Latin America & The Caribbean

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Unsettling
September 6, 2009 2 min. read

Conjecture is rife in the aftermath of Mexico’s decriminalization program. Much of it concerns the reaction of the drug cartels. Will they be undercut by legalization? Will they redouble efforts to expand drug use in Mexico? Will prices decrease? Will Mexico’s new focus on treatment, as opposed to punishment, work? Answers to some of these […]

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Rallies Against Chavez Organized Worldwide
September 4, 2009 2 min. read

Today and tomorrow (September 4 and 5) there will be a series of marches in Venezuela, Colombia and throughout the world based on the theme of “No More Chávez”. El Universal, one of the independent newspapers in the Venezuelan capital, has a short blurb here. Two weeks ago a march against the new education reform […]

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“Flags of Our (Founding) Fathers”: Venezuela's Claim on Guyanese Territory
September 3, 2009 2 min. read

The Venezuelan flag carries a rich historical tradition, and is based on versions used by rebels who fought for the country’s independence in the early 19th century. At the same time, like Venezuela as a whole, the flag has undergone changes in recent times. The flag has three horizontal colored stripes. The red is said […]

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With No Thaw in Frozen Relations, Who Suffers from Limits on Venezuelan-Colombian Trade?
August 31, 2009 3 min. read

This past weekend President Chávez of Venezuela’s reiterated his commitment to maintaining “frozen relations” with the administration of Alvaro Uribe and Colombia. (You can read more at this link.) He stated that based on trade agreements with Brazil and Argentina, “we are not going to have problems with supplies”. This may be the plan, with […]

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Summit in Bariloche: Why Discuss US Military Presence in Colombia Now?
August 29, 2009 2 min. read

Today leaders met in Bariloche, Argentina, for a session of the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR). Atop the agenda was discussion of the military agreement between Colombia and the United States, signed to maintain efforts against drug-trafficking and terrorism in the region. See this BBC Mundo article for a preview of the meeting. As […]

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A Mixed Bag
August 26, 2009 3 min. read

The decriminalization of drug use in Mexico is bound to have unintended consequences. Beginning last Friday, possession of small amounts of drugs, including cocaine, heroine, LSD, marijuana and meth, is permitted. Such wholesale legalization is crude, but may prove beneficial to the Mexican economy. Having up to four joints on you (the legal limit is […]

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The Politics of Chavez and Uribe: Distinct Ideologies, Similar Strategies?
August 26, 2009 3 min. read

President Alvaro Uribe recently moved one step closer to running for a third term in office. The Colombian Senate voted 56-2 last week to approve a plan for legal changes that would enable him to be reelected a second time. The process must now be approved by the House of Representatives and pass a nationwide […]

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“Which Way Home”: A Story of Migration in Latin America
August 26, 2009 3 min. read

On August 24th HBO presented a new documentary titled “Which Way Home”. This film follows a number of children, as young as 9-years old, on their perilous journey from Central America into the United States. While seeking to enter the US illegally, they dream of building better lives. Venezuelan migrants do not live in the […]

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Police Detain Colombians and Consulate Official in Caracas
August 24, 2009 3 min. read

On August 16th a staff person from the Colombian Consulate and between 20 and 30 Colombian migrants were detained by the police in Caracas. Despite diplomatic immunities, consular documents and a computer were also confiscated. The Consulate was carrying out a documentation exercise for residents of the barrio Catía. Although accused of not receiving authorization […]

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Off A Cliff
August 23, 2009 3 min. read

The cliff diving Mecca of Acapulco has come to symbolize Mexico’s ailing economy. The sheer cliffs of La Quebrada are famous for the professional divers who hurl themselves over the 140-plus foot cliffs. If they time the waves wrong, they can go splat. Tourists can watch the spectacle from a nearby restaurant carved into the […]

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Is Chavez's Influence in Decline? (and Lessons for US Policy with Potential Adversaries)
August 22, 2009 3 min. read

In an editorial within today’s Washington Post, Edward Schumacher-Matos presents a nice summary of what might be considered a waning in the power of Venezuelan President, Hugo Chávez. As Schumacher-Matos describes, on a number of fronts other South American nations have been acting counter to Chávez’s wishes. Ecuador, though considered an ally, has reached out […]

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Golfing in Venezuela: Chavez May Close Down the “Bourgeois” Links
August 21, 2009 4 min. read

Golf in Venezuela has again come under pressure after President Hugo Chávez recently labeled it “a bourgeois sport”. The links are considered by the President, and his supporters, to be the playing fields of the wealthy and elite. An article in the New York Times further describes the situation. Interestingly, it appears that some of […]

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