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University of Miami

2009

Cuban

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Tension Under The Sun: Tourism And Identity In Cuba, 1945-2007, John Andrew Gustavsen Aug 2009

Tension Under The Sun: Tourism And Identity In Cuba, 1945-2007, John Andrew Gustavsen

Open Access Dissertations

My dissertation on Cuban tourism links political, economic, social, and cultural history to show how the development of tourism on the island between 1945 and 2007 has been crucial in helping to cultivate identities for Cuba and the Cuban people on multiple levels. I focus on three distinct periods - 1945 to 1958, 1959 to 1979, and 1980 to 2007. While significant shifts occurred within each of these three phases, this periodization best illuminates the relationship between tourism development and identity. The fall of the Soviet Union, for example, certainly altered the pace of the industry's growth. Arrivals soared beginning …


Cancer In The Florida Hispanic Diverse Populations, Paulo S. Pinheiro Apr 2009

Cancer In The Florida Hispanic Diverse Populations, Paulo S. Pinheiro

Open Access Dissertations

Cancer afflicts 1.4 million people in the United States annually. In 2007, 45.5 million Hispanics were the largest and fastest growing minority in the US. Although treated as a homogeneous group, Hispanics are different from cultural, socioeconomic and genetic perspectives. The cancer experience of Hispanic subpopulations has, thus far, been poorly described. The present dissertation focused on the descriptive epidemiology of Cancer in Hispanics in the US. We created and validated an algorithm, the Hispanic Origin Identification Algorithm (HOIA), to improve the assignment of ethnicity and Hispanic subpopulation. We applied the HOIA to the Florida incident cancer data of the …


Cancer In The Florida Hispanic Diverse Populations, Paulo S. Pinheiro Apr 2009

Cancer In The Florida Hispanic Diverse Populations, Paulo S. Pinheiro

Open Access Dissertations

Cancer afflicts 1.4 million people in the United States annually. In 2007, 45.5 million Hispanics were the largest and fastest growing minority in the US. Although treated as a homogeneous group, Hispanics are different from cultural, socioeconomic and genetic perspectives. The cancer experience of Hispanic subpopulations has, thus far, been poorly described. The present dissertation focused on the descriptive epidemiology of Cancer in Hispanics in the US. We created and validated an algorithm, the Hispanic Origin Identification Algorithm (HOIA), to improve the assignment of ethnicity and Hispanic subpopulation. We applied the HOIA to the Florida incident cancer data of the …