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Current Issue #52
Vol 24, No. 1
For
texts of articles published within the past year, please contact us
(info@sdonline.org)
about buying a copy of the journal, or else
contact our publishers through their website: www.tandf.co.uk/journals
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Table of Contents
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52
(Volume 24, No. 1)
Cuban
Perspectives on Cuban Socialism
Preface
by
The Editors
Introduction, by Alfredo
Prieto
Rafael Hernández, Revolution/Reform and Other Cuban
Dilemmas
Juan Valdés Paz, Cuba: The Left in Government,
1959-2008
Emilio Duharte Díaz, Cuba at the Onset of the
21st Century: Socialism, Democracy, and Political Reforms
Omar Everleny Pérez Villanueva and Pavel
Vidal Alejandro, Cuba’s Economy: A Current Evaluation
and Several Necessary Proposals
Mayra Espina, Looking at Cuba Today: Four Assumptions
and Six Intertwined Problems
María del Carmen Zabala Argüelles, Poverty
and Vulnerability in Cuba Today
Marta Núñez Sarmiento, Cuban Development
Strategies and Gender Relations
Aurelio Alonso, Religion in Cuba’s Socialist
Transition
Rodrigo Espina Prieto and Pablo Rodríguez
Ruiz, Race and Inequality in Cuba Today
Notes on Contributors

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Notes on Contributors
Marcella Bencivenni is an Assistant Professor of
History at Hostos Community College of the City University of New York,
and a member of S&D editorial board. She has written several articles
and book reviews on issues related to Italian American history and American
radicalism, and is currently completing a book entitled Italian Immigrant
Radical Culture: The Sovversivi in the United States, 1890s-1940s
for New York University Press.
<mbencivenni@hostos.cuny.edu>
Mat
Callahan is a musician and author from San Francisco who currently
resides in Bern, Switzerland. His musical work includes award-winning
albums and collaborations such as founding legendary artists' collective
Komotion International. He is the author of numerous books and articles,
most recently The Trouble with Music (AK Press, 2006).
<www.matcallahan.com>;
<info@matcallahan.com>
Susan
J. Dicker is Associate Professor of English at Hostos Community
College, CUNY. She is the author of Languages in America: A pluralist
view (Multilingual Matters Ltd.), as well as numerous articles on
multilingualism in the United States. <susied@msn.com>
Kim Geron is Associate Professor of Political Science
at California State University. He studies issues of race, labor, and
social movements. His current book project, The Snake Dance of Asian
American Activism: Community, Vision, and Power in the Struggle for Social
Justice 1945-2000, co-authored with Michael Liu and Tracy Lai (Lexington
Books, 2008), uses social movement theory to analyze the rise of Asian
American activism in the late 1960s. <kim.geron@csueastbay.edu>
Ron Hayduk teaches political science at the Borough of
Manhattan Community College of the City University of New York. He is
the author of Democracy for All and Gatekeepers to the Franchise,
and is co-editor of Democracy’s Moment and From ACT
UP to the WTO, and Socialism and Democracy's special issue
on Race (no. 33). He is Co-Director of the Immigrant Voting Project. <www.ronhayduk.com>
Hugh Hamilton is a professional journalist of wide-ranging
experience spanning some two decades in both print and broadcast media.
He has traveled extensively on assignment in various parts of the world
and for several years combined his journalistic expertise with a parallel
career in legislative advocacy and community development for the New York
City Council. He was born in Guyana and migrated to the United States
in 1988. <talktohugh@aol.com>
John A Imani has been an anarcho-communist activist for
forty years. He is a former teacher in the Los Angeles public schools
who single-parented two daughters from the ages of 14 and 6 to adulthood
and is the originator of a theater company "The Conspiracy of Equals"
that, since its founding in 1995, has produced and staged ten original
productions and over 100 performances. <johnaimani@earthlink.net>
Robin Jacobson is Professor of Political Science at Bucknell
University. She studies issues of social justice and social movements,
and the politics of race and immigration. Her book The New Nativism
(University of Minnesota Press, 2008) explores the Right’s impact
on immigration politics by looking at the nativist movement in California
in the mid-1990s. <rjacobso@bucknell.edu>
Susanna Jones is assistant professor and coordinator
of the undergraduate social work program at Long Island University, Brooklyn.
She is the co-author of “Transnational Social Work: Using a Wraparound
Model” in Global Networks: A Journal of Transnational Affairs
(2008), and is the author of several forthcoming articles about the
challenges facing immigrants, particularly the undocumented. <susanna.jones@liu.edu>
Stefano Luconi teaches US history at the University of
Padua and specializes in Italian immigration to the United States. His
books include From Paesani to White Ethnics: The Italian Experience
in Philadelphia (2001) and The Italian-American Vote in Providence,
Rhode Island, 1916-1948 (2004). <Stefano_Luconi@yahoo.com>
D.H. Melhem’s seven books of poetry include New
York Poems, Conversation with a Stonemason, Country,
and Rest in Love. Notes on 94th Street was the first poetry book
in English by an Arab American woman. Her critical works include Gwendolyn
Brooks and Heroism in the New Black Poetry, which won an American
Book Award. Stigma & The Cave (2007) completed her fiction
trilogy Patrimonies. She received the RAWI Lifetime Achievement Award
in 2007 and is vice-president of the International Women’s Writing
Guild. <www.dhmelhem.com>
Gerald Meyer is Professor of History (semi-retired) at
Hostos Community College of the City University of New York. He is the
author of Vito Marcantonio: Radical Politician, 1902-1954 (1989),
and co-editor with Philip Cannistraro of The Lost World of Italian
American Radicalism (2003). <GeraldJMeyer@aol.com>
Alicia Ostriker has published eleven books of poetry,
including The Volcano Sequence and No Heaven. Her poetry has
appeared in many journals and anthologies, and has been translated into
French, German, Italian, Chinese, Japanese, Hebrew and Arabic. Her critical
work includes Stealing the Language: The Emergence of Women’s
Poetry in America and For the Love of God: The Bible as an Open
Book. She lives in Princeton, is a Professor Emerita at Rutgers University,
and currently teaches in the low-residency Poetry MFA program of New England
College.
<www.rci.rutgers.edu/~ostriker/home.htm>
Héctor Perla Jr. is an Assistant Professor of
Latin American and Latino Studies at the University of California, Santa
Cruz and a visiting scholar at UC Berkeley’s Center for Latin American
Studies. He is currently finishing his book Revolutionary Deterrence:
U.S. Coercion & Transnational Resistance by Sandinista Nicaragua.
<hperla@uci.edu>
LaToya Tavernier is a doctoral candidate in sociology
at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. <latoyat@gmail.com>
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