Publications

The CUNY Dominican Studies Institute has published notable texts in the field of Dominican Studies, among them books, research monographs, working papers and research briefs. Many of them are available for download, free of charge, while others are for purchase. Thank you for your support!

RESEARCH MONOGRAPHS

Ramona Hern谩ndez, Francisco L. Rivera-Batiz and Sidie S. Sisay. 

2023. 45pp.
This research report provides a comprehensive analysis of the current socioeconomic status of the Dominican population in Puerto Rico, examining changes over time using data from the U.S. Census for Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rico Community Survey.


Ramona Hern谩ndez, Francisco L. Rivera-Batiz and Sidie S. Sisay

2022. 82pp.
This research presents the first detailed study of the socioeconomic status of the Dominican population of the United States as we enter the second decade of the 2000s, using information provided by the American Community Survey, the Current Population Survey and the United States Census.


Paul Austerlitz

2022. 44pp.
This monograph examines manifestations of Afro-Dominican music, dance, and spirituality in the Dominican Republic and in the United States serving as a powerful counter-narrative of blackness asserting Dominicans鈥 valorization of their negritude.


Ramona Hern谩ndez, Pedro Ortega, Nancy Sohler and Sarah Marrara

2022. 32pp.
The first research study to examine the experience of people of Dominican origins residing in the United State amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. It is based on a survey with a probabilistic and representative sample of 794 people of Dominican descent across the seven states in which the majority鈥85%鈥攐f Dominicans living in the U.S. resided at the time of the study.


Anthony Stevens-Acevedo

2019. 65pp.
This volume disseminates for the first time ever a full English translation of a seminal document in the history of Black people in the Americas: the January, 1522 鈥渙rdinances on slaves and blacks鈥 issued by the colonial government of La Espa帽ola or Santo Domingo (known in English as Hispaniola), the first post-1492 European settlement in the Americas and, at the same time, the first black-majority society in the modern Americas and the ancestor society of what is today the Dominican Republic.


Ramona Hern谩ndez and Sarah Marrara
 
2015. 24pp.
The aim of the study is to document internal migration patterns of Dominicans in the U.S., comparing international migrants and domestic migrants.


Anthony Stevens-Acevedo, Tom Weterings and Leonor 脕lvarez Franc茅s

2013. 65pp.
This study offers a historical overview of the little-known story of Juan Rodriguez, a dark-skinned free man from the Spanish colony of La Espa帽ola (today the Dominican Republic and the Republic of Haiti) who arrived in the Hudson Harbor in 1613 on board a Dutch ship and stayed there until at least 1614.

Versi贸n en espa帽ol: . Publicado en colaboraci贸n con el Archivo General de la Naci贸n. Santo Domingo, Rep煤blica Dominicana, 2014.


Raymond Torres-Santos

2013. 19pp.
This research monograph offers a brief historical account about the development of merengue in the Dominican Republic from the late 1800鈥檚 to the present.


Silvio Torres-Saillant

2012. 64pp.
This seminal study is a reflection on the complexity of racial thinking and racial discourse throughout the history of the Dominican Republic. It discusses how Haiti, the U.S., and the brutal legacy of colonialism have had an impact on what it means to be black within the Dominican Republic.


Ramona Hern谩ndez and Pedro Ortega

2010. 33pp.
This study provides the first analysis of the findings from a survey of 636 persons of Dominican descent residing in Manhattan and the Bronx. The survey was conducted in collaboration with the Survey Research Unit of Baruch College. In the survey, heads of households were interviewed about everyday life issues. The study was released on December 1, 2010 at Fundaci贸n Global Democracia y Desarrollo in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.


Ramona Hern谩ndez, Lincoln Restler and Greysi Peralta

2010. 59pp. 
The aim of the study was to enhance understanding of the fiscal habits and financial literacy of Dominicans in the New York City area and to produce data that can be used to compare the experiences of Dominicans with other Latino communities in the United States. In addition, this study seeks to inform policy makers and community leaders in designing approaches that will effectively address financial asset building and management within the Dominican community. The study relied on a survey conducted with 613 persons of Dominican descent.


Jorge Duany

2008. 70pp. (Second edition with an updated and expanded introduction). (First edition: Released in 1994. 54 pp.)
This field research study of ethnic identity, popular culture, and everyday life of the Dominican community of Washington Heights examines the social adaptation of Dominican immigrants to the host country.


