The Archive of Hispanic Literature on Tape at the Library of Congress dates back to 1943. It contains nearly seven-hundred recordings of poets and prose writers participating in sessions at the Library’s Recording Laboratory and at other locations around Spain and Latin America.
Guest worker initiative program spanning 1942-1964, when millions of Mexican agricultural workers came to the US to work in more than half of the states in America
CHCI provides leadership, public service, and policy experiences to outstanding Latino/a/x students and young professionals, and convenes Members of Congress and other public officials, corporate executives, nonprofit advocates, and thought leaders to discuss issues facing the nation and the Hispanic community.
Hispano Music and Culture of the Northern Rio Grande: The Juan B. Rael Collection is an online presentation of an ethnographic field collection documenting religious and secular music of Spanish-speaking residents of rural Northern New Mexico and Southern Colorado.
Published since 1936 and edited by the Hispanic Division of the Library of Congress, this is a bibliography on Latin America consisting of selected works annotated by scholars in the social sciences and the humanities.
A non-governmental international organization that brings together research centers and graduate schools in the field of social sciences and humanities.
Search Harvard Widener Library Digital Collection for "scarce and unique pamphlets, primarily from Chile, Cuba, Bolivia and Mexico, published during the 19th and early 20th centuries."
Latino Stories was founded in 2006, making it one of the oldest sites dedicated to Latino literature and Latino studies. It was redesigned in 2020 with a mission to provide resources that provide real stories of Latino populations.
Managed by the Oxford School of Global and Area Studies. MOxLAD is a statistical series for more than forty economic and social indicators over the whole twentieth century, covering twenty countries in the region.
The digital collection Puerto Rico at the Dawn of the Modern Age: Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century Perspectives is one component of a collaborative project undertaken by the Library of Congress Hispanic Division and the National Digital Library Program to recognize the centennial of the Spanish-American War (1898).
The Tejano Voices Project focuses on one hundred seventy-six oral history interviews with Tejano and Tejana leaders from across the state conducted by Dr. José Angel Gutiérrez, associate professor of political science at the University of Texas at Arlington.
The Tomás Rivera Policy Institute works to address the challenges and opportunities of demographic diversity in the 21st century global city. The Institute is a special initiative of the Price Center for Social Innovation and produces original research, student activities, and policy solutions.