Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration | United States agency (2024)

In Puerto Rico: Political developments

The newly formed Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration (PRRA) attempted to redistribute economic power on the island, primarily by placing a restrictive quota on sugarcane production and enforcing a long-neglected law that limited corporate holdings to 500 acres (200 hectares). Thus, the PRRA reversed the growth of the island’s…

Read More

","url":"Introduction","wordCount":0,"sequence":1},"imarsData":{"INFINITE_SCROLL":"","HAS_REVERTED_TIMELINE":"false"},"npsAdditionalContents":{},"templateHandler":{"name":"INDEX"},"paginationInfo":{"previousPage":null,"nextPage":null,"totalPages":1},"uaTemplate":"INDEX","infiniteScrollList":[{"p":1,"t":482875}],"topicLeftRail":{"topicInfo":{"id":482875,"title":"Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration","url":"https://www.britannica.com/topic/Puerto-Rican-Reconstruction-Administration","description":"Puerto Rico: Political developments: The newly formed Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration (PRRA) attempted to redistribute economic power on the island, primarily by placing a restrictive quota on sugarcane production and enforcing a long-neglected law that limited corporate holdings to 500 acres (200 hectares). Thus, the PRRA reversed the growth of the island’s…","type":"TOPIC","titleText":"Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration","urlTitle":"Puerto-Rican-Reconstruction-Administration","metaDescription":"Other articles where Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration is discussed: Puerto Rico: Political developments: The newly formed Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration (PRRA) attempted to redistribute economic power on the island, primarily by placing a restrictive quota on sugarcane production and enforcing a long-neglected law that limited corporate holdings to 500 acres (200 hectares). Thus, the PRRA reversed the growth of the island’s…","identifierHtml":"United States agency","identifierText":"United States agency","alternateTitles":"PRRA","topicClass":"topic","topicKey":"Puerto-Rican-Reconstruction-Administration","articleContentType":"INDEX","ppTecType":"THING","gaTemplate":"INDEX","topicType":"INDEX","relativeUrl":"/topic/Puerto-Rican-Reconstruction-Administration","assemblyLinkPrefix":"/media/1/482875/"},"topicLink":{"title":"Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration","url":"https://www.britannica.com/topic/Puerto-Rican-Reconstruction-Administration"},"tocTitle":"Directory","tocEntry":"References","toc":null,"quoteLink":null,"indexLink":null,"factsLink":null,"mediaLink":null,"media":null,"studentLinks":null,"relatedQuizzes":null,"topQuestions":null,"readNext":null,"discover":[{"id":6411,"title":"New Seven Wonders of the World","url":"/list/new-seven-wonders-of-the-world","description":"See who did—and didn’t—make the cut.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/36/162636-131-E4AA93A0/Colosseum-Rome-Italy.jpg","altText":"The Colosseum, Rome, Italy. Giant amphitheatre built in Rome under the Flavian emperors. (ancient architecture; architectural ruins)","credit":"© fabiomax/Fotolia","width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/36/162636-131-E4AA93A0/Colosseum-Rome-Italy.jpg"},"type":"LIST","breadcrumb":{"homeLink":null,"items":[{"title":"List","url":"/list/browse"},{"title":"Lifestyles & Social Issues","url":"/list/browse/Lifestyles-Social-Issues"}],"lastItemTitle":"Lifestyles & Social Issues"},"superCategory":{"id":5,"title":"History & Society","url":"History-Society","description":"Explore history and society; accidents and disasters; the age of revolutions; the ancient world; historic dynasties; global exploration; the middle ages; the modern world; prehistory; US history; world history; wars and battles; sociology; religion and philosophy; humanities; ethics; anthropology; festivals and holidays; human rights; human migration; international relations; politics, law, and government","keywords":"accidents and disasters; the age of revolutions; the ancient world; historic dynasties; global exploration; the middle ages; the modern world; prehistory; US history; world history; wars and battles; sociology; religion and philosophy; humanities; ethics; anthropology; festivals and holidays; human rights; human migration; international relations; politics, law, and government","classId":"HISTORY","sortOrder":1},"hashtags":["New Seven Wonders of the World","Great Wall of China","Chichén Itzá","Colosseum","Petra","Machu Picchu","Taj Mahal","Christ the Redeemer","Wonders of the World","Seven Wonders of the World"],"hashtagsString":"New Seven Wonders of the World, Great Wall of China, Chichén Itzá, Colosseum, Petra, Machu Picchu, Taj Mahal, Christ the Redeemer, Wonders of the World, Seven Wonders of the World","displayDate":[2018,2,14],"urlTitle":"new-seven-wonders-of-the-world","featureSubType":"REGULAR","categories":[{"id":8000,"title":"Lifestyles & Social Issues","url":"Lifestyles-Social-Issues","description":"It's easy enough to agree that human beings all around the world have certain basic requirements that must be fulfilled in order to ensure their individual and collective well-being. History has shown us, however, that it's not so easy to form societies or communities that fulfill these requirements for all members. The fight for human and civil rights has persisted for hundreds of years and remains alive today, both within the borders of nations and on an international scale. It has led to large-scale social movements and reforms concerning issues such as suffrage, slavery, women's rights, racism, environmentalism, gay rights, and much more.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/11/195611-131-4DFC1336/Belgian-pride-parade-People-streets-flags-Brussels-2017.jpg","altText":"Lifestyles & Social Issues","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/11/195611-131-4DFC1336/Belgian-pride-parade-People-streets-flags-Brussels-2017.jpg"}},{"id":6000,"title":"World History","url":"World-History","description":"Does history really repeat itself, or can we learn from the mistakes of those who came before us? History provides a chronological, statistical, and cultural record of the events, people, and movements that have made an impact on humankind and the world at large throughout the ages.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/05/84505-050-8BB58BE6/cave-art-Ennedi-Plateau-Chad.jpg","altText":"World History","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/05/84505-050-8BB58BE6/cave-art-Ennedi-Plateau-Chad.jpg"}},{"id":11000,"title":"Visual Arts","url":"Visual-Arts","description":"These are the arts that meet the eye and evoke an emotion through an expression of skill and imagination. They include the most ancient forms, such as painting and drawing, and the arts that were born thanks to the development of technology, like sculpture, printmaking, photography, and installation art. Though beauty is in the eye of the beholder, different eras in art history have had their own principles to define beauty, from the richly ornamented taste of the Baroque to the simple utilitarian style of the Prairie School.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/45/24345-050-78FAA104.jpg","altText":"Visual Arts","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/45/24345-050-78FAA104.jpg"}}],"mainCategory":{"id":8000,"title":"Lifestyles & Social Issues","url":"Lifestyles-Social-Issues","description":"It's easy enough to agree that human beings all around the world have certain basic requirements that must be fulfilled in order to ensure their individual and collective well-being. History has shown us, however, that it's not so easy to form societies or communities that fulfill these requirements for all members. The fight for human and civil rights has persisted for hundreds of years and remains alive today, both within the borders of nations and on an international scale. It has led to large-scale social movements and reforms concerning issues such as suffrage, slavery, women's rights, racism, environmentalism, gay rights, and much more.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/11/195611-131-4DFC1336/Belgian-pride-parade-People-streets-flags-Brussels-2017.jpg","altText":"Lifestyles & Social Issues","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/11/195611-131-4DFC1336/Belgian-pride-parade-People-streets-flags-Brussels-2017.jpg"}},"typeDisplayName":"List"},{"id":13584,"title":"Why Is Missouri Called the Show Me State?","url":"/story/why-is-missouri-called-the-show-me-state","description":"Learn the stories behind this state nickname.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/74/205574-131-EBF86DDE/Gateway-Arch-park-area-St-Louis-Missouri.jpg","altText":"The Gateway Arch viewed from the surrounding park area in Gateway Arch National Park (formerly Jefferson National Expansion Memorial) in St. Louis, Missouri.","credit":"© Davel5957—E+/Getty Images","width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/74/205574-131-EBF86DDE/Gateway-Arch-park-area-St-Louis-Missouri.jpg"},"type":"STORY","breadcrumb":{"homeLink":null,"items":[{"title":"Companion","url":"/stories/companion"},{"title":"Geography & Travel","url":"/stories/companion/Geography-Travel"}],"lastItemTitle":"Geography & Travel"},"superCategory":{"id":4,"title":"Geography & Travel","url":"Geography-Travel","description":"Explore geography and travel; geographic regions; historical places; people of the world; countries, states, provinces, cities, and towns; languages; deserts, islands, mountains, plateaus; lakes, oceans, seas, rivers; national parks, tourist attractions","keywords":"geographic regions; historical places; people of the world; countries, states, provinces, cities, and towns; languages; deserts, islands, mountains, plateaus; lakes, oceans, seas, rivers; national parks, tourist attractions ","classId":"GEOGRAPHY","sortOrder":5},"hashtags":["companion","Missouri","Show Me state","Encyclopedia Britannica","Encyclopaedia Britannica","Britannica"],"hashtagsString":"companion, Missouri, Show Me state, Encyclopedia Britannica, Encyclopaedia Britannica, Britannica","displayDate":[2023,11,30],"urlTitle":"why-is-missouri-called-the-show-me-state","featureSubType":"COMPANION","categories":[{"id":5000,"title":"Geography & Travel","url":"Geography-Travel","description":"Planet Earth contains some extraordinarily diverse environments, some of which are easily habitable and some not so much. In different areas of Earth, one might find sweltering deserts, dense tropical rainforests, or bone-chilling tundras. Each biome and habitat comes with its own selection of flora and fauna, and it may include physical features such as canyons, volcanoes, rivers, or caves. Human beings have built homes in many different environments, settling the area and organizing it into units such as cities, states, regions, and countries, each with its own points of interest. Shifting trends in human migration have resulted in a human geography that is profoundly different from that of centuries ago.