a routine to the United States. But the most important of the Cuban migration has happened in the past 40 to 50 years. Since then there were 4 major migration movements that distinguish this particular migration movement from others.…
The island of Hispaniola, which Dominicans share with Haitians, is considered to be the cradle of blackness in the Americas. It was one of the first territories that colonizers brought African slaves to labor. Since then, there has always been a dispute between the two sides of the island. One side defending the ideology of European heritage while the other side stands to beliefs and practices of African descendants. There has always been a clear distinction, culture shock, different traditions and beliefs due to the divergence of ideologies that each country pursues. Dominican Republic is one of the most typical cases where a country generates, simultaneously, emigration and immigration. Apart from being a country of about 10 million people with a weak economy that has led to the exit and establishment of communities of millions of Dominicans in other parts of the world, particularly the United States and Spain, its insertion in the global market, openness to foreign investment and the…
Immigration is when someone moves from one country or region to a new foreign place. Such movement has been made by people from different continents, such as Europe, Asia, and Africa to the United States. The United States of America has been one of the largest countries throughout history to receive massive amount of foreigners from around the world. Some also migrate from many Latin countries including Mexico, Cuba, and the Dominican Republic, as mentioned in "Immigrants from the Dominican Republic in the United States" by authors Jeanne Batalova and Chiamaka Nwosu. Hispanics are one of the biggest immigrant groups in America and Dominicans are the fifth-largest Hispanic group throughout the states. The Dominican diaspora, the different methods…
America was built on immigration; Europeans came to America in search of a new life and the rest of the world followed. People came to America for all different reasons: to flee war, to escape oppression, to have a voice in the government, to worship freely, and to leave poverty behind. Little has changed in the past five hundred years; people are still coming to America in search of a new life. According to a Gallup survey reported by Jon Clifton between 2007 and 2012, 150 million adults wish to move to America. This number is 23% of the total 640 million who want to leave their country permanently (Clifton).…
They would walk miles to help their families, to have a happier life, to find work, and to be free. The Great Migration was a turning point for African American history. The Great Migration was “a movement of of African Americans from rural southern United States to north, northeast, midwest, and west of the United States”(Great Migration African American). “During this time six million African Americans migrated”(The Great Migration). This took place during the twentieth century 1910-1970.…