Melissa Madera

2008. 24pp. 
This is an introduction to the study of public health during the dictatorship of Rafael Leonidas Trujillo Molina (1930-1961). The essay shows how the dictatorship sought to advance the regime's agenda of patriarchal modernity making women responsible for the health of the nation. The essay extensively cites issues of the periodical publication Previsi贸n Social.  


Rosie M. Soy and Stefan Bosworth
.
2008. 50pp.
This study explores the struggle of Dominican women to access formal education and the impact of such access in their lives and on their own perceptions of their experiences. The essay captures the voices of female members of three generations of Dominican immigrant families in New York City.


Ramona Hern谩ndez and Anthony Stevens-Acevedo

2004. 56pp.
A joint publication with the Fundaci贸n Global Democracia y Desarrollo, this study details the status of the Dominican student population in New York City, drawing mostly on data from the 2000 U.S. Census and from the Office of Institutional Research of the City University of New York. CUNY is one of the largest public, urban universities in the United States.


Ramona Hern谩ndez and Francisco Rivera-Batiz

2003. 73pp. 
This study provides a statistical account of the situation of Dominicans living in the United States using the 1990 U.S. Census data.


Sarah Aponte

1999. 178pp. 
This is an annotated listing of books, scholarly articles, and chapters on Dominican migration providing an important reference guide for the study of Dominican migration from the 1970s to 1997 (with a 1998 addendum).


Luis Alvarez-L贸pez, Jean Weisman, Sherrie Baver, Ramona Hern谩ndez and Nancy L贸pez

1997. 78pp. 
This collection of bibliographies, research reports, listings of resources, and discussions of research question, gathers the results of various projects sponsored by the Dominican Studies Institute.


Ramona Hern谩ndez and Francisco Rivera-Batiz

1997. 72pp.
This study details the socioeconomic status of the Dominican population in New York City during the 1990s, drawing mostly on 1996 data provided by the U.S. Current Population Survey.


Norberto James

1998. 78pp.
This Directory provides a list of US-based scholars working on Dominican topics.


Ramona Hern谩ndez, Francisco Rivera-Batiz and Roberto Agodini

1995. 56pp. 
Published in collaboration with the Institute for Urban and Minority Education (IUME) at Teachers College, Columbia University, this is the first academic effort to provide a statistical account, using the 1980 and 1990 U.S. Census data, of the current situation of Dominicans living in New York.


BOOKS

Cover of "Las Novedades"

Sarah Aponte
La presencia dominicana en el peri贸dico Las Novedades, 1876-1918: De breve menci贸n a propietarios en la ciudad de Nueva York
2022, 482pp. 

Published in collaboration with Biblioteca Nacional Pedro Henr铆quez Ure帽a, Dominican Republic. This book compiles and describes the writings of Dominicans published between 1876-1918 in Las Novedades: Espa帽a y los Pueblos Hispano-americanos, a Spanish newspaper printed in New York City.  Las Novedades was founded by Spaniards and later bought by Dominicans who published the periodical until its disappearing. This book delivers the first comprehensive compilation and annotation of the contents published in Las Novedades under the ownership of Dominicans. Conceived as a cultural publication, Las Novedades ended up covering much more, and its contents offer a window through which one can visualize everyday-issues involving Latin American societies and Latinos in the U.S. in the first two decades of the 20th century.

To purchase this publication, please . 


Cover of "La rebeli贸n de los esclavos"

Anthony Stevens-Acevedo 

2022, 145pp. 

Published in collaboration with Instituto Superior Pedro Francisco Bon贸 and Fundaci贸n Juan Bosch. This monograph analyzes the rebellion of enslaved Black people in La Espa帽ola in 1521 and the response to the insurrection by the Spanish colonial authorities in the form of ordinances specifically targeting the enslaved population. Both had no precedents in the Americas. The study is based on rigorous reading of primary archival sources from the period.

To purchase this publication, please .


Cover of "Decolonialidad..."

Pedro Jos茅 Ortega, Leopoldo Artiles and Carolina Armenteros, editors

2022, 330pp. 

