Charles Venator-Santiago, Ph.D.

Associate Professor

  • Storrs CT UNITED STATES
  • Political Science and El Instituto

Dr. Venator-Santiago is an expert in US territorial law and policy with a focus on the history of citizenship

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Biography

Charles R. Venator-Santiago is an Associate Professor with a joint appointment in the Department of Political Science and El Instituto, Institute for Latino/a, Caribbean, and Latin American Studies. He teaches courses in the areas of legal and political theory, Latino/a and Puerto Rican politics, and public law.

He currently directs the Puerto Rico Citizenship Archives Project, the Puerto Rico Status Archives Project, and the American Samoa Nationality and Citizenship Archives Project.

He is also the Secretariat (Executive Director) (2017-2022) and Vice-President (2019-2020)/President (2021-2022) of the Puerto Rican Studies Association.

Areas of Expertise

Nation-State building in the Americas
Political Theory
Latino Politics
Puerto Rico/US Law Territorial Legal History
Public Law
Puerto Rican and Latino Studies

Education

University of Massachusetts at Amherst

Ph.D

Political Science

2002

Comprehensive Examinations: Public Law and History of
Political Thought Dissertation: Constitutional Interpretation and Nation-Building: Race and the Territorial Clause, 1787-1900
Chair: Roberto Alejandro

University of Massachusetts at Amherst

M.A.

Political Science

1996

Areas of Specialization: International Relations and Political Theory
Thesis: The Other Nationalists, Marcus Garvey and Pedro Albizu Campos
Chair: Dean Robinson

University of Massachusetts at Amherst

B.A.

Political Science

1992

Certificate: Latin American Studies

Affiliations

  • Law and Society Association (LSA)
  • American Political Science Association (APSA)
  • Puerto Rican Studies Association

Accomplishments

Outstanding Faculty of the Year

2012
Puerto Rican/Latin American Cultural Center, University of Connecticut

Media Appearances

The fierce fight to lead Puerto Rico

Politico  online

2023-11-28

Charles Venator-Santiago, associate professor in the University of Connecticut’s Department of Political Science and El Instituto: Institute for Latina/o, Caribbean and Latin American Studies, says González-Colón is seen as “a more palatable alternative to Pierluisi because she appeals to the type of loud or vociferous Puerto Rican who takes charge” and has a “sort of Trumpiest attitude in Puerto Rico … and it appeals to a lot of people in Puerto Rico.”

“She has a chance of winning because people don’t like the governor,” he says.

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Concerns prompt Hartford ballot change heading into Election Day

NBC Connecticut  tv

2023-11-02

A political science associate professor at UConn, Charles Venator Santiago, said this could discourage Latino voters from participating.

"Because it sends a message that they are not important," Venator Santiago said.

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Why Puerto Rico Is Adding ‘USA’ to Its Driver’s Licenses

New York Times  print

2023-10-08

Many residents of Puerto Rico have long viewed the island’s status as a colonial territory as untenable, debating the pros and cons of statehood, being a commonwealth and independence, said Charles R. Venator-Santiago, a professor of Latino politics and law at the University of Connecticut.

Puerto Rico has held six nonbinding plebiscites on whether it should become a state, most recently in 2020, when 52 percent of voters on the island endorsed the move. Turnout has often been low, amid boycotts by critics who support the status quo, or the smaller faction that seeks independence.

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Research Grants

Climate Change and Puerto Rican Migration to the City of Holyoke, MA

Massachusetts Vulnerability Preparedness Program Grant

2019
P.I.
$149,000

Survey on Impact of Post-Disaster Displacement on Puerto Rican Households in the Hartford Region

Hartford Foundation for Public Giving

2017-2018
P.I.
$47,281

Theorizing Catastrophe Working Group

University of Connecticut Humanities Institute (UCHI)

2017-2018
Small Grant (seed)
$800.00

Articles

US Territorial Citizenship Today: Four Interpretations

PS: Political Science & Politics

Charles R Venator-Santiago

2017
Questions about the citizenship status of people born in the US territories continue to be discussed in public debates. In 2007, Gabriel Chin (2008) questioned whether Senator John McCain, the Republican Party's presidential nominee, was a natural-born citizen, which is a constitutional requirement for eligibility to serve as the US president. Senator McCain was born on a US military base in the Panama Canal Zone, a leased and unincorporated territory located outside of the United States for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment.

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A Note on the Puerto Rican De-Naturalization Exception of 1948

Centro Journal

Charles R Venator-Santiago

2017
In 1948, Congress enacted corrective legislation amending the citizenship provisions of both the Jones Act of 1917 and the Nationality Act of 1940. Under prevailing naturalization laws, a person born in Puerto Rico who acquired a US citizenship under the terms of the Jones Act was given a naturalized citizenship status. It followed that Puerto Ricans, like other naturalized citizens, who continuously resided or worked outside of the United States for five or more years were automatically denaturalized.

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Mapping the Contours of the History of the Extension of US Citizenship to Puerto Rico, 1898-Present

Centro Journal

Charles Venator-Santiago

2017
The Jones Act of 1917 was neither the first nor the last law enacted by Congress containing a citizenship provision for Puerto Rico. Since annexing Puerto Rico in 1898, Federal lawmakers debated at least 100 bills containing citizenship, nationality, and naturalization provisions for the island's inhabitants.

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