Florida and the Mariel Boatlift of 1980
360 pages, 6 x 9
27 B&W illustrations
Hardcover
Release Date:30 Jul 2014
ISBN:9780817318376
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Florida and the Mariel Boatlift of 1980

The First Twenty Days

University of Alabama Press
Winner of the Florida Historical Society's 2015 Stetson Kennedy Award

The 1980 Mariel Boatlift was a profound episode in twentieth-century American history, impacting not just Florida, but the entire country. During the first twenty days of the boatlift, with little support from the federal government, the state of Florida coordinated and responded to the sudden arrival in Key West of more than thirty thousand Cuban refugees, the first wave of immigrants who became known as “Marielitos.”
 
Kathleen Dupes Hawk, Ron Villella, Adolfo Leyva de Varona, and Kristen Cifers combine the insights of expert observers with the experiences of actual participants. The authors organize and present a wealth of primary sources, first-hand accounts, archival research, government records, and interviews with policy-makers, volunteers, and refugees that bring into focus the many far-reaching human, political, and cultural outcomes of the Mariel Boatlift that continue to influence Florida, the United States, and Cuba today.
 
Emerging from these key records and accounts is a grand narrative of high human drama. Castro’s haphazard and temporary opening of Cuba spurred many thousands of Cubans to depart in calamitously rushed, unprepared, and dangerous conditions. The book tells the stories of these Cuban citizens, most legitimately seeking political asylum but also including subversive agents, convicted criminals, and the mentally ill, who began arriving in the US beginning in April 1980. It also recounts how local and state agencies and private volunteers with few directives or resources were left to improvise ways to provide the Marielitos food, shelter, and security as well as transportation away from Key West.
 
The book provides a definitive account of the political, legal, and administrative twists on the local, state, and federal levels in response to the crisis as well as of the often-dysfunctional attempts at collaboration between governmental and private institutions. Vivid and readable, Florida and the Mariel Boatlift of 1980 presents the significant details that illuminate and humanize this complex humanitarian, political, and logistical crisis. 
Beyond the value of this book as a contribution to the field of migration studies and Cuban studies, it becomes a relevant text in the context of the reestablishment of diplomatic relations between Cuba and the United States. The book is also pertinent to the current role of citizens, local communities and volunteer organizations in the social shaping of immigrant subjects, and within more encompassing, present-day debates on immigration in the United States. Just as this book has accomplished, future studies on Cuban migration must reconsider oral histories as key research sources, even when these personal stories must exist, paradoxically, in the excessively restricted language and format of academic publications. But perhaps Florida and the Mariel Boatlift of 1980: The First Twenty Days suggests that research practices and academic writing are evolving, along with more creative ways of reaching the reading public.'
Cuba Counterpoints
The significant contribution of this book is precisely the unique and original description of what was going on in the field day by day by all the characters involved. I do not believe this particular story has been told before. This book documents a vital moment in Florida history.’
Yolanda Prieto, author of The Cubans of Union City: Immigrants and Exiles in a New JerseyCommunity

‘The Mariel Boatlift, as reported by Ron and Kate, is a compelling story that had to be told. It was history in the making and these two individuals lived it from the first moment. The story of the boatlift is complex. It is a tale of local, state, and federal officials struggling to respond to the unexpected. It has political intrigue, both in the covert activities taking place with the boatlift and in the chaos that followed. Ultimately, the boatlift is a tale of compassion. . . . The people who spent those first twenty days on the front lines of history represented public service at its best. For me, it was an honor to have worked with them and to have been part of the contribution they made to our state and country. This volume is the latest extension of their contribution and helps chronicle a vital moment in Florida history.’
—From the Foreword by Florida governor and United States senator Bob Graham
Kate Dupes Hawk has published articles on medical history and the Mariel Boatlift. She has developed three museums for the Florida National Guard Historical Foundation and was awarded the Commander’s Award for Civilian Service medal for her work on the Camp Blanding, Florida, Museum of World War II. Ron Villella retired as vice-president of Smith, Bryan & Myers, a lobbying firm in Tallahassee, Florida. He served as Florida Governor Bob Graham’s first director of administration. Adolfo Leyva de Varona is an associate professor at Florida State University-Panama in the Republic of Panama, where he teaches international relations and Latin American history. He is the author of Cuba: Assessing the Threat to U.S. Security and Propaganda and Reality: A Look at the U.S. Embargo against Castro's Cuba. Kristen Cifers is the executive editor and co-owner of Florida Media, Inc., where she has edited and published Florida Monthly Magazine, Florida Living, Florida Parks & Wildlife, Florida Fishing & Boating, and other periodicals.
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