Salvadoran American
Part of a series of articles on Hispanic and Latino Americans |
---|
National origin groups |
Argentine Americans Bolivian Americans Brazilian Americans Chilean Americans Colombian Americans Costa Rican Americans Cuban Americans Dominican Americans Ecuadorian Americans Guatemalan Americans Honduran Americans Mexican Americans Nicaraguan Americans Panamanian Americans Paraguayan Americans Peruvian Americans Puerto Ricans (stateside) Salvadoran Americans Spanish Americans Uruguayan Americans Venezuelan Americans |
History |
History of Hispanic and Latino Americans History of Mexican-Americans |
Colonial casta system |
criollo · castizo · mestizo · cholo · mulato · pardo/moreno · zambo |
Political movements |
Hispanic and Latino American politics Chicano Movement |
Organizations |
National Hispanic Institute NALEO · RNHA Congressional Hispanic Caucus Congressional Hispanic Conference LULAC · MALDEF · NALFO · SHPE National Council of La Raza Association of Hispanic Arts · MEChA · UFW United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce |
Culture |
Hispanic culture Literature · Music · Religion · Studies · |
Related national groups |
Belizean Americans · Haitian Americans · Guyanese Americans · Filipino Americans |
Languages |
English · Portuguese · Spanish in the United States · Spanish · Spanglish |
Ethnic groups |
Californio · Chicano · Hispano · Isleño · Nuevomexicano · Nuyorican · Tejano |
Lists |
Communities with Hispanic majority Puerto Rico-related topics Notable Hispanics Related topics |
Portals |
Hispanic and Latino Portal |
Read more about Salvadoran American: Race and Ethnicity, Misconceptions and Stereotypes, Areas of Concentration, Acculturation and Assimilation, Politics and Government, Salvadoran Americans Relations With El Salvador, El Salvador and United States Relations, See Also Famous quotes containing the word american:“Even an attorney of moderate talent can postpone doomsday year after year, for the system of appeals that pervades American jurisprudence amounts to a legalistic wheel of fortune, a game of chance, somewhat fixed in the favor of the criminal, that the participants play interminably.” |