Examination of the origin and evolution of academic exchange between Cuba and the United States, with emphasis on the period since 1959, reveals a close relationship between that exchange and both the conflict between the two nations and the development of Cuban studies in the United States. This review suggests the need for academics in the two countries to take steps to preserve what has been achieved and to pursue alternative means for continuing their cooperation.
2006 “Cuban Visas Memorandum, David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, Harvard University.” January. http://www.lasacubasection.org.
2.
Crahan, Margaret 1998 “U.S.-Cuban scholarly exchanges: the early history.” MS, Cuba Exchange Program, Johns Hopkins University.
3.
Domínguez, Jorge, Omar EverlenyPérez Villanueva, and Lorena Barberia (eds.) 2004The Cuban Economy at the Start of the Twenty-first Century. Cambridge: Harvard University, David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, distributed by Harvard University Press.
4.
Gunn, Gillian 1994 Paper presented to the MacArthur Foundation Workshop on Perspectives on Peace and Sustained Cooperation, Miami.
5.
Franklin, Jane1997Cuba and the United States. A Chronological History. Melbourne and New York: Ocean Press.
6.
León Rojas, Gloria 1998 “Reseña de un intercambio.” MS, Cuba Exchange Program, Johns Hopkins University.
7.
Linger, Eloise 2000 “Las ciencias sociales estadounidenses: beneficiarias de la Revolución Cubana.” In Rafael Hernández (ed.), Mirar el Niágara: Huellas culturales entre Cuba y los Estados Unidos. Havana: Juan Marinello Center for Research and Development of Cuban Culture.
8.
Martínez Reinosa, Milagros, Carmen Castillo Herrera, and Mayra Heydrich 2004 “Los programas de semestre de los estudiantes norteamericanos en la Universidad de La Habana.” Paper presented at the Twelfth World Conference on Comparative Education, Havana, October 25-29.
9.
McMurtrie, Beth2005“Study-abroad numbers rise.”Chronicle of Higher Education, November 8.
10.
Pastrana, Sergio Jorge2000“Las ciencias en Cuba y los Estados Unidos: encuentros y desencuentros.” In Rafael Hernández (ed.), Mirar el Niágara: Huellas culturales entre Cuba y los Estados Unidos. Havana: Juan Marinello Center for Research and Development of Cuban Culture.
11.
Price, Rachel and Eric Hershberg1999“Expanding U.S.-Cuban scholarly relations: The ACLS/SSRC Working Group on Cuba.”LASA Forum30 (2): 11-13.
12.
Smith, Wayne S. 1998 “Twenty years of keeping channels of communications open.” MS, Cuba Exchange Program, Johns Hopkins University.
13.
Stephenson, Skye 2004 “Policy winds and exchanges flows: forty years of US-Cuban academic and educational exchanges.” Paper presented at Twenty-fifth LASA Congress, Las Vegas.
14.
Strategic Task Force on Education Abroad2003Securing America’s Future: Global Education for a Global Age, 5-12. Washington, DC.
15.
Valdés, Nelson P.1995“Estudios cubanos en los Estados Unidos.”Temas, no. 2. http://www.nafsa.org/public_policy_document/study_abroad_1/securing_america_5_future.
16.
Weisman, Jean 1999 “The impact of the U.S academic community on U.S.-Cuba relations.” Paper prepared for the conference “Cuba-United States, 40 years of confirmation: Perspectives for the 21st Century,”Havana, December 16-18.
17.
Zaldívar, Andrés 1984 “Algunas consideraciones sobre el surgimiento y desarrollo de la cubanología.” MS, DISEU-UH, Havana.