Published in collaboration with Editora Global, Instituto Global de Altos Estudios en Ciencias Sociales, C谩tedra Unesco de Ciencias Sociales, Consejo Latinoamericano de Ciencias Sociales (CLACSO). This publication brings together essays examining the main critical currents that describe Latin American thought in the twenty-first century. The essays explore Latin America and the Caribbean from various theoretical perspectives, including decoloniality, post- development, anti-utilitarianism, post-structuralism, post-functionalism, trans-modernity, emancipation, and liberation.

To purchase this publication, please .


Espaillat, Rhina P. and Sarah Aponte

2015, 216pp. 
Published in collaboration with Biblioteca Nacional Pedro Henr铆quez Ure帽a, Dominican Republic. This is the first bilingual (Spanish and English) book containing the writings of Juan Pablo Duarte, the founding father of the Dominican Republic.

To purchase this publication, please .



2015. 114pp. 
The Dominican Blue Book features twenty-two outstanding and accomplished professionals with degrees from CUNY, the largest public urban institution of higher education in the United States, from which over forty-thousand people of Dominican descent have graduated at the time of the writing (2015). The present rendition of the Dominican Blue Book is an expression both of pride in the accomplishments of the Dominican people and of gratitude to the CUNY system, with hope and confidence that this mutually fulfilling relationship will continue.


Aponte, Sarah and Franklin Guti茅rrez
Autores dominicanos de la di谩spora: apuntes bio-bibliogr谩ficos (1902-2012)
2013, 430pp. 
Published in collaboration with Biblioteca Nacional Pedro Henr铆quez Ure帽a, Dominican Republic. Winner of the 鈥淛os茅 Toribio Medina Award鈥 SALALM (2014).This publication is a reference guide that documents Dominican writers who have published outside the Dominican Republic from 1902 to 2012. 


Saneaux, Sully and Ramona Hern谩ndez
La Rep煤blica Dominicana y la prensa extranjera: mayo 1961 - septiembre 1963 (Desde la desaparici贸n de Trujillo hasta Juan Bosch)
2013, 459pp. 
Published in collaboration with Biblioteca Nacional Pedro Henr铆quez Ure帽a, Dominican Republic. This volume details the global news coverage for the assassination of dictator Rafael Trujillo in 1961 and the coup de'etat of President Juan Bosch in 1963.


Daisy Cocco De Filippis

2000. 251pp.
This English-language compilation of essays, manifestos, and pronouncements by Dominican women provides an unprecedented source for the study of Dominican feminism.


Frank Moya Pons
The Dominican Republic: A National History 
1995. 544pp. (by Hispaniola Books is available as a reader's copy in our library).
This first major history of the Dominican Republic available in English in the United States in over 60 years is a chronicle of events in Dominican territory from pre-colonial times through the 1990s.


RESEARCH BRIEFS

Hern谩ndez, Ramona, Yana Kucheva, Sarah Marrara and Utku Sezgin

July 2018. 17pp.
This study sheds light on how demographic changes in Washington Heights and Inwood have created steeper prices within the neighborhood鈥檚 housing market, driving away Dominicans and other low-income groups that have historically called the area their home. It also offers recommendations on how this issue can be remedied for the betterment of the local population.


Hern谩ndez, Ramona, Sarah Marrara and Utku Sezgin
.
January 2018. 29pp.
This brief report is an introduction to the state of affordable housing in the Washington Heights/Inwood sector of New York City, historically a predominantly Dominican neighborhood.


Hern谩ndez, Ramona, Sarah Marrara and Utku Sezgin 
.
December 2016. 10pp.
This research brief offers a profile of the Latino population in Canada, with a particular focus on Dominicans, in an attempt to develop wider interest and more scholarly research on the subject.


WORKING PAPERS SERIES

Torres-Saillant, Silvio
.
2000. 41pp. 
This paper analyzes the Dominican diaspora discussing the two main lineage of analyses: those that privilege stress community formation and those based on transnational interaction.


Cocco de Filippis, Daisy, ed.
.
1999. 94pp.
These are the proceedings from a major Dominican literature conference reflecting on the state of Dominican letters in the native land and in the diaspora, and on the prospects of Dominican writers for the new millennium.


D谩vila-Mendoza, Dora

1999. 62pp. 
This is a study of the social actions of women in 18th Century Santo Domingo.


Villam谩n-Matos, Maitreyi. 
 
1999. 36pp. 
This is a preliminary study of Fiestas de Cruz (Feast of the Holy Cross) in the Dominican Republic.

Last Updated: 04/10/2025 14:25