Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

Only a Few Blocks to Cuba : Cold War Refugee Policy, the Cuban Diaspora, and the Transformations of Miami, Hardback Book

Only a Few Blocks to Cuba : Cold War Refugee Policy, the Cuban Diaspora, and the Transformations of Miami Hardback

Part of the Politics and Culture in Modern America series

Hardback

Description

In Only a Few Blocks to Cuba, Mauricio Castro shows how the U.S. government came to view Cuban migration to Miami as a strategic asset during the Cold War, in the process investing heavily in the city’s development and shaping its future as a global metropolis. When Cuban refugees fleeing Communist revolution began to arrive in Miami in 1959, the city was faced with a humanitarian crisis it was ill-equipped to handle and sought to have the federal government solve what local politicians clearly viewed as a Cold War geopolitical problem.

In response, the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations, and their successors, provided an unprecedented level of federal largesse and freedom of transit to these refugees.

The changes to the city this investment wrought were as impactful and permanent as they were unintended.

What was meant to be a short-term geopolitical stratagem instead became a new reality in South Florida.

A growing and increasingly powerful Cuban community contested their place in Miami and navigated challenges like bilingualism, internal political disputes, socioeconomic polarization, and ongoing struggles and negotiations with Washington and Havana in the decades that followed.

This contested process, argues Mauricio Castro, not only transformed South Florida, but American foreign policy and the calculus of national politics. Castro uses extensive archival research in local and national sources to demonstrate that the Cuban diaspora and Cold War refugee policy made South Florida a key space to understanding the shifting landscape of the late twentieth century.

In this way, Miami serves as an example of both the lived effects of defense spending in urban spaces and of how local communities can shape national politics and international relations.

American politics, foreign relations, immigration policy, and urban development all intersected on the streets of Miami.

Information

Save 8%

£45.00

£41.25

 
Free Home Delivery

on all orders

 
Pick up orders

from local bookshops

Information

Also in the Politics and Culture in Modern America series  |  View all