
Ronald Fernandez is an eloquent speaker on issues of race, ethnicity and legal and undocumented migration. His latest book is
America Beyond Black and White: How Immigrants Are Helping Us Overcome the Racial Divide (University of Michigan Press).
The book seeks a radical reconfiguration of the culture and it touches on a wide variety of hot button issues: legal and illegal immigration, race, ethnicity, and the very questionable value of assimilating into a culture that teaches newcomers to make skin color a key variable in self identification.
America Beyond Black and White focuses on the 50 million people in the United States who do not fit into the much-used black/white dichotomy, and that these "outsiders" underscore the need to reevaluate the discourse on the issue of race in U.S. society.
Fernandez is currently the Director of the Center for Caribbean Studies at a Connecticut University. His also speaks on the Caribbean. The New York Review of Books rates his book,
Cruising the Caribbean as one of the best in print and
The Disenchanted Island is regarded as a seminal analysis of the century long relationship between the United States and Puerto Rico.
Fernandez can offer first-hand insights on Vieques, Puerto Rican political prisoners and his travels in the Caribbean include Trinidad, Tobago, Barbados, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Grenada, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Cuba. On the latter, he speaks on race in Cuba and the questions of eliminating prejudice and institutional discrimination in Cuban society.