Susan Eva Eckstein is Professor in the Pardee School of Global Studies and the Sociology Department at Boston University. Specializing in social movements, rights and justice in, and immigration from, Latin America, she has single-authored, edited and co-edited nine books. She is the recipient of many fellowships, including from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and the Radcliffe Institute.
'Susan Eckstein has given the first comprehensive account of U.S. immigration policy’s treatment of Cubans, who for more than half a century enjoyed incredible privileges compared to other immigrants. Her account is an indispensable road map for understanding the growth of the Cuban diaspora in the United States and how it came to enjoy a powerful place in American politics.' William M. LeoGrande, American University 'A fascinating account of how Cuban immigrants’ success resulted from decades of policies that worked to their advantage. Eckstein also convincingly reveals how immigration policies do much more than regulate entrance and exit. They double as foreign policy and social welfare policy and once they are in place, they are very hard to reverse. Rigorously researched and historically grounded, this book adds a new, important twist to debates on why immigrant integration and social mobility come easily to some groups and evade others.' Peggy Levitt, Wellesley College and Harvard University 'In Cuban Privilege, Susan Eckstein lays bare the political origins of Cubans’ preferential access to immigration visas and federal entitlements in America’s Cold War politics, enabling them not only to create a prosperous economic enclave but also a potent electoral block that compelled successive governments to maintain and even expand their privileges over nearly six decades. After reading the book, one is compelled to ask not why other immigrants can’t be more like Cubans, but why the government can’t treat other groups like Cubans.' Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University 'Cuban Privilege is the story of how eleven presidents from Eisenhower to Obama accorded Cuban immigrants privileges denied to all other immigrants. By contrasting the different treatment afforded to Dominican and Haitian immigrants, Eckstein demonstrates the interplay of race, foreign policy and politics in our immigration system. A terrific history and sociology of immigration policy, this book is a window into the realities of America’s messy and unequal immigration policies. Must reading for the immigration expert and the general reader alike.' Mary C. Waters, Harvard University