
DBA Events
Dear Members and Friends:
We are excited to announce that this year we will be holding our annual Judiciary Night at Brooklyn Law School. We thank Brooklyn Law's Latin American Law Students Association for co-hosting this event. The event will be held February 29, 2012, see below for details.
Bianka Perez Vega, President
Dominican Bar Association, Inc.
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DBA’s Upcoming Events
…
February 25, 2012
The Dominican Bar Association together with NALEO Educational Fund invite you to NALEO's first Citizenship Application Assistance Workshop of 2012 on Saturday, February 25, 2012 in Washington Heights, NY from 10:00am-3:00p.m.
Location to follow.
Volunteer to help the applicants, Jennifer Gomez, Board Member.
February 29, 2012
The Dominican Bar Association together with the Latino Law Students Association at Brooklyn Law School cordially invite you to join us in our annual Judiciary Night
Date: February 29, 2012,
Time: 6:000pm-8:00pm,
Place: 250 Joralemon Street, Subotnick Center, 10th Floor, Brooklyn, New York.
Honorees:
Hon. Nelson Roman, Appellate Division, 1st Dept.
Hon. Carmen Velasquez, Civil Court of the City of NY, Queens County
Please RSVP at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Non-DBA Events where membership is invited to attend
February 19, 2012
NDAC/DANR RESERVA LA FECHA, FEBRERO 19, 2012, 12ava CONFERENCIA PARA ASUNTOS DOMINICANOS DE NEW JERSEY
Date: February 19, 2012, Time: 8:30am-4pm, Place: 123 Washington Street, Newark, New Jersey
Dominicanos en New Jersey: Contribución,
Participación y Apoderamiento Entre los oradores principales:
El Honorable Aníbal de Castro, Embajador de República Dominicana en EEUU
La Jurista Dominicana Julissa Reynoso, Deputy Assistant Secretary, U.S. Department of State
President Obama's nominee to serve as U.S. Ambassador to Uruguay
El Honorable Juan Pichardo Senador por El Estado de Rhode Island, el Primer Dominicano Electo a Una Legislatura Estatal en Los Estados Unidos
La Periodista Sara Pérez y entro otros, El Distinguido Empresario Frank Salado de Perth Amboy, NJ
Se estrenará el documental original: "Dominican Civilization: Diaspora e Identidad"
Para información e Inscripción: Institute for Latino Studies, Research & Development, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it Tel.: 973-345-3624
February 16, 2012 THE PUERTO RICAN BAR ASSOCIATION JUDICIARY NIGHT Date: February 16, 2012, Time: 6:30pm-9:00pm Location: Brooklyn Borough Hall, 209 Joralemon Street, Brooklyn, NY. Honorees: Hon, Edgardo Ramos, Hon. Analisa Torres, Hon. Betsy Barros and Hon. Laura Visitacion-Lewis.
February 22, 2012
THE NEW YORK CITY BAR ASSOCIATION EVENT "SHOW UP, SPEAK UP, AND STEP UP: 3 Leadership Strategies for Emerging Women Leaders".
Date: February 22, 2012, Time: 6:30pm-8:30pm Location: NYC Bar 42 West 44th Street, New York, New York.
No charge for this program, Register online at www.nycbar.org
May 3-4, 2012
- Naugatuck Valley Community College, the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute (CUNY DSI), the Office of Community Relations, Hostos Community College & the Latino Artist Round Table (LART) Invite you to join The 2012 Conference of the Dominican Studies Association "Moving Dominican Studies Forward…" Naugatuck Valley Community College, Playbox Theater, 750 Chase Parkway, Waterbury, CT 06708. The bi-annual interdisciplinary conference of the Dominican Studies Association (DSA) invites the submission of papers in any disciplinary area focusing on Dominican studies. The conference seeks to explore the multiple narratives documenting the life experience of the Dominican people in the United States. The conference welcomes papers that document new knowledge about Dominicans, for example papers that offer comparative perspectives with other groups, highlight women’s work in the making of the Dominican community, study the Dominican literary production in Spanish in the U.S., the interception of institutional and community politics, and the impact of the second and third generations in U.S. society. Presentations will be accepted in English or Spanish. Presentations in Spanish must be accompanied by a one-page summary in English of no more than 800 words to be made available during the conference. Please send an abstract for consideration to present at the conference to: Lissette Acosta Corniel at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it and to Dr. Eduardo Paulino at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . Proposals for presentations will be accepted until January 31, 2012. Lodging: A block of rooms has been reserved at a discounted price at Hampton Inn Waterbury (777 Chase Parkway, Waterbury, CT 06708, 866-539-0036) the official hotel of the conference. Seating is limited and people must register using the registration form above or calling at (212) 650-7496.
Registration for Bi-Annual Conference & Membership Rates for the DSA:
$10 - undergraduate students & community scholars
$25 - graduate students
$50 - faculty
$50 - administrators & professionals
Registration and membership dues provide travel stipends for students and community scholars who want to attend the conference but are unable to cover their expenses.
Payment may be made using the online payment processor in the registration above or by check or money order payable to:
CUNY Dominican Studies Institute
Please write "Dominican Studies Association registration fee" in the check’s memorandum section.
