Professor Frank Bonilla (born 1925) is an American academic of Puerto Rican descent who became a leading figure in Puerto Rican Studies. After earning his doctorate from Harvard University, where his dissertation was supervised by Talcott Parsons, he held faculty positions at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University and the City University of New York. He is a key figure in the establishment of the Puerto Rican Hispanic Leadership Forum and the Center for Puerto Rico Studies at the City University of New York. He was an early supporter of PRdream.com.
Biography
Bonilla was born in New York City in 1925. His parents were both from Puerto Rico and had moved to the United States early in their lives. His mother emigrated to the United States in hopes of attending college, and his father had been a cigar maker and had served in the U.S. Cavalry. They were on the same boat going to the United States, and it was there where they met and began their courtship.
Bonilla was raised in East Harlem, a neighborhood full of diversity of culture and race. He said that children were very often exposed to multiple languages at an early age and that they became bilingual to interact with people in their day-to-day lives. Bonilla spent his first years of high school attending a Franciscan high school in Illinois, where he showed academic and leadership skills. His favorite subjects were classical Greek, Latin, Spanish, French, and German. He was also elected President of his class. Bonilla then transferred to Morris High School (Bronx, New York). After he graduated from Morris high in 1943, he was drafted and assigned to a weapons platoon. Bonilla was taught to be a mortar gunner and was assigned to the 290th Infantry Regiment, 75th Infantry Division.
World War II service
The 290th Infantry Regiment, 75th Infantry Division was involved in the Battle of the Bulge. Bonilla served in this battle at the front of the line for nearly a month.
After serving at the front lines, Bonilla sustained an injury and had to be hospitalized in France. After a brief three week hospitalization, Bonilla was reassigned to a replacement depot in France. It was there that he was invited to join the Puerto Rican National Guard near Frankfurtand assigned as the company clerk. He soon realized that the Puerto Rican soldiers had a divide. The Puerto Rican soldiers raised in the United States were looked down upon by those who had grown up in Puerto Rico, and referred to the emigrated Puerto Ricans as “American Joes”. Bonilla said of this experience, “The military experience helped to consolidate my sense of being Puerto Rican and also a sense of wanting to study and be a scholar.”
Post-war career
Bonilla returned to the United States after he was discharged from the military and made use of the educational benefits of the G.I. Bill to attend the College of the City of New York. He graduated cum laude in 1949 with a B.A. in business administration. He went on to pursue a master’s degree in sociology from New York University, which he earned in 1954. He attended Harvard University and received a doctorate in sociology soon after.
Dr. Bonilla played a key role in the formation of the Puerto Rican Hispanic Leadership Forum to help manage the needs of Puerto Ricans in New York. He also played an instrumental role in the formation of the Center for Puerto Rico Studies at the City University of New York, where he served as founding director until his retirement in 1995. He died after a long illness on December 28, 2010.
Frank Bonilla: Centro Profile
Dr. Frank Bonilla, Thomas Hunter Professor Emeritus, Hunter College of the City University of New York, devoted his life to understanding and exposing the political and economic forces that engender exploitation and injustice and to joining community struggles against racial and ethnic oppression, especially in education. The fruits of his labor are found in the thriving of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at CUNY’s Hunter College; in his pioneering research on the political economy of Puerto Rico and migration to the United States; and in his extensive contributions to collaborative research on Latinos in a globalizing economy. Moreover, Bonilla is known to a multitude of Latinos and African Americans for serving as a bridge-builder between communities of color and to advocacy groups and progressive policymakers across the United States for his determination in the global quest for human rights and dignity.
Education and Early Career Born in New York in 1925 of parents who migrated to the U.S. from Puerto Rico, Bonilla lived as a child in East Harlem and the Bronx, though several years of middle and high school were spent in Tennessee and Illinois. In many of his writings and speeches, he described his school years in the South as a transformative experience. The concept and implications of “race” in the United States first became constituted for him at the Mason-Dixon Line where, though his New York birth certificate categorized him as “white,” he was instructed by the driver of a Greyound Bus to surrender his seat and move to the back. His subjection to forced segregation as a person of color in the South, combined with the social, political, and economic marginalization of Puerto Ricans in New York, informed his career choices and life trajectory. Following his graduation from Morris High School in the South Bronx, Bonilla was drafted into the U.S. Army, served with the 190th Infantry Regiment, 75th Infantry, and fought in World War II’s Battle of the Bulge. When an injury removed him from the front lines, he joined the ranks of the Puerto Rican National Guard in Germany. Upon returning to the U.S., he earned his B.B.A. in 1949, graduating cum laude from the College of the City of New York, his M.A. in Sociology from New York University in 1954, and his doctorate in Sociology from Harvard University in 1959.