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/17/2317-050-758D0E55/World-map-descriptions-Herodotus-Black-Sea.jpg","altText":"Geography & Travel","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/17/2317-050-758D0E55/World-map-descriptions-Herodotus-Black-Sea.jpg"}},null,null],"mainCategory":{"id":5000,"title":"Geography & Travel","url":"Geography-Travel","description":"Planet Earth contains some extraordinarily diverse environments, some of which are easily habitable and some not so much. In different areas of Earth, one might find sweltering deserts, dense tropical rainforests, or bone-chilling tundras. Each biome and habitat comes with its own selection of flora and fauna, and it may include physical features such as canyons, volcanoes, rivers, or caves. Human beings have built homes in many different environments, settling the area and organizing it into units such as cities, states, regions, and countries, each with its own points of interest. Shifting trends in human migration have resulted in a human geography that is profoundly different from that of centuries ago.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/17/2317-050-758D0E55/World-map-descriptions-Herodotus-Black-Sea.jpg","altText":"Geography & Travel","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/17/2317-050-758D0E55/World-map-descriptions-Herodotus-Black-Sea.jpg"}},"typeDisplayName":"Companion"},{"id":6159,"title":"7 Deadliest Weapons in History","url":"/list/7-deadliest-weapons-in-history","description":"From rocks to rockets.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/28/60728-131-36BD65EF/infantrymen-German-Maxim-World-War-I-machine.jpg","altText":"Figure 13: A Maxim machine gun, belt-fed and water-cooled, operated by German infantrymen, World War I.","credit":"Imperial War Museum","width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/28/60728-131-36BD65EF/infantrymen-German-Maxim-World-War-I-machine.jpg"},"type":"LIST","breadcrumb":{"homeLink":null,"items":[{"title":"List","url":"/list/browse"},{"title":"Technology","url":"/list/browse/Technology"}],"lastItemTitle":"Technology"},"superCategory":{"id":6,"title":"Science & Tech","url":"Science-Tech","description":"Explore science and technology; astronomy; biology; chemistry; earth science; mathematics; physics; technology, agriculture, cars, computers, engineering, industry, inventions, communication","keywords":"astronomy; biology; chemistry; earth science; mathematics; physics; technology, agriculture, cars, computers, engineering, industry, inventions, communication","classId":"SCIENCE","sortOrder":2},"hashtags":["deadliest weapons","swords","drones","nuclear weapons","wmd","machine gun","Greek fire","weapons","killing","destruction"],"hashtagsString":"deadliest weapons, swords, drones, nuclear weapons, wmd, machine gun, Greek fire, weapons, killing, destruction","displayDate":[2017,3,24],"urlTitle":"7-deadliest-weapons-in-history","featureSubType":"REGULAR","categories":[{"id":2000,"title":"Technology","url":"Technology","description":"Humankind has long striven to improve its living conditions through the development of tools, instruments, and transportation and communications systems, all with the goal of making our lives easier, more productive and—why not?—more fun, too. Thanks to human curiosity and technological research, many significant inventions have been made throughout history that in turn made a difference in our daily lives.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/84/203584-131-357FBE7D/speed-internet-technology-background.jpg","altText":"Technology","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/84/203584-131-357FBE7D/speed-internet-technology-background.jpg"}},{"id":6000,"title":"World History","url":"World-History","description":"Does history really repeat itself, or can we learn from the mistakes of those who came before us? History provides a chronological, statistical, and cultural record of the events, people, and movements that have made an impact on humankind and the world at large throughout the ages.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/05/84505-050-8BB58BE6/cave-art-Ennedi-Plateau-Chad.jpg","altText":"World History","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/05/84505-050-8BB58BE6/cave-art-Ennedi-Plateau-Chad.jpg"}},null],"mainCategory":{"id":2000,"title":"Technology","url":"Technology","description":"Humankind has long striven to improve its living conditions through the development of tools, instruments, and transportation and communications systems, all with the goal of making our lives easier, more productive and—why not?—more fun, too. Thanks to human curiosity and technological research, many significant inventions have been made throughout history that in turn made a difference in our daily lives.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/84/203584-131-357FBE7D/speed-internet-technology-background.jpg","altText":"Technology","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/84/203584-131-357FBE7D/speed-internet-technology-background.jpg"}},"typeDisplayName":"List"},{"id":10170,"title":"All 119 References in “We Didn’t Start the Fire,” Explained","url":"/list/all-119-references-in-we-didnt-start-the-fire-explained","description":"No, Billy Joel isn’t talking about the band U2.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/04/79904-131-6DCAD337/Elizabeth-II-speech-throne-Parliament-state-opening-1958.jpg","altText":"Queen Elizabeth II addresses at opening of Parliament. (Date unknown on photo, but may be 1958, the first time the opening of Parliament was filmed.)","credit":"Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.","width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/04/79904-131-6DCAD337/Elizabeth-II-speech-throne-Parliament-state-opening-1958.jpg"},"type":"LIST","breadcrumb":{"homeLink":null,"items":[{"title":"List","url":"/list/browse"},{"title":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","url":"/list/browse/Entertainment-Pop-Culture"}],"lastItemTitle":"Entertainment & Pop Culture"},"superCategory":{"id":2,"title":"Arts & Culture","url":"Arts-Culture","description":"Explore arts and culture; entertainment and pop culture, actors, comics, dance, film, food, music, theatre, tv; visual arts, architecture, fashion, painting, photography, sculpture; literature, fiction, nonfiction, plays, poetry, short story; sports and recreation","keywords":"entertainment and pop culture, actors, comics, dance, film, food, music, theatre, tv; visual arts, architecture, fashion, painting, photography, sculpture; literature, fiction, nonfiction, plays, poetry, short story; sports and recreation","classId":"ART","sortOrder":6},"hashtags":["We Didn’t Start the Fire","Billy Joel","Harry Truman","Doris Day","China","communism","Johnnie Ray","rock music","Elvis","South Pacific","Rodgers and Hammerstein","Walter Winchell","Joseph McCarthy","Red Scare","Joe DiMaggio","McCarthyism","Richard Nixon","Studebaker","Studebaker-Packard","television","North Korea","South Korea","Korean War","Marilyn Monroe","Gentlemen Prefer Blondes","The Seven Year Itch","Julius Rosenberg","Ethel Rosenberg","H-bomb","hydrogen bomb","thermonuclear bomb","Sugar Ray","Sugar Ray Robinson","P'anmunjŏm","demilitarized zone","Marlon Brando","A Streetcar Named Desire","The Godfather","The King and I","Yul Brynner","Siam","Juan Peron","Eva Peron","Arturo Toscanini","Dacron","aorta","Dien Bien Phu","Indochina War","The Catcher in the Rye","Dwight D. Eisenhower","Reconstruction","civil rights","polio","vaccine","Jonas Salk","Elizabeth II","Rocky Marciano","boxing","Liberace","The Liberace Show","George Santayana","Joseph Stalin","Soviet Union","Malenkov","Nikita Khrushchev","Gamal Abdel Nasser","Sergey Prokofiev","Winthrop Rockefeller","Roy Campanella","Communist Bloc","Cold War","Donald Trump","Roy Cohn","Bill Haley and His Comets","Decca","Rock Around the Clock","Albert Einstein","James Dean","Brooklyn Dodgers","Jackie Robinson","Davy Crockett","Disney","Peter Pan","J.M. Barrie","Elvis Presley","Disneyland","Walt Disney","Brigitte Bardot","Hungarian Revolution","Budapest","Rosa Parks","Alabama","Montgomery bus boycott","de-Stalinization","Grace Kelly","Princess Grace","Prince Rainier","Rainier III","Monaco","Peyton Place","soap opera","Suez Canal","Little Rock Nine","Dwight D. Eisenhower","Boris Leonidovich Pasternak","Boris Pasternak","Doctor Zhivago","Mickey Mantle","Beat writer","Jack Kerouac","On the Road","Sputnik","Chou En-Lai","Zhou Enlai","China","Bridge on the River Kwai","Hollywood blacklist","Lebanon","Camille Chamoun","Charles de Gaulle","NATO","San Francisco Giants","Charles Starkweather","thalidomide","Buddy Holly","Ben Hur","","hula hoop","Fidel Castro","Cuba","U-2","Syngman Rhee","payola","Chubby Checker","the twist","Hank Ballard","American Bandstand","Psycho","Ed Gein","Alfred Hitchco*ck","Democratic Republic of the Congo","Belgium","colonization","Ernest Hemingway","Lost Generation","The Sun Also Rises","A Farewell to Arms","Adolf Eichmann","Holocaust","Stranger in a Strange Land","Robert A. Heinlein","Bob Dylan","Berlin Wall","Bay of Pigs","CIA","Lawrence of Arabia","Peter O’Toole","The Beatles","Beatlemania","Ole Miss","University of Mississippi","James Meredith","Robert F. Kennedy","John Glenn","Yuri Gagarin","Sonny Liston","Floyd Patterson","Pope Paul VI","Malcolm X","John Profumo","Christine Keeler","Profumo affair","Griswold v. State of Connecticut","birth control","Ho Chi Minh","Neil Armstrong","Apollo 11","Woodstock","Watergate","punk rock","Menachem Begin","Israel","Ronald Reagan","Palestine","Jimmy Carter","PLO","hijacking","Ruhollah Khomeini","Ayatollah Khomeini","Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi","shah of Iran","Afghanistan","Wheel of Fortune","Sally Ride","heavy metal","death metal","inflation","Vietnam War","AIDS","CDC","crack epidemic","crack cocaine","Bernie Goetz","hypodermic needle","medical waste","Tiananmen Square","martial law","Tank Man","Coca-Cola","PepsiCo","Paula Abdul","Michael Jackson"],"hashtagsString":"We Didn’t Start the Fire, Billy Joel, Harry Truman, Doris Day, China, communism, Johnnie Ray, rock music, Elvis, South Pacific, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Walter Winchell, Joseph McCarthy, Red Scare, Joe DiMaggio, McCarthyism, Richard Nixon, Studebaker, Studebaker-Packard, television, North Korea, South Korea, Korean War, Marilyn Monroe, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, The Seven Year Itch, Julius Rosenberg, Ethel Rosenberg, H-bomb, hydrogen bomb, thermonuclear bomb, Sugar Ray, Sugar Ray Robinson, P'anmunjŏm, demilitarized zone, Marlon Brando, A Streetcar Named Desire, The Godfather, The King and I, Yul Brynner, Siam, Juan Peron, Eva Peron, Arturo Toscanini, Dacron, aorta, Dien Bien Phu, Indochina War, The Catcher in the Rye, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Reconstruction, civil rights, polio, vaccine, Jonas Salk, Elizabeth II, Rocky Marciano, boxing, Liberace, The Liberace Show, George Santayana, Joseph Stalin, Soviet Union, Malenkov, Nikita Khrushchev, Gamal Abdel Nasser, Sergey Prokofiev, Winthrop Rockefeller, Roy Campanella, Communist Bloc, Cold War, Donald Trump, Roy Cohn, Bill Haley and His Comets, Decca, Rock Around the Clock, Albert Einstein, James Dean, Brooklyn Dodgers, Jackie Robinson, Davy Crockett, Disney, Peter Pan, J.M. Barrie, Elvis Presley, Disneyland, Walt Disney, Brigitte Bardot, Hungarian Revolution, Budapest, Rosa Parks, Alabama, Montgomery bus boycott, de-Stalinization, Grace Kelly, Princess Grace, Prince Rainier, Rainier III, Monaco, Peyton Place, soap opera, Suez Canal, Little Rock Nine, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Boris Leonidovich Pasternak, Boris Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago, Mickey Mantle, Beat writer, Jack Kerouac, On the Road, Sputnik, Chou En-Lai, Zhou Enlai, China, Bridge on the River Kwai, Hollywood blacklist, Lebanon, Camille Chamoun, Charles de Gaulle, NATO, San Francisco Giants, Charles Starkweather, thalidomide, Buddy Holly, Ben Hur, , hula hoop, Fidel Castro, Cuba, U-2, Syngman Rhee, payola, Chubby Checker, the twist, Hank Ballard, American Bandstand, Psycho, Ed Gein, Alfred Hitchco*ck, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Belgium, colonization, Ernest Hemingway, Lost Generation, The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to Arms, Adolf Eichmann, Holocaust, Stranger in a Strange Land, Robert A. Heinlein, Bob Dylan, Berlin Wall, Bay of Pigs, CIA, Lawrence of Arabia, Peter O’Toole, The Beatles, Beatlemania, Ole Miss, University of Mississippi, James Meredith, Robert F. Kennedy, John Glenn, Yuri Gagarin, Sonny Liston, Floyd Patterson, Pope Paul VI, Malcolm X, John Profumo, Christine Keeler, Profumo affair, Griswold v. State of Connecticut, birth control, Ho Chi Minh, Neil Armstrong, Apollo 11, Woodstock, Watergate, punk rock, Menachem Begin, Israel, Ronald Reagan, Palestine, Jimmy Carter, PLO, hijacking, Ruhollah Khomeini, Ayatollah Khomeini, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, shah of Iran, Afghanistan, Wheel of Fortune, Sally Ride, heavy metal, death metal, inflation, Vietnam War, AIDS, CDC, crack epidemic, crack cocaine, Bernie Goetz, hypodermic needle, medical waste, Tiananmen Square, martial law, Tank Man, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Paula Abdul, Michael Jackson","displayDate":[2023,5,9],"urlTitle":"all-119-references-in-we-didnt-start-the-fire-explained","featureSubType":"REGULAR","categories":[{"id":10000,"title":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","url":"Entertainment-Pop-Culture","description":"Entertainment and leisure activities have been a part of culture in one form or another since the ancient times. Dance performances, live music, and storytelling have a long tradition throughout history, even as the styles and available methods of delivery have shifted dramatically.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/04/167104-050-A0D0F726.jpg","altText":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/04/167104-050-A0D0F726.jpg"}},null,null],"mainCategory":{"id":10000,"title":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","url":"Entertainment-Pop-Culture","description":"Entertainment and leisure activities have been a part of culture in one form or another since the ancient times. Dance performances, live music, and storytelling have a long tradition throughout history, even as the styles and available methods of delivery have shifted dramatically.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/04/167104-050-A0D0F726.jpg","altText":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/04/167104-050-A0D0F726.jpg"}},"typeDisplayName":"List"},{"id":5720,"title":"Why Do Bananas Turn Brown?","url":"/story/why-do-bananas-turn-brown","description":"What makes a banana go to the dark side?","image":{"id":0,"url":"/83/190683-131-E796F1EE/Green-bananas.jpg","altText":"Green, yellow and black bananas","credit":"© cegli/Fotolia","width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/83/190683-131-E796F1EE/Green-bananas.jpg"},"type":"STORY","breadcrumb":{"homeLink":null,"items":[{"title":"Demystified","url":"/stories/demystified"},{"title":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","url":"/stories/demystified/Entertainment-Pop-Culture"}],"lastItemTitle":"Entertainment & Pop Culture"},"superCategory":{"id":2,"title":"Arts & Culture","url":"Arts-Culture","description":"Explore arts and culture; entertainment and pop culture, actors, comics, dance, film, food, music, theatre, tv; visual arts, architecture, fashion, painting, photography, sculpture; literature, fiction, nonfiction, plays, poetry, short story; sports and recreation","keywords":"entertainment and pop culture, actors, comics, dance, film, food, music, theatre, tv; visual arts, architecture, fashion, painting, photography, sculpture; literature, fiction, nonfiction, plays, poetry, short story; sports and recreation","classId":"ART","sortOrder":6},"hashtags":["demystified","banana","fruit","ethylene","photosynthesis","chlorophyll","chemistry","ripening","decay"],"hashtagsString":"demystified, banana, fruit, ethylene, photosynthesis, chlorophyll, chemistry, ripening, decay","displayDate":[2016,6,30],"urlTitle":"why-do-bananas-turn-brown","featureSubType":"DEMYSTIFIED","categories":[{"id":10000,"title":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","url":"Entertainment-Pop-Culture","description":"Entertainment and leisure activities have been a part of culture in one form or another since the ancient times. Dance performances, live music, and storytelling have a long tradition throughout history, even as the styles and available methods of delivery have shifted dramatically.