“This volume is unique in taking on a challenge rarely seen—detailed studies of Spanish colonialism on a truly global scale, including the Americas, the Philippines, the South Pacific Islands, and West Africa.”—Jeffrey Hantman, co-editor of Across the Continent: Jefferson, Lewis and Clark, and the Making of America“The volume maps the haphazard development of the colonial Spanish Empire, focusing on how indigenous and enslaved populations carved and crafted their own spaces through persistence and imaginative place-making strategies.”—Mariah F. Wade, author of Missions, Missionaries, and Native Americans: Long-Term Processes and Daily Practices“The resulting collection, organized largely chronologically, offers a rich and wide-ranging survey of local experiences with Spanish colonialism, with special focus on diverse Indigenous people’s dynamic strategies of response, resistance, and adaptation. Contributors steer away from homogenizing, static, or essentialist conceptions of identity and social practice, instead stressing the heterogeneity, complexity, and continuous evolution of communities and their intersections with one another.”–Christine Delucia, H-Net:Humanities Social Sciences Online (H-LatAm)"The Global Spanish Empire is an ambitious project and one with a very broad geographical scope. Many academic collaborations on the Spanish Empire confine themselves to Latin America and the North American borderlands. Refreshingly, the Beaule and Douglass volume is equally attentive to the Spanish Pacific."—Sean F. McEnroe, Bulletin of Spanish Studies