Huge congratulations to our Seminar Faculty Leader of the Puerto Rico Syllabus project and CUNY colleague Dr. Yarimar Bonilla who has been appointed interim Director of El Centro, The Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter/CUNY (el Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños)!
Click here to read Dr. Yarimar Bonilla’s statement accepting the Directorship of El Centro and regarding the path forward. You can write to Dr. Bonilla directly or join the community group #Community4CENTRO at [email protected] to stay informed of new developments.
Read more about this news story from Hunter College, CUNY below or here:
Hunter College President Jennifer J. Raab today announced the
appointment of Professor Yarimar Bonilla as Interim Director of El
Centro, The Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter/CUNY (el Centro de
Estudios Puertorriqueños). Dr. Bonilla, Professor of Africana &
Puerto Rican/Latino Studies in the Anthropology Department, will be the
first woman to head Centro in its 48-year-history. She will assume the
post following the retirement of longtime director Dr. Edwin Meléndez,
which takes effect June 30. Hunter will conduct a national search with a
diverse and inclusive search committee for a permanent director for El
Centro.
President Raab commented: “We are delighted that the highly
accomplished Yarimar Bonilla will be building on the legacy of Edwin
Meléndez to advance Centro’s mission in support of scholarship and
engagement on issues vital to Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rican diaspora.
“In Yarimar, we welcome a leader who has always combined scholarship
and activism in her work. She brings to Centro a deep understanding of
Caribbean cultures in general and the Puerto Rican community in
particular—and a commitment to research, educating students, utilizing
new technologies, and advocating around pressing issues on the island
and the mainland.”
Continued President Raab: “Edwin Meléndez has made an enormous impact
in his 13 years at Centro, leaving an admirable legacy on which Yarimar
and the Center can now build. On behalf of the entire college, I want
to thank Edwin for his remarkable achievements. We are delighted that,
following a well-deserved one-year sabbatical, he will return to
Hunter’s Urban Affairs and Planning faculty where he will continue his
vital efforts to study economic development and the process of recovery
in Puerto Rico.”
“I would like also to express special thanks to CUNY Chancellor Félix
V. Matos Rodríguez for his advice and support during this important
transition. As a former Centro director himself, the Chancellor has long
made the Center a high priority, and we are fortunate to have his
leadership and encouragement as we plan for its future.”
“I had the privilege of starting my CUNY journey at Centro and know
first-hand how unique Centro is and how crucial it is as a research and
archival anchor of the Puerto Rican experience in the U.S.,” said CUNY
Chancellor Félix V. Matos Rodríguez. “I want to thank Edwin for his
transformational work over the last 13 years and welcome a scholar of
the caliber of Yarimar as interim director. I am as committed to
Centro’s future today as I was in 2000 when I became its director and to
working with Yarimar and other Centro leadership during this time of
transition and opportunity leading to Centro’s exciting 50th anniversary
in 2023.”
“We are delighted that the
highly accomplished Yarimar Bonilla will be building on the legacy of
Edwin Meléndez to advance Centro’s mission in support of scholarship and
engagement on issues vital to Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rican
diaspora.”Hunter College President, Jennifer J. Raab
Dr. Bonilla, who joined the faculty in 2018, was born in
San Juan and spent part of her childhood in Topeka and Phoenix before
returning to Puerto Rico at the age of 12. She received her BA from the
University of Puerto Rico, an MA from the University of New Mexico, and a
PhD from the University of Chicago. She previously taught at the
University of Virginia and Rutgers. In 2018 she was named a Carnegie
Fellowship for her research on the social impact of Hurricane Maria in
Puerto Rico.
“I look forward to working through this moment of transition with the
different constituencies that Centro serves,” said Dr. Bonilla. “I am
proud to be part of the ever-evolving Puerto Rican community of New York
and excited to build Centro’s connections with its community roots.
Centro’s mission has never been more urgent as Puerto Rico faces the
compounding effects of economic, political, and environmental health
crises, which in turn reverberate across the diaspora. “Given that my
focus has long been on public-facing scholarship that pushes beyond the
confines of the academy, I am particularly eager to grow the
interdisciplinary scope of Centro. In particular, I want to create more
opportunities for artists to use the archives and develop their work in
dialogue with the CUNY community. I also want to forge partnerships with
our scientific community who have so much to tell us as we navigate a
post-disaster and post-pandemic future.”