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/04/167104-050-A0D0F726.jpg","altText":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/04/167104-050-A0D0F726.jpg"}},{"id":1000,"title":"Science","url":"Science","description":"How can the sky be blue one day and stormy the next? Why do heavy objects tend to fall downwards when dropped? How are birds able to fly (and why can’t I do the same?)? Human beings have long been curious about the world in which we live, striving to identify connections among the phenomenons we witness and to understand how it all works. The field of science has developed over many centuries as a way of studying and understanding the world, beginning with the primitive stage of simply noting important regularities in nature and continuing through the rise of modern science. The modern-day sciences cover a vast range of fields, including biology, chemistry, meteorology, astronomy, physics, and much more.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/86/193986-050-7B2DBB6A/ball-and-stick-model-structure-atoms.jpg","altText":"Science","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/86/193986-050-7B2DBB6A/ball-and-stick-model-structure-atoms.jpg"}},null],"mainCategory":{"id":10000,"title":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","url":"Entertainment-Pop-Culture","description":"Entertainment and leisure activities have been a part of culture in one form or another since the ancient times. Dance performances, live music, and storytelling have a long tradition throughout history, even as the styles and available methods of delivery have shifted dramatically.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/04/167104-050-A0D0F726.jpg","altText":"Entertainment & Pop Culture","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/04/167104-050-A0D0F726.jpg"}},"typeDisplayName":"Demystified"},{"id":5546,"title":"Secret Service Code Names of 11 U.S. Presidents","url":"/list/secret-service-code-names-of-11-us-presidents","description":"Find out the Secret Service code names of 11 U.S. presidents.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/45/189145-131-45FF672E/Secret-Service-Agent-Earpiece.jpg","altText":"Secret Service Agent Listens To Earpiece","credit":"©David Stuart/Fotolia","width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/45/189145-131-45FF672E/Secret-Service-Agent-Earpiece.jpg"},"type":"LIST","breadcrumb":{"homeLink":null,"items":[{"title":"List","url":"/list/browse"},{"title":"Politics, Law & Government","url":"/list/browse/Politics-Law-Government"}],"lastItemTitle":"Politics, Law & Government"},"superCategory":{"id":5,"title":"History & Society","url":"History-Society","description":"Explore history and society; accidents and disasters; the age of revolutions; the ancient world; historic dynasties; global exploration; the middle ages; the modern world; prehistory; US history; world history; wars and battles; sociology; religion and philosophy; humanities; ethics; anthropology; festivals and holidays; human rights; human migration; international relations; politics, law, and government","keywords":"accidents and disasters; the age of revolutions; the ancient world; historic dynasties; global exploration; the middle ages; the modern world; prehistory; US history; world history; wars and battles; sociology; religion and philosophy; humanities; ethics; anthropology; festivals and holidays; human rights; human migration; international relations; politics, law, and government","classId":"HISTORY","sortOrder":1},"hashtags":["U.S. president","Secret Service","code names"],"hashtagsString":"U.S. president, Secret Service, code names","displayDate":[2021,6,1],"urlTitle":"secret-service-code-names-of-11-us-presidents","featureSubType":"REGULAR","categories":[{"id":9000,"title":"Politics, Law & Government","url":"Politics-Law-Government","description":"The world today is divided territorially into more than 190 countries, each of which possesses a national government that claims to exercise sovereignty and seeks to compel obedience to its will by its citizens. Governments can be classified in any number of ways. For example, they might be classified by the number of rulers, thus distinguishing government by one (as in a monarchy or a tyranny) from government by the few (in an aristocracy or oligarchy) and from government by the many (as in a democracy). Governments can also be classified by mode of succession; for example, ascension to governmental leadership may follow the rules of hereditary succession, or it may be determined through elections or by force. Governments also vary in terms of the laws and rules of conduct that each political entity follows.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/22/99622-050-E70BCD0A/Parthenon-Athens.jpg","altText":"Politics, Law & Government","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/22/99622-050-E70BCD0A/Parthenon-Athens.jpg"}},{"id":6000,"title":"World History","url":"World-History","description":"Does history really repeat itself, or can we learn from the mistakes of those who came before us? History provides a chronological, statistical, and cultural record of the events, people, and movements that have made an impact on humankind and the world at large throughout the ages.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/05/84505-050-8BB58BE6/cave-art-Ennedi-Plateau-Chad.jpg","altText":"World History","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/05/84505-050-8BB58BE6/cave-art-Ennedi-Plateau-Chad.jpg"}},null],"mainCategory":{"id":9000,"title":"Politics, Law & Government","url":"Politics-Law-Government","description":"The world today is divided territorially into more than 190 countries, each of which possesses a national government that claims to exercise sovereignty and seeks to compel obedience to its will by its citizens. Governments can be classified in any number of ways. For example, they might be classified by the number of rulers, thus distinguishing government by one (as in a monarchy or a tyranny) from government by the few (in an aristocracy or oligarchy) and from government by the many (as in a democracy). Governments can also be classified by mode of succession; for example, ascension to governmental leadership may follow the rules of hereditary succession, or it may be determined through elections or by force. Governments also vary in terms of the laws and rules of conduct that each political entity follows.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/22/99622-050-E70BCD0A/Parthenon-Athens.jpg","altText":"Politics, Law & Government","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/22/99622-050-E70BCD0A/Parthenon-Athens.jpg"}},"typeDisplayName":"List"},{"id":3793,"title":"9 of the World’s Deadliest Spiders","url":"/list/9-of-the-worlds-deadliest-spiders","description":"Do these dangerous arachnids live near you? ","image":{"id":0,"url":"/70/62770-131-C97CD1F7/Black-widow-spider.jpg","altText":"Black widow spider","credit":"Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.","width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/70/62770-131-C97CD1F7/Black-widow-spider.jpg"},"type":"LIST","breadcrumb":{"homeLink":null,"items":[{"title":"List","url":"/list/browse"},{"title":"Science","url":"/list/browse/Science"}],"lastItemTitle":"Science"},"superCategory":{"id":6,"title":"Science & Tech","url":"Science-Tech","description":"Explore science and technology; astronomy; biology; chemistry; earth science; mathematics; physics; technology, agriculture, cars, computers, engineering, industry, inventions, communication","keywords":"astronomy; biology; chemistry; earth science; mathematics; physics; technology, agriculture, cars, computers, engineering, industry, inventions, communication","classId":"SCIENCE","sortOrder":2},"hashtags":["encyclopedia","britannica","encyclopedia britannica","list","lists","dangerous","deadly","spiders","arachnids","black widow","wolf spider","animals","bugs","insects"],"hashtagsString":"encyclopedia, britannica, encyclopedia britannica, list, lists, dangerous, deadly, spiders, arachnids, black widow, wolf spider, animals, bugs, insects","displayDate":[2014,3,7],"urlTitle":"9-of-the-worlds-deadliest-spiders","featureSubType":"REGULAR","categories":[{"id":1000,"title":"Science","url":"Science","description":"How can the sky be blue one day and stormy the next? Why do heavy objects tend to fall downwards when dropped? How are birds able to fly (and why can’t I do the same?)? Human beings have long been curious about the world in which we live, striving to identify connections among the phenomenons we witness and to understand how it all works. The field of science has developed over many centuries as a way of studying and understanding the world, beginning with the primitive stage of simply noting important regularities in nature and continuing through the rise of modern science. The modern-day sciences cover a vast range of fields, including biology, chemistry, meteorology, astronomy, physics, and much more.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/86/193986-050-7B2DBB6A/ball-and-stick-model-structure-atoms.jpg","altText":"Science","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/86/193986-050-7B2DBB6A/ball-and-stick-model-structure-atoms.jpg"}},null,null],"mainCategory":{"id":1000,"title":"Science","url":"Science","description":"How can the sky be blue one day and stormy the next? Why do heavy objects tend to fall downwards when dropped? How are birds able to fly (and why can’t I do the same?)? Human beings have long been curious about the world in which we live, striving to identify connections among the phenomenons we witness and to understand how it all works. The field of science has developed over many centuries as a way of studying and understanding the world, beginning with the primitive stage of simply noting important regularities in nature and continuing through the rise of modern science. The modern-day sciences cover a vast range of fields, including biology, chemistry, meteorology, astronomy, physics, and much more.","image":{"id":0,"url":"/86/193986-050-7B2DBB6A/ball-and-stick-model-structure-atoms.jpg","altText":"Science","credit":null,"width":null,"height":null,"fullUrl":"https://cdn.britannica.com/86/193986-050-7B2DBB6A/ball-and-stick-model-structure-atoms.jpg"}},"typeDisplayName":"List"}]},"byline":null,"citationInfo":null,"websites":null,"freeTopicReason":"TOPIC_IS_INDEX_PAGE","articleSchemaMarkup":{"keywords":"Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration","wordcount":0,"url":"https://www.britannica.com/topic/Puerto-Rican-Reconstruction-Administration","description":"Other articles where Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration is discussed: Puerto Rico: Political developments: The newly formed Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration (PRRA) attempted to redistribute economic power on the island, primarily by placing a restrictive quota on sugarcane production and enforcing a long-neglected law that limited corporate holdings to 500 acres (200 hectares). Thus, the PRRA reversed the growth of the island’s…","publisher":{"name":"Encyclopedia Britannica","@type":"Organization","logo":{"url":"https://corporate.britannica.com/wp-content/themes/eb-corporate/_img/logo.png","@type":"ImageObject"}},"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"article"},"studentArticle":false,"initialLoad":true}

Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration

Directory

References

Discover

New Seven Wonders of the World

Why Is Missouri Called the Show Me State?

All 119 References in “We Didn’t Start the Fire,” Explained

Why Do Bananas Turn Brown?

Secret Service Code Names of 11 U.S. Presidents

9 of the World’s Deadliest Spiders


United States agency

Also known as: PRRA

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Puerto Rico

  • Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration | United States agency (8)

    In Puerto Rico: Political developments

    The newly formed Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration (PRRA) attempted to redistribute economic power on the island, primarily by placing a restrictive quota on sugarcane production and enforcing a long-neglected law that limited corporate holdings to 500 acres (200 hectares). Thus, the PRRA reversed the growth of the island’s…

    Read More
Puerto Rican Reconstruction Administration | United States agency (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Sen. Ignacio Ratke

Last Updated:

Views: 5926

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (76 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Sen. Ignacio Ratke

Birthday: 1999-05-27

Address: Apt. 171 8116 Bailey Via, Roberthaven, GA 58289

Phone: +2585395768220

Job: Lead Liaison

Hobby: Lockpicking, LARPing, Lego building, Lapidary, Macrame, Book restoration, Bodybuilding

Introduction: My name is Sen. Ignacio Ratke, I am a adventurous, zealous, outstanding, agreeable, precious, excited, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.