Mail payment to:
CUNY Dominican Studies Institute, The City College of New York, 160 Convent Avenue, NAC 4/107, New York, NY 10031
Free CLE Program/Trainings/Fellowship
Georgetown University's Center for Applied Legal Studies Fellowship Opportunity
Georgetown University's Center for Applied Legal Studies (CALS) is now accepting applications for its annual fellowship program in clinical legal education. CALS will offer one lawyer a two year teaching fellowship (July 2012 June 2014), providing a unique opportunity to learn how to teach law in a clinical setting. At CALS, two fellows and faculty members work as colleagues, sharing responsibilities for designing and teaching classes, supervising law students in their representation of clients, selecting and grading students, administering the clinic, and all other matters. In addition, the fellow will undertake independent legal scholarship, conducting the research and writing to produce a law review article of publishable quality. This fellowship is particularly suitable for lawyers with some degree of practice experience who now want to embark upon careers in law teaching. Most of our previous fellows are now teaching law or have done so for substantial portions of their careers. Since 1995, CALS has specialized in immigration law, specifically in asylum practice, and our docket focuses on presenting asylum claims in immigration court. Applicants with experience in U.S. immigration law will therefore be given preference. The fellow must be a member of a bar at the start of the fellowship period. The fellow will receive full tuition and fees in the LL.M. program at Georgetown University, and a stipend in excess of $53,000 in each of the two years. On successful completion of the requirements, the Fellow will be granted the degree of Master of Laws (Advocacy) with distinction. Recent holders of this fellowship include Mary Brittingham (1995-97), Andrea Goodman (1996-98), Michele Pistone (1997-99), Rebecca Story (1998-2000), Virgil Wiebe (1999-2001), Anna Marie Gallagher (2000-02), Regina Germain (2001-2003), Dina Francesca Haynes (2002-2004), Diane Uchimiya (2003-2005), Jaya Ramji-Nogales (2004-2006), Denise Gilman (2005-2007), Susan Benesch (2006-2008), Kate Aschenbrenner (2007-2009), Anjum Gupta (2008-2010) and Alice Clapman (2009-2011). The current Fellows are Geoffrey Heeren and Heidi Altman. The faculty members directing CALS are Philip Schrag and David Koplow. To apply, send a resume, an official or unofficial law school transcript, a writing sample, and a detailed statement of interest (approximately 5 pages) by December 1, 2011. The statement should address: a) why you are interested in this fellowship; b) what you can contribute to the Clinic; c) your experience with asylum and other immigration cases; d) your professional or career goals for the next five or ten years; e) your reactions to the Clinic's goals and teaching methods as described on its website; and e) anything else that you consider pertinent. Address your application to Directors, Center for Applied Legal Studies, Georgetown Law, 600 New Jersey Avenue, NW, Suite 332, Washington, D.C. 20001, or electronically to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
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ARTICLES OF INTEREST
For Many Latinos,
Racial Identity Is
More Culture Than Color
By Mireya Navarro
New York Times (January 13, 2012)
Every decade, the Census Bureau spends billions of dollars and deploys hundreds of thousands of workers to get an accurate portrait of the American population. Among the questions on the census form is one about race, with 15 choices, including "some other race."
More than 18 million Latinos checked this "other" box in the 2010 census, up from 14.9 million in 2000. It was an indicator of the sharp disconnect between how Latinos view themselves and how the government wants to count them. Many Latinos argue that the country's race categories - indeed, the government's very conception of identity - do not fit them.
The main reason for the split is that the census categorizes people by race, which typically refers to a set of common physical traits. But Latinos, as a group in this country, tend to identify themselves more by their ethnicity, meaning a shared set of cultural traits, like language or customs.
So when they encounter the census, they see one question that asks them whether they identify themselves as having Hispanic ethnic origins and many answer it as their main identifier. But then there is another question, asking them about their race, because, as the census guide notes, "people of Hispanic, Latino or Spanish origin may be of any race," and more than a third of Latinos check "other."
This argument over identity has gained momentum with the growth of the Latino population, which in 2010 stood at more than 50 million. Census Bureau officials have acknowledged that the questionnaire has a problem, and say they are wrestling with how to get more Latinos to pick a race. In 2010, they tested different wording in questions and last year they held focus groups, with a report on the research scheduled to be released by this summer.
Some experts say officials are right to go back to the drawing table. "Whenever you have people who can't find themselves in the question, it's a bad question," said Mary C. Waters, a sociology professor at Harvard who specializes in the challenges of measuring race and ethnicity.
The problem is more than academic - the census data on race serves many purposes, including determining the makeup of voting districts, and monitoring discriminatory practices in hiring and racial disparities in education and health. When respondents do not choose a race, the Census Bureau assigns them one, based on factors like the racial makeup of their neighborhood, inevitably leading to a less accurate count.
Latinos, who make up close to 20 percent of the American population, generally hold a fundamentally different view of race. Many Latinos say they are too racially mixed to settle on one of the government-sanctioned standard races - white, black, American Indian, Alaska native, native Hawaiian, and a collection of Asian and Pacific Island backgrounds.
