Six on the shonda in Puerto Rico -- still!: Puerto Rican-Origin Children’s Living Arrangements; Protest Over Austerity Measures Ends in Tear Gas; NiLP Report: Statehood or Independence for Puerto Rico?; Post-Hurricane Puerto Rico Blackout Second-Largest in the World; Both Parties Are Missing the Boat on Florida's Newest Voting Bloc; Puerto Rico: Teachers Denounce Closing of 283 Public Schools
Protest in Puerto Rico Over Austerity Measures Ends in Tear Gas
Puerto Rico: Teachers Denounce Closing of 283 Public Schools
The move will leave just 828 schools open to serve 319,00 students on the island.
A Binational Perspective of Puerto Rican-Origin Children’s Living Arrangements: A Decade of Change and Migration in Puerto Rico and the United States, 2006 and 2015
Puerto Rican flags are now ubiquitous, they were banned from 1947 to 1956 under the Ley de la Mordaza, or gag law, along with all other expressions of nationalist sentiment..jpg
In Aguadilla, as in most of Puerto Rico, signs of the hurricane's wrath are still visible. About 100,000 households remain without power on the island.jpg