Bonilla began his academic career in 1960 as a member of The American Universities Field Service in Latin America. Starting with a project initiative on behalf of UNESCO and the Economic Commission for Latin America, his research for the next three years in Argentina, Chile, Mexico, and Brazil investigated the relationship between social development and education in Latin America. In this period, Dr. Bonilla lectured at seven U.S. campuses and at the PontifÃcia Unversidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro.
When Bonilla joined the Political Science Department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) (1963-1969), he pursued his interests in Latin America as a senior staff member at MIT’s Center of International Studies. He joined an extensive investigation into Venezuelan politics, conducted in collaboration with the Center for Development Studies of the Central University of Venezuela (CENDES), served as Program Advisor in Social Science to the Ford Foundation in Brazil, and lectured as Visiting Professor at the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais. His support for his Latin American students and collaboration with Latin American colleagues continued for decades following his return to the United States.
Bonilla’s years of residence and research agenda in Latin America yielded several notable books. The Failure of Elites (1970) presented a far-sighted study of how oil companies and the U.S. state in the 1960s acted as socializing agents in Venezuela, producing leaders in business, politics, and the armed forces who became partners of multinational capital but lost the capacity to act on behalf of national development. Bonilla found that Venezuelan elites in the period had little or no sustained contact with the mass of people and no sense of obligation to meet the needs of the population. The second book, Student Politics in Chile (1970), co-authored with Myron Glazer, contributed a vital piece to the comparative study of campus politics in Latin America by offering a comprehensive view of the Chilean student movement from the early 1900s to the 1960s.
As Professor of Political Science and Senior Associate of the Institute of Political Studies at Stanford University (1969-1972), Bonilla created opportunities for dialogue among Latin Americans, Chicanos, African Americans, and Puerto Ricans in the United States. In 1972, Brazilian, Venezuelan, Panamanian, Jamaican, Argentinian, African American, Chicano, and Puerto Rican scholars and students attended a seminar to explore ways to establish a common framework for analyzing inequality and dependence. The seminar produced Structures of Dependency, the volume of essays edited by Bonilla and Robert Girling that challenged the dominant dependency paradigm used by the Left academy to analyze Latin American political economies. In his contribution, Bonilla noted as one major flaw of dependency theory its failure to identify strategies that would permit oppressed nations to act against imperialism.
The Stanford seminar was also an occasion for developing critical perspectives on theoretical and methodological approaches in the study of Latinos and other minority groups in the U.S. As an early advocate of the militant efforts of minority students and faculty to establish space within U.S. universities and to accomplish their own intellectual work, Bonilla joined students, faculty, and community activists in New York in proposing a research institute for investigating the Puerto Rican experience. When the proposal was accepted and funded by CUNY and the Ford Foundation, the search committee formed in early 1973 unanimously chose Bonilla as the first Director of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies. (See “Finding Aids” for an account of the mission, historical development, and achievements of the Centro.) The forming of the Centro and his appointment as Director was a profoundly significant personal achievement, as it gave Bonilla the opportunity to return to New York to serve his community in ways that would have a profound and long-lasting impact.
Tenure at the Center for Puerto Rican Studies
Most significantly, in his twenty-year tenure as Director, Bonilla provided the intellectual, political, and organizational leadership that helped to define the field of Puerto Rican Studies and to firmly establish the Centro as a vital academic and community resource. Within a short time of its founding, the Centro’s organizational structure and research agendas were shaped by commitments to collective governance, scholarship in service of community, and broad accessibility.
As Director of the only university-based institute in the United States devoted to the interdisciplinary study of the Puerto Rican experience, Bonilla oversaw research in history, political economy, demographic transitions, and social and cultural development. His most well-known contributions were made to the History Task Force, through his close collaboration with Ricardo Campos. In the published version of its findings, Labor Migration under Capitalism (1979), the History Task Force critiqued the dependency framework as inadequate for explaining the colonial relationship between Puerto Rico and the U.S. and located the root of massive post-World War II labor migration from the island to the U.S. paradoxically in the development model known as “Operation Bootstrap.” In a subsequent study, “A Wealth of Poor: Puerto Ricans in the New Economic Order” (1981), Bonilla and Campos further illustrated the flaws of the political-economic model which caused persistently high levels of unemployment, extreme social stress, and “brain drain” from Puerto Rico to the United States.