Some regard white or black as separate demographic groups from Latino. Still others say Latinos are already the equivalent of another race in this country, defined by a shared set of challenges.
"The issues within the Latino community - language, immigration status - do not take into account race," said Peter L. Cedeño, 43, a lawyer and native New Yorker born to Dominican immigrants. "We share the same hurdles."
At a time when many multiracial Americans are proudly asserting their mixed-race identity, many Latinos, an overwhelmingly blended population with Indian, European, African and other roots, are sidestepping or ignoring questions of race.
Erica Lubliner, who has fair skin and green eyes - legacies of her Jewish father and her Mexican mother - said she was so "conflicted" about the race question on the census form that she left it blank.
Ms. Lubliner, a recent graduate of the medical school at the University of California, Los Angeles, in her mid-30s, was only 9 when her father died, and she grew up steeped in the language and culture of her mother. She said she has never identified with "the dominant culture of white." She believes her mother is a mix of white and Indian. "Believe me, I am not a confused person," she said. "I know who I am, but I don't necessarily fit the categories well."
Alejandro Farias, 23, from Brownsville, Tex., a supervisor for a freight company, sees himself simply as Latino. His ancestors came from the United States, Mexico and Portugal. When pressed, he checked "some other race."
"Race to me gets very confusing because we have so many people from so many races that make up our genealogical tree," he said.
Yet race matters. How Latinos identify themselves - and how the census counts them - affects the political clout of Latinos and other minority groups. Some studies have found that African-Latinos tend to be significantly more supportive of government-sponsored health care and much less supportive of the death penalty than Latinos who identify as white, a rift that is also found in the broader white and black populations.
This racial effect "weakens the political effectiveness of Latinos as a group," said Gary M. Segura, a political science professor at Stanford who has conducted some of the research.
A majority of Latinos identify themselves as white. Among them is Fiordaliza A. Rodriguez, 40, a New York lawyer who says she considers herself white because "I am light-skinned" and that is how she is viewed in her native Dominican Republic.
But she says there is no question that she is seen as different from the white majority in this country. Ms. Rodriguez recalled an occasion in a courtroom when a white lawyer assumed she was the court interpreter. She surmised the confusion had to do with ethnic stereotyping, "no matter how well you're dressed."
Some of the latest research, however, shows that many Latinos - like Irish and Italian immigrants before them - drop the Latino label to call themselves simply "white." A study published last year in the Journal of Labor Economics found that the parents of more than a quarter of third-generation children with Mexican ancestry do not identify their children as Latino on census forms.
Most of this ethnic attrition occurs among the offspring of parents or grandparents married to non-Mexicans, usually non-Hispanic whites. These Latinos tend to have high education, high earnings and high levels of English fluency. That means that many successful Latinos are no longer present in statistics tracking Latino economic and social progress across generations, hence many studies showing little or no progress for third-generation Mexican immigrants, said Stephen J. Trejo, an economist at the University of Texas at Austin and co-author of the study.
And a more recent study by University of Southern California researchers found that more than two million people, or 6 percent of those who claimed any type of Latin American ancestry on census surveys, did not ultimately identify as Latino or Hispanic. The trend was more prevalent among those of mixed parentage, who spoke only English and who identified as white, black or Asian when asked their race.
James Paine, whose father is half Mexican-American, said it never occurred to him to claim a Latino identity. Mr. Paine, 25, the owner of a real estate investment management company in La Jolla, Calif., spent summers with his Mexican-American aunt and attends his father's big family reunions every year (his mother is white of Irish and French descent). But he says he does not speak Spanish or live in a Latino neighborhood.
"If the question is 'What's your heritage?' I'd say Irish-Mexican," he said. "But the question is 'What are you?' and the answer is I'm white."
On the other side of the spectrum are black Latinos, who say they feel the sting of racism much the same as other blacks. A sense of racial pride has been emerging among many black Latinos who are now coming together in conferences and organizations.
Miriam Jimenez Roman, 60, a scholar on race and ethnicity in New York, says that issues like racial profiling of indigenous-looking and dark-skinned Latinos led her to appear in a 30-second public service announcement before the 2010 census encouraging Latinos of African descent to "check both: Latino and black." "When you sit on the subway, you just see a black person, and that's really what determines the treatment," she said. The 2010 census showed 1.2 million Latinos who identified as black, or 2.5 percent of the Hispanic population.
Over the decades, the Census Bureau has repeatedly altered how it asks the race question, and on the 2010 form, it added a sentence spelling out that "Hispanic origins are not races." The change helped steer 5 percent more Latinos away from "some other race," with the vast majority of those choosing the white category.
Still, critics of the census questionnaire say the government must move on from racial distinctions based on 18th-century binary thinking and adapt to Americans' sense of self.
But Latino political leaders say the risk in changing the questions could create confusion and lead some Latinos not to mark their ethnicity, shrinking the overall Hispanic numbers.
Ultimately, said Angelo Falcon, president of the National Institute for Latino Policy and chairman of the Census Advisory Committee on the Hispanic Population, this is not just a tussle over identity, it is a political battle, too.
"It comes down to what yields the largest numbers for which group," he said.

