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Ted Henken
Assistant Professor of Sociology &
Black and Hispanic Studies

Baruch College, CUNY

Voice: 646 312-3888
Fax: 646 312-4461
Email: Ted_Henken@baruch.cuny.edu
Office: Room 4-284, 55 Lexington Avenue


Professor Henken earned his Master’s (1998) and Ph.D. (2002) degrees from Tulane University’s Stone Center for Latin American Studies (New Orleans), where he concentrated in the disciplines of Sociology, History, and Political Science. He also holds a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology from Holy Cross College (Worcester, MA).

At Baruch, professor Henken teaches introductory courses in Sociology and Latin American Studies, and upper level courses on Race and Ethnic Relations, U.S.-Latin American relations, Latin American Immigration to the United States, and in Cuban Studies.

Professor Henken’s current research deals with different manifestations of the changing nature of work, across national borders and outside state regulations. Apart from continuing his work on Cuba’s underground economy, he is undertaking a transnational study of the immigrant networks among the growing, yet understudied Mexican communities in the U.S. South (Baldwin County, Alabama). His future research plans also include comparative research among the newly arrived Mexican and the more established Cuban immigrant communities in the New York metropolitan area.

Henken’s Master’s thesis, “Cuban and Mexican Migration to the United States: Refugee Flows and Labor Migration in the Modern World System,” was partially based on interviews with Cuban and Mexican immigrants in the United States and their families at home in Cuba and Mexico.

His doctoral dissertation, “Condemned to Informality: Cuba’s Experiments with Self-employment during the Special Period” (completed in April, 2002), describes the recent growth of Cuba’s underground economy and the emergence of semi-legal, private, micro-enterprises on the island since 1993.

Before beginning graduate school in 1996, professor Henken worked as an English teacher in Guayaquil, Ecuador, and in Mobile, Alabama, resettling Cuban refugees through Catholic Social Services. Additionally, each summer for the past twelve years (1991-2003), he has worked with the Mexican immigrant community of Baldwin County, Alabama, in the capacity of teacher, social worker, and parent-involvement coordinator at La Casa de Amigos, a Head Start school for migrant children.

Professor Henken has traveled to Cuba numerous times since 1997 in order to conduct research and attend academic conferences. During the spring of 2001, he worked in Cuba for Tulane University’s Cuban Studies Institute as the in-country liaison and program coordinator. He has been a consultant on Cuba for the U.S. Department of State and has lectured widely on contemporary Cuban issues. Recently, Henken helped coordinate cultural exchanges between New Orleans and Cuba for the non-profit group, CubaNola Collective, bringing U.S. groups to the Havana Jazz Festival in December, 2002, and to Santiago de Cuba’s Carnival celebration in July, 2003.

Henken has published his research on Cuba’s underground economy in the journal Cuban Studies (2002) and in many volumes of Cuba in Transition, the journal of the Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy (ASCE). He has presented his research at the Cuban Research Institute’s Cuban and Cuban-American Studies Conference at Florida International University, at the Cuban Association of the United Nations Conference, in Havana, Cuba, and at many meetings of the Latin American Studies Association.

His publications in the field of international migration include an entry on “Immigration to Latin America,” in the Encyclopedia of Contemporary Latin American and Caribbean Cultures (Volume 2, pp. 753-754; Routledge: London, 2000) and a forthcoming entry on “Latin American Immigration in the United States” (co-authored by Héctor Cordero-Guzmán) in the Encyclopedia of Latinas and Latinos in the United States (Oxford: London, 2004). Finally, Henken has just co-authored a book review with Cordero-Guzmán of Beyond Smoke and Mirrors (2002) and Immigration Policy and the Challenge of Globalization (2002) to be published in the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management (Volume 23:1, Winter, 2004).




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