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Anthony Stevens-Acevedo, Historian, former Assistant Director of the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute
In Dominican American Politics: Immigrants, Activists, and Politicians Jacqueline Jiménez Polanco presents the most complete narrative to date about Dominicans' involvement in U.S. politics. This is a mature writing by an author who has experienced, observed, and patiently studied the process of politization undertaken by the Dominican people in the United States. Jiménez Polanco's discussion brings attention to the relationship between the development of leadership and rooted, established communities on U.S. soil, and how both became stakeholders with whom the other ethnic and interest groups need to negotiate and reckon with. Taking into account Juan Rodríguez, Jiménez Polanco portrays the Dominican political leadership in the U.S. as decisive and assertive, conscientious and meticulous in demarcating and marking the spaces where it gravitates. This book goes through the politization of Dominicans with ease, from spontaneous community activism to formal organizing and recording, and the rise of electoral politics in Dominican-dominated spaces and beyond. In a challenging conclusion that seeks to materialize a tacit assumption, Jiménez Polanco argues convincingly that the ancestral land's steady and strong tradition of political involvement influenced the birth of Dominican political participation in the U.S.
Ramona Hernández, Professor of Sociology and Director of the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute