Book Conversation with Emma Amador

Join us for a conversation between historians Emma Amador and Cecilia Márquez. Drawing from her new book The Politics of Care Work (Duke University Press), Amador will explore how Puerto Rican women organized for social and economic justice through care work, both on the island and in the continental U.S., from the early 20th century to the present.


A conversation with Emma Amador and Cecilia Márquez
Drawing from Amador’s book The Politics of Care Work: Puerto Rican Women Organizing for Social Justice (Duke University Press)

Wednesday, October 8 · 5:00–6:30 PM ET
Ahmadieh Family Lecture Hall, Smith Warehouse, Bay 4

Join us for a critical conversation on how Puerto Rican social workers, caregivers, and community organizers fought for reproductive labor to be recognized and valued, and how their efforts helped shape social welfare, civil rights, and migrant justice movements across Puerto Rico and the United States. Amador and Márquez will trace how Puerto Rican women’s labor and activism forged enduring infrastructures of care in the face of racialized capitalism, migration, and political exclusion.

🍽 A light dinner will be served. To RSVP, please email revaluingcarelab@duke.edu

Co-sponsored by the Franklin Humanities Institute, the History Hub, the Program in Latino/a Studies in the Global South (LSGS), and Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies (GSF)


Full Description of the Book
In The Politics of Care Work, Emma Amador tells the story of Puerto Rican women’s involvement in political activism for social and economic justice in Puerto Rico and the United States throughout the twentieth century. Amador focuses on the experiences and contributions of Puerto Rican social workers, care workers, and caregivers who fought for the compensation of reproductive labor in society and the establishment of social welfare programs. These activists believed conflicts over social reproduction and care work were themselves high-stakes class struggles for women, migrants, and people of color.

In Puerto Rico, they organized for women’s rights, socialism, labor standards, and Puerto Rican independence. They continued this work in the United States by advocating for migrant rights, participating in the civil rights movement, and joining Puerto Rican-led social movements. Amador shows how their relentless efforts gradually shifted the field of social work toward social justice and community-centered activism. The profound and enduring impact of their efforts on Puerto Rican communities underscores the crucial role of Puerto Rican women’s caregiving labor and activism in building and sustaining migrant communities.


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