Centro at Hunter College
Centro is the acclaimed CUNY research institute dedicated to the study,
interpretation, and preservation of the Puerto Rican experience in the
United States. Founded in 1973, the center conducts interdisciplinary
research and collects, preserves, and disseminates its incomparable
resources documenting Puerto Rican history and culture. Centro works to
share its collections and scholarship not only with researchers and
students at Hunter and around the world, but also with government
leaders and non-profit institutions in an effort and advance public
policy discussions and nourish social action.
Among other initiatives, the Center for Puerto Rican Studies (Centro de Estudios Puertoriquenos)
provides research grants and fellowships—including a Research Exchange
Program that has benefitted more than 100 resident scholars to
date—while offering an array of student internship opportunities. Centro
also maintains one of the most extensive Latino research libraries and
archives in the nation, the Evelina López Antonetty Research Collection,
in a state of the art facility at the Silberman campus. The archive
houses, among other highlight treasures, the archives of former
Congressmen Herman Badillo and Jose Serano as well as those of the
National Puerto Rican Coalition.
The Center also manages Centro Press, which has published 15 titles to date with more forthcoming; and issues the thrice-yearly Centro Journal,
which presents important scholarship on political economy, history, and
Puerto Rican migration and work, along with social policy analysis. In
addition, Centro has amassed and maintains a vast collection of oral
history (Centro Voices), which has conducted and archived more than 300
interviews; a data center housing information on Puerto Ricans
throughout the U.S.; and a video network (Centro TV) that has launched a
documentary series celebrating pioneers of the Puerto Rican diaspora.
Additionally, the Centro Digital Collections provide an unparalleled
resource for academics, researchers, students, genealogists, filmmakers,
and the community at large.
Dr. Yarimar Bonilla
Dr. Bonilla is a Professor in Hunter’s Department of Africana &
Puerto Rican/Latino Studies, and in the Anthropology Department at the
CUNY Graduate Center. She is an award-winning scholar and prominent
public intellectual, Dr. Bonilla is a major voice on issues of Caribbean
and Latinx politics. She has contributed to the New Yorker, the Nation, and the Washington Post, writes a monthly column called “En Vavién” for Puerto Rico’s newspaper El Nuevo Día, and is frequently heard on National Public Radio and television programs such as Democracy Now. Most recently, she contributed an episode to WNYC’S new bilingual radio series about Puerto Rico, La Brega.
She has written for scholarly journals on such subjects as the role
of digital protest in the Black Lives Matter movement, post-disaster
impacts in contemporary Puerto Rico, and anti-colonial labor struggles
in the French Caribbean.
She is the author of the books Non-Sovereign Futures: French Caribbean Politics in the Wake of Disenchantment (2015); Aftershocks of Disaster: Puerto Rico Before and After the Storm (2019); and the forthcoming Trouillot Remixed (2021). Her digital projects include Visualizing Sovereignty: Animated Video of Caribbean Political History,
which she co-designed, and the Puerto Rico Syllabus Project
(#PRSyllabus), which she co-created to provide an open access resource
for teaching and learning about the socio-economic crises affecting
Puerto Rico.
Dr. Edwin Meléndez
Dr. Meléndez, a long-respected specialist in Latino Studies, economic
development, poverty, and labor markets, is a Professor of Urban Policy
& Planning at Hunter. He is the author of 13 books, including State of Puerto Ricans (2017) and Puerto Ricans at the Dawn of the New Millennium (2014), both published by Centro Press, which he helped establish, and Latinos in a Changing Society
(Prager, 2017). In addition to his scholarship, Dr. Meléndez has a long
record of community and public service, having served as Chair of the
ASPIRA Association National Board, Vice President of the Board of
Directors of UnidosUS, and membership on the New York Hurricane Maria
Memorial Agenda, among other posts.
Dr. Meléndez will step down on June 30 after 13 years at the helm of
Centro where he was instrumental in growing Centro’s programs,
developing partnerships across the country, and strengthening Centro’s
outreach to disseminate research. He has also served on a number of
government task forces and commissions. Before joining the Hunter
faculty, he taught at the New School, the University of Massachusetts,
MIT, and Fordham.