The treatment of women in the Dominican Republic reflected the intricate relationship between conventional gender norms and socioeconomic dynamics. In contrast to the limitations they encountered back home, Dominican women who immigrated to the United States experienced greater freedom and expanded opportunities. In the United States, women were protected by the law and were equal to men. They were also allowed to work and did not have to rely on a man. New York is the home of several Dominican-owned businesses such as hair salons, bodegas, restaurants, and grocery stores. Many Dominican women who immigrated to New York opened hair salons, making Dominican hair salons extremely popular in the present day. Dominican women could get a G.E.D. and have the chance to advance their lives. If they could afford it, they had the opportunity to attend college to further their economic progress. Although Dominican women had many liberties in the United States, Dominicans in New York were in a worse financial state than other New