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Full Coverage: Latin America and the Caribbean

July 2007

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07/30/2007 Is it possible to speak mostly Spanish and still assimilate into U.S. culture? Do you have to like hamburgers more than tacos? Activists and academics weigh in on what assimilation is, and whether U.S. Latinos have achieved it.
From: New America Media
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Related: [United States]
07/27/2007 Although there is disagreement over how Puerto Rico should be governed -- as a U.S. territory, U.S. state, or independent nation -- there is consensus that Puerto Ricans themselves must play a major role in deciding the island's fate.
Read more
From: North American Congress on Latin America
Related: [Puerto Rico] [United States]
07/26/2007 More than 6,000 documented slaves were working in Brazil in 2005, doing much of the work that turns cane into sugar for food and ethanol fuel. As the agro-fuel market booms, a human rights group urges the Brazilian government to address the chronic problem of slavery.
Read more
From: Grassroots International
Related: [Brazil]
07/26/2007 Developing countries can learn from the experiences of Brazil and Thailand when it comes to sustaining access to anti-HIV drugs, says Médecins Sans Frontières.
Read more
From: SciDev.Net
Related: [Brazil] [Thailand]
07/25/2007 Last year Colombia was praised for reducing violence in Bogota, formally one of the most dangerous cities in the world. Yet this new urban order has not resulted from the rule of law, explains Colombia specialist Garry Leech, but from the rule of private right-wing militias.
Read more
From: North American Congress on Latin America
Related: [Colombia] [Brazil]
07/24/2007 Fifteen women gathered recently to help develop strategies to combat domestic and sexual violence in Colombia. Now they're working to spread the movement throughout the region.
Read more
From: MADRE
Related: [Colombia]
Image: © MADRE
07/23/2007 Kansalaisjärjestöt penäävät Väli-Amerikan hallituksilta vastuuta maquilloilla tapahtuvien ihmisoikeusrikkomusten suhteen. Työntekijöihin kohdistuvat lukuisat rikkomukset tulevat esiin järjestöjen Amerikkojen ihmisoikeuskomissiolle jättämässä raportissa.
Read more
From: UnMundo América Latina
Related: [Central America]
07/19/2007 For Mexico's government, worries over the drug trade going north have been matched by concerns over the arms trade heading south. Louis Nevaer explains.
From: New America Media
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Related: [United States] [Mexico]
07/18/2007 In a historic move, Bolivia's indigenous Chiquitano group have been granted permanent land titles over their ancestral territory.
Read more
From: Oxfam America
Related: [Bolivia]
Selling potatoes in South America.
07/18/2007 A major region of Peru has banned genetically modified varieties of a crop that has been grown there for thousands of years and which helped fuel the ancient Inca empire.
Read more
From: International Institute for Environment and Development
Related: [Peru]
Image: Selling potatoes in South America. © FAO / G. Bizzarri
07/13/2007 After more than 20 years of waiting, communities in the highlands of Guatemala are finally able to bury their loved ones -- victims of some of the most brutal violence of the country’s 36-year civil war.
View the Photo Essay
From: North American Congress on Latin America
Related: [Guatemala]
07/12/2007 Ahead of an announcement today by Peru’s state oil company of the results of an auction of 19 oil exploration lots - some in areas inhabited by uncontacted tribes - a company spokeswoman questioned the existence of such people in the Peruvian Amazon.
Read more
From: Survival International Italia
Related: [Peru]
07/11/2007 JOHANNESBURG, Jul 11 (IPS) - What is a common factor in ensuring that women do not marry too young, do not have more children than they can cope with, do not die giving birth -- and contract HIV in smaller numbers? Men.
Read more
From: Inter Press Service (IPS)
Related: [Africa] [Asia and the Pacific] [Europe] [Northern America] [Development] [Population] [Gender] [MDGs]
07/11/2007 The White House recently held a conference on "Advancing Social Justice in the Americas." Though the United States has typically focused on free trade, narcotics, and military policy in the region, the Bush administration should shift its priorities toward social justice, says a Washington-based non-profit think tank.
Read more
From: Center for Global Development
Related: [United States]
07/10/2007 Köyhimmätkään kehitysmaat eivät aina tee kaikkeaan köyhyyden vähentämiseksi, vaan ohjaavat niukkoja resurssejaan puolustusmenoihin. Costa Rican presidentti Oscar Arias ehdottama Costa Rican konsensus kasvattaisi kehitysapua ja velkahelpotuksia maille, jotka vähentävät puolustusmenojaan tai pitävät puolustusmenotasonsa alhaisena.
Read more
From: Ulkoministeriö
Related: [Costa Rica] [Development] [Arms & Military]
The Global Compact: Worth the paper it's written on?
07/10/2007 World leaders and global business chiefs gathered last week to assess progress on a voluntary initiative aimed at promoting human rights standards for cooperate operations. Several non-profits are criticizing the seven-year-old "Global Compact" as a mockery and a failure.
Read more
From: OneWorld US
Related: [Mexico] [India] [Ghana] [Water/Sanitation] [Corporations] [Pollution] [Human Rights] [Codes of Conduct]
Image: The Global Compact: Worth the paper it's written on?
07/06/2007 Brazilian authorities freed over 1,100 forced labourers from a sugar cane plantation in the Amazon in the biggest raid to date.
Read more
From: Anti-Slavery International
Related: [Brazil]
07/05/2007 Abbott Laboratories, the third-largest U.S. drug maker, agreed to cut the price of its new AIDS treatment drug by 30 percent in Brazil, two months after the country broke the patent on a similar drug made by Merck.
Read more
Related: [Brazil]
One of the U.S. Social Forum's organizers, Alice Lovelace.
07/05/2007 NEW YORK, Jul 4 (OneWorld) - New alliances between activist communities in the Unites States and those involved in social justice movements across the Gulf of Mexico are in the offing.
Read more
From: OneWorld US
Related: [United States] [Activism] [Globalization]
Image: One of the U.S. Social Forum's organizers, Alice Lovelace. © Nic Paget-Clarke / In Motion Magazine
Soldiers in Colombia.
07/04/2007 A sham paramilitary demobilization process combined with thousands of cases of threats and killings and a chronic lack of investigations and prosecutions makes Colombia one of the most dangerous places in the world for trade unionists, according to a new human rights report.
From: Amnesty International
Read more
Related: [Colombia]
Image: Soldiers in Colombia. © Independent Media Center
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