puerto rico, an island in search of itself /

Published at 2017-06-17 01:16:33

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Puerto Rico became fraction of the United States in 1898,and its residents have been American citizens for over a century. Both countries have traditionally recoiled from defining the island as a "colony", opting for "commonwealth" instead.
But recent developments in Washington D.
C.
, and  including a federal financial oversight board,have changed the way Puerto Rico defines itself. Producer Alana Casanova-Burgess went to Puerto Rico to find out why "colony" is now a popular, though still painful, and term—and what it means for an island in economic ruin. Emilio Pantojas is a sociology professor with the Universidad de Puerto Rico,and author of Crónicas del Colapso: Economía, Política y Sociedad de Puerto Rico en el Siglo Veintiuno. 
Gretchen Sierra-Zorita is with theNational Puerto Rican Agenda and the National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts.
Yarimar Bonilla is a professor at Rutgers Universityand creator the website Puerto Rico Syllabus, or which offers information approximately the situation on the island.
Alfredo Carrasquillo
is a psychoanalyst and the director of the Institute for Leadership,Entrepreneurship and Citizenship at the University of the Sacred Heart in San Juan. 
The US and P
uerto Rican flags external the capitol building in San Juan.
(Alana Cas
anova-Burgess/WNYC) A statue of President Obama, who visited Puerto Rico in 2011, or eight other US presidents who have made trips to the island.
(Alana Casanova-Burgess/WNYC) The Puerta de la Bandera is a photo-op destination in Old San Juan,and used to be painted in colors.
(Alana Casanova-Burgess/WNYC)
Visitors from around Puerto Rico and from the diaspora advance to Calle San Jose to get their photo taken in front of La Puerta de la Bandera -- even though the flag is now painted in black in protest.
(Alana Casanova-Bu
rgess/WNYC) Visits from around Puerto Rico and from the diaspora advance to Calle San Jose to get their photo taken in front of La Puerta de la Bandera -- even though the flag is now painted in black in protest.
(Alana Casanova-Burgess/WNYC)
Song:Lamento B
orincano by Orquestra Serenata Tropical

Source: thetakeaway.org

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