Bonilla was also greatly concerned about the disproportionate levels of imprisonment in communities of color and the need for prison reform. Bringing the experience of similar initiatives with him from Stanford, he encouraged the Centro’s Prison Task Force to develop a program of college study for inmates in New York. He worked resolutely worked for community empowerment by joining dozens of community-based and policy advocacy organizations and coalitions intent on combating institutional racism and promoting educational opportunities for minorities; in many cases, he was the principal public spokesperson. He served on the Boards of Directors of the Empowerment Institute of the Community Service Society of the City of New York, a 140-year-old nonprofit organization involved in social and education issues, and of Open Mind, The Association for the Achievement of Cultural Diversity in Higher Education. A small sample of additional affiliations includes the Social Science Advisory Board of the Poverty and Race Research Institute, the National Puerto Rican Task Force on Educational Policy, and the Puerto Rican Organization for Growth, Research, Education and Self-Sufficiency (P.R.O.G.R.E.S.S., Inc.). Throughout his life, he remained committed to strengthening bonds between African Americans and Puerto Ricans. Of special note are his participation in the National Commission on Minorities in Higher Education, his advocacy of redistricting policy reform, and his invited testimonies before the U.S. Congressional Black Caucus on the deleterious effects of U.S. colonialism in Puerto Rico.
Despite his extensive community commitments and administrative responsibilities, Bonilla was a passionate educator who was broadly accessible to his students at CUNY’s Graduate Center, where he taught in the Political Science Department from 1973 to 1993 and in the Sociology Department from 1977 to 1993. In 1986, he was appointed Thomas Hunter Professor of Sociology at CUNY’s Hunter College. As a popular dissertation advisor at the Graduate Center, Dr. Bonilla mentored many students who remained close to him long after completing their degrees. Throughout his life, he encouraged new scholars to understand the political implications of social scientific research and to embrace their potential role in the service of liberation of oppressed peoples.
Ten years after his retirement, Bonilla was honored by the staff and friends of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at its 30th Anniversary Celebration in 2003, where he received a Lifetime Achievement Award presented by Rossana Rosado, publisher and CEO of El Diario-La Prensa, the oldest Spanish-language daily newspaper in the United States.
Inter-University Program for Latino Research
One of the most enduring projects Bonilla launched as the Centro’s Director is the Inter-University Program for Latino Research (IUPLR), co-founded with three colleagues in 1986. What began as a national consortium of eight university-based research centers grew to include more than twenty universities and to serve as a model for other initiatives that pursue interdisciplinary research cooperation in Latino Studies. Bonilla served IUPLR as Managing Co-Director from 1988 to 1993 and Executive Director from 1993 to 1995. He remained on IUPLR’s National Board of Advisors for several years following his retirement.
As Director of IUPLR, Bonilla was the principal coordinator of the project entitled, “Latinos in a Changing U.S. Economy.” The multinational team he assembled tracked the impact of international, national, and regional forces in shaping labor force participation and earnings of Latinos in the U.S. He was one of the driving forces as well in convening the conference in Northern Italy that brought together scholars, policy makers, and activists involved in analyzing the globalizing economic forces at the center of the “Latinization of the United States,” and the emerging political consequences and opportunities. Borderless Borders: U.S. Latinos, Latin Americans, and the Paradox of Interdependence (1998), co-edited by Bonilla, Edwin Meléndez, Rebecca Morales and MarÃa de los Angeles Torres, is the acclaimed product of the conference.
Additional Publications, Activities and Honors
Frank Bonilla was a prolific writer and advocate of collaborative research among scholars of the Latino diasporas. He wrote, edited, co-authored or co-edited dozens of books, monographs, articles for refereed journals, and chapters in edited books. He delivered papers internationally on human rights, minority experiences in the U.S., and research methodologies; encouraged cultural and educational exchange programs between the U.S. and Caribbean countries; and acted as confidant and critic to countless aspiring scholars and community organizers.
Among his many honors, Bonilla received the Distinguished Alumni Award from CCNY in 1972 and the Ralph C. Guzmán Award of the American Political Science Association in 1986 for Excellence in Scholarship and Service to the Profession. He was recognized by Mercy College in 1987 and by the University of Washington, D.C. in 1993 with Doctor of Letters Honors Causa Awards, by Hunter College with the President’s Medal in 1993, and by the Council of Dominican Educators with its Service Award also in 1993. In 2003, he was the first recipient of the Public Intellectual Award of the Latino Studies Section of the Latin American Studies Association; and the Award was subsequently named after him.
Retirement Years: Family, Recreation, and Ongoing Intellectual and Political Concerns
Bonilla has been a central figure in his large, extended family. Among his three children, five grandchildren, great grandchild, siblings, and many nieces and nephews, he is known to cherish family gatherings and to give generously of his time to his loved ones. He spoke proudly of the “mosaic of kinship” in his family that depicted the “multiracial reality of Puerto Ricans and other Latinos as well as Afro-Americans that is now exploding in the U.S.” Though the passions that drove him to apply his intellectual talents to the pursuit of justice left Bonilla with little time for leisure, his recreational pastimes included swimming, fishing, biking, reading, and writing. For some years in the 1980s and 1990s, he enjoyed these pleasures at his home in Montauk, on the East End of Long Island, New York.
