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The feasibility and/or necessity of urban farming
August 26, 2009 2 min. read

Around Cuba’s capital Havana, it is quite remarkable how often you see a neatly tended plot of land right in the heart of the city. Sometimes smack bang between tower block estates or next door to the crumbling colonial houses, fresh fruit and vegetables are growing in abundance. So begins Sarah Murch’s piece in the Herald […]

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A video surprise: "healthy" Fidel
August 25, 2009 2 min. read

Former Cuban President Fidel Castro appeared on state television Sunday for the first time since June 2008, looking far healthier than in many of the photos released since his surgery. The footage shows clips from Fidel’s three-hour meeting over the weekend with a group of Venezuelan students from the University of Carabobo. He comments on […]

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Cooperation opportunities: storms
August 24, 2009 2 min. read

Hurricane Bill was a source of great concern over the last few weeks for storm watchers in the Caribbean and along the southern and eastern coasts of the United States. Cooperation on tracking could not be a matter of politics, even between the Cuban and U.S. governments, because coastal communities in both countries were vulnerable. It is […]

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Debate on the embargo: listen here
August 22, 2009 2 min. read

The above clip is a debate between Phil Peters, Vice President of the Lexington Institute, and Mauricio Claver-Carone, lobbyist for the anti-Castro U.S.-Cuba Political Action Committee, on the merits of maintaining or relaxing the U.S. embargo of Cuba. The debate itself follows a typically unproductive “talk past each other” sort of progression, but it lays […]

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Little progress in communications
August 21, 2009 2 min. read

Statistics on the telecommunications and information technology sectors in Cuba are now available on the website of the government’s Oficina Nacional de Estadísticas (ONE). ONE’s data reports (particularly on the economy) are widely regarded as suspect: the claims of improvements and growth often appear impossibly inflated. But this particular report shows such poor results that […]

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Fidel in the U.S. health care debate
August 20, 2009 1 min. read

Is the plan to reform health care in the United States a step toward socialism? Many Republicans say it is. Some of the loudest opponents to Obama’s plan at the Town Hall meetings across the country have been those arguing that the plan erodes the fabric of what defines “America” by turning toward socialism. Across […]

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The Church steps in
August 19, 2009 2 min. read

This week, a delegation of U.S. Catholic bishops headed to Havana to meet with church leaders, expressing their hope that the White House will soon take further steps to improve U.S.-Cuba relations. U.S. Reverend Andrew Small, Archbishop of Boston Sean Patrick O’Malley and Bishop Thomas Wenski of Orlando, Florida held a news conference in Havana today. […]

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Caribbean comparisons
August 17, 2009 2 min. read

Robert Buddan of the University of the West Indies at Mona had a thought-provoking piece in the Jamaica Gleaner today, entitled “Managing crisis in Jamaica and Cuba.” Buddan highlights the difference in options available to the two countries in facing similar debt difficulties. Cuba, for example, cannot seek or receive loans from the International Monetary Fund […]

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When national leaders "live on"
August 16, 2009 2 min. read

From Newsweek: Thursday was the 83rd birthday of Fidel Castro, Cuba’s comandante en jefe, who, upon “retiring” as the country’s leader last year, passed control of the government on to his brother. In that way he remains the godfather of Cuban politics. Like Castro, plenty of other leaders-despite old age, term limits, or even death-continue […]

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On Fidel's 83rd birthday
August 14, 2009 1 min. read

Today is Fidel Castro’s 83rd birthday, a day he marked not with celebration (indeed, the state organized no official events for the occasion) but with an essay on the global economic crisis, climate change and immigration. He wonders in his piece whether the crisis might mean the end of imperialism or the beginning of something […]

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The bad times keep on rolling
August 13, 2009 2 min. read

As the Cuban economy continues to struggle to deal with the global downturn and its implications, consumers will see at least one relief. The state announced a reduction of up to 20% on the price of 24 basic goods, including food products like ground meat, chicken and canned milk, as well as soap, toothpaste, diapers and […]

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Tune in: Blog Talk Radio
August 12, 2009 1 min. read

PBS WIDE ANGLE correspondent Aaron Brown will host a live debate on Blog Talk Radio this Thursday at 11:00 a.m. EST. The topic: should the U.S. lift the trade embargo on Cuba? The standard positions in favor of lifting the embargo are (1) it has failed to achieve its objective of regime change, (2) the […]

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