Carlos Figueroa

Associate Professor, Politics
School: School of Humanities and Sciences
Phone: 607-274-7381
Office: Muller Faculty Center 319, Ithaca, NY 14850
Specialty: U.S. Politics & Policy; Race, Religion, & Class politics; U.S. Quakerism; Afro American Politics; US-Puerto Rico policy; Public Leadership

General Biography:  Carlos Figueroa holds a dual Ph.D. in Political Science and Historical Studies from the New School for Social Research. He is an Associate professor of politics at Ithaca College (USA) who researches and writes on race, religion, and class politics, interpretative policy analysis, Public and Practical Leadership, the politics of Quakerism, U.S. Puerto Rico affairs, the Quakerism of Bayard T. Rustin, and his work has appeared in the Journal of Public Affairs EducationJournal of Race and PolicyPolitical Science Quarterly, Annales: Ethics in Economic Life, Fair Observer, Common Dreams, the University of Virginia PressKansas University Press, and Routledge Press

Figueroa is writing a book, Bayard T. Rustin: The Pragmatic Quaker, 1912 - 1987 (under contract, Palgrave MacMillan), that examines how and why Rustin's tacit pragmatic Quaker faith informed his political thought, organizing, and activism in the context of dealing with the various social injustices and inequalities facing working & poor people, and other marginalized groups in the U.S. and abroad during his 50-year public life.  Figueroa has recently published two chapters on the Pragmatic Quakerism of Bayard T. Rustin in The Quaker World, C. Wess Daniels and Rhiannon Grant, Editors, 1st edition (Routledge Press, 2022/2023).

He is also writing Quakers, Race, and Empire: Political Ecumenism and U.S. Insular Policy in the Early Twentieth Century, which shows how and why progressive era Quakers intervened in U.S. foreign policy debates, in particular, insular policy discourses over the organizing and governance of acquired territories (Puerto Rico and the Philippines), and the struggles for self-determination, and citizenship within the context of an expanding American empire from 1898 to 1917. 

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I teach courses at various levels: 100 (lectures), 300 (seminars), and 400 (seminars & tutorials), including -- U.S. Politics and Public Policy; The Politics of U.S. Citizenship; Social and Racial Justice Politics: Quakers in America; Afro American Politics and Political Thought; Faith & Race in American Political Life; Race, Class and the Geographies of Housing; and The Politics of U.S. Labor.  I am currently designing seminars (300 and 400 levels): 1) Faith, Labor Rights, and Bayard T. Rustin, 2) Puerto Rican Revolutionary Leader Pedro Albizu Campos, and 3) Public Leadership and Ethics

I also serve as the faculty advisor to Buzzsaw Magazine.

I am a First-Generation who holds a dual Ph.D. degree in political science and Historical studies from The New School for Social Research, an M.S. in General Administration from Central Michigan University, and a B.A. in Political Science from Fairleigh Dickinson University, Florham Park/Madison, N.J.  I have studied British politics, history, and literature abroad at Wroxton College in Oxfordshire, England (FDU), and democratic and constitutional theory at the Trans-regional Center for Democratic Studies (New School).  I have been active in working-class politics and labor organizing/collective bargaining since the early 1990s, which also informs my intellectual, research, and teaching work.

My expanded scholarly interests include studies in U.S. politics and policy developmentU.S. Quakers, race and citizenship; interpretive policy analysis (IPA); Afro-American politics and political thought; Latino/a politics in the U.S. & border studies; interpretive & qualitative methodology/methods; U.S. intellectual History; and public leadership (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7oafbLDV6X8).

My most recent publications (https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1972-2022): 

1) "The Duty to Resist: Bayard T. Rustin’s Pragmatic Quaker Faith" in Friends Journal:  https://www.friendsjournal.org/the-duty-to-resist/

2) Book Foreword to Surendra Bhana's The United States and the Development of the Puerto Rican Status Question, 1936 - 1968 (Kansas Press, 2021 [1975]): https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv1p2gkbn.4?refreqid=excelsior%3A6a81d53f5cde66c335dab3b5aae49e62&seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents

3) "Working-Class America Needs Real Change, Not Slogans":  https://www.fairobserver.com/region/north_america/carlos-figueroa-2020-us-presidential-election-donald-trump-joe-biden-working-class-americans-73991/?fbclid=IwAR0jZRiA_MqXeLFrIql_R26rz36nvbeGxYrFjoic1WjV4xW6BMuyeTCePpc

4) "The Puerto Rico Crisis:  A Reflection of a Flawed US Democracy"https://www.fairobserver.com/region/north_america/puerto-rico-us-territory-ricardo-rossello-world-news-34709/

Also published separately in Spanish at Revista Comun:  https://www.revistacomun.com/blog/la-crisis-de-puerto-rico-reflejo-de-una-democracia-estadounidense-defectuosa

5) "US Supreme Court and its educative role within a deliberative democratic system":  https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/annales/article/view/4440

6) "Developing Practical/Analytical Skills through Mindful Classroom Simulations for 'Doing' Leadership" https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15236803.2014.12001774 

One book project, Quakers, Race, and Empire:  Political Ecumenism and U.S. Insular Policy in the Early Twentieth Century, shows how and why progressive era Quakers intervened in U.S. insular policy discourses over the organizing and governance of acquired territories (Puerto Rico and the Philippines), and the struggles for self-determination, and citizenship within the context of an expanding American empire from 1898 to 1917.  For some aspects of this book's arguments, please see:  

"Quaker Political Interventions, and US Puerto Rico Policy Development, 1900 - 1917," The Journal of Race and Policy, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Spring/Summer 2015), pp. 36 - 54.

I am also working on several research studies on black gay Quaker labor and civil rights thinker & activist Bayard Rustin.  In February 2016, I gave an invited talk on Rustin at Illinois State as a University Speaker and as part of their Black History Month celebration.  Please listen to my National Public Radio (Normal, Illinois) conversation on Rustin and his Quakerism here (17 minutes): https://www.wglt.org/show/wglts-sound-ideas/2016-02-23/gay-civil-rights-leader-grounded-in-quaker-upbringing#stream/0.

Quoted in various places related to U.S. politics, race, class, and citizenship: 

https://mediainnovation.camd.northeastern.edu/2023/masters23/rajesh/

https://daily.jstor.org/adolph-reed-jr-the-perils-of-race-reductionism/

https://www.delish.com/food-news/a37544138/latinx-history-what-is-a-bodega/

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2020/11/01/no-mr-president-sanders-says-election-day-youre-not-standing-working-families

https://www.newstatesman.com/world/north-america/2018/09/hurricane-maria-may-have-been-us-s-deadliest-natural-disaster-ever-trump

https://depauliaonline.com/40698/nation/trump-foreign-aid-cuts-to-central-america-exacerbating-cycle-of-despair/

https://www.bupipedream.com/news/95036/students-discuss-implications-of-citizenship-question-on-2020-census/

Please read my critical commentary here:  

https://www.fairobserver.com/author/carlos-figueroa/

https://www.commondreams.org/author/carlos-figueroa

https://www.revistacomun.com/colaboradores

Please follow me and read my research here: 

https://twitter.com/figueroaphd

https://ithaca.academia.edu/CarlosFigueroa

USEFUL WEBSITES:

https://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/latest_polls/

http://www.buzzsawmag.org/

https://www.wsws.org/en?redirect=true