Though formally retired by the late 1990s, Dr. Bonilla continued to emphasize the importance of promoting Latino academic and policy research capabilities and bringing Latino voices and perspectives into the U.S. foreign policy arena. In his words, “we must continue to seek a place within the university from which to articulate the social and intellectual problems of our community while reaffirming the intent to define and control our own intellectual agenda…. To create new knowledge and quickly and comprehensibly transfer it to a long-denied community is the principal goal of all our effort….”
This is truly a great loss to academia and most certainly a loss to the Puerto Rican community.
I had the honor and pleasure to meet Dr. Bonilla via Willie Nieves (El Caney del Barrio, R.I.P.) Willie resided in the building right next door to him (owed by Dr. Josephine Nieves/Dr. Maria Canino) on 116th St./off-of 1st Ave.
As I recall, I had just recently read one of his many treatises on the subject of Puerto Rican labor migration (circa 1984) so I took the opportunity to asked him to shed some light on some aspects that were clearly beyond my intellectual grasp. Ever the thoughtful, dedicated teacher he proceeded to share insight and understanding on subject matter that has, come to think of it, shaped who I am as a person, as Boricua and as a world citizen. That was the first of a number of exchanges over a glass coquito o glass of wine. Even beyond confines of the academy he was predisposed to share his knowledge freely and with a joyous heart.
He will be missed but never forgotten. Q.E.P.D.
Dr Frank Bonilla was one of my Professors and mentors at the CUNY graduate school, and later we were colleagues at Hunter College and the CUNY Gradute Center. On the advice of my chief diss adviser, he late Hugh H Smythe, Frank reviewed my diss and provided invaluable advice. With Hylan Lewis, Al Pinkney, Hugh Smythe,Bogdan Denitch, Joseph Bensman, and Ben Ringer, among others , he took an active interest in mentoring and advancing the scholarship and career trajectory of many racial minority students.He worked well with Dean Harrison to diversify the graduate program
As Chair of Sociology at Hunter College/CUNY, and prior, duirng a brief adm stint at CUNY central with Vice Chancellor Marguerite Ross Barnett and Chancelllor Jooseph Murphy, i was involved in the margins in the decision to relocate the Center for Puerto Rican Studies from John Jay College to Hunter….President Donna Shalala played a supportive and pivotal role in that regard
Franks’ scholarship was seminal and muckracking in many regards.He was a solid academic who could hold his own with the best and not lose his humility. He loved his muisc and revelled when Donna Shalala awrded The Mighty SParrow with academic plaudits at Hunter College . With my many moves form east to west coast and back, i saw him last at the memorial for the late Hylan Lewis as he was heading to San Diego …we remained in touch intermittently- drawn lesser so by his illness
He loved life, his family, his friends , his students. he was a grand internationalist and we will miss him sorely.
May he Rest In Peace as he joins the Ancestors.Allah Akbar!
My father read of the passing of Dr. Bonilla in the New York Times, and shared with me tonight that he remembers serving in the 75th Infantry alongside Frank during the Battle of the Bulge. He recalled marching long distances to the steady, uplifting salsa beat that Frank would tap out on his canteen. When my father was given a mandolin, at one point, he and Frank would settle into spontaneous jam sessions during spells in the fighting. He further recalled Frank’s profound intellect and joyful spirit, and although they’d lost touch after the war, my father was not at all surprised to learn of how much of a scholar Frank became.
I met Frank as a fellow student -at different institutions- when we worked together at the Burau of Applied Social Research at Columbi University, about 1949. Four of us workers in that setting formed the nucleus of a supportive social group that lasted years. After marriage his wife Tam and I wheeled our baby carriages together in Brooklyn Heights. I have followed his career ever since, and have been thrilled with what he accomplished and that his brilliance, and I shoud add his warm humanity, was able to flower and contribute so much to the world. He was the most interesting- and vivid -person I have ever met.
I had the great pleasure of knowing and working with Frank Bonilla on our jointly authored book, Student Politics in Chile. Frank had written an excellent doctoral dissertation on the Chilean University Student Federation – one of the best works ever done on Latin American students to that time. When I met him in the late 1960s, he was already a recognized scholar. I was a young assistant professor who had recently completed a dissertation on the professional and political attitudes of Chilean university students. Frank was an extraordinarily generous colleague in encouraging my work and agreeing to combine our two dissertations into a single volume on student politics in Chile. I was very proud when Basic Books published the work in 1972.