Uncategorized

See All Press
Anti-Homophobia in Cuba
May 17, 2009 3 min. read

In March of this year, Cuba kicked off its “Campaign for the Respect of People’s Sexual Orientation,” led by the National Center for Sexual Education (CENESEX). Center Director Mariela Castro (above) explained that the campaign aims to “contribute to the education of the entire society, with an emphasis on university youth, in respecting free and […]

Read more
Cuban economy: prospects for 2009
May 16, 2009 3 min. read

Predicting trends in the Cuban economy is a particularly challenging exercise, especially from outside of the country. After all, Havana does not release complete information about the economy, business climate, or domestic financial systems. One is left almost solely with sparse data and the word of Cuban officials to go on. For instance, the Cuban […]

Read more
Salary reform pending
May 13, 2009 2 min. read

Since 2006 when he was “provisional” president, Raúl Castro has pushed for a salary reform that would eliminate the previous egalitarian system in favor of a system familiar in most other countries: paying higher wages to individuals who work harder and yield higher production. The idea, of course, is to spur production by creating an […]

Read more
Strange bedfellows on the UN Human Rights Council
May 13, 2009 3 min. read

The Bush administration boycotted the United Nations Human Rights Council since its creation three years ago, criticizing the Council for ignoring abuses in a number of states in favor of increasing the attention paid to Israel’s treatment of Palestinians (an issue that merits attention, but not instead of paying mind to other states’ egregious offenses). […]

Read more
Orbitz enters the Cuba travel fray
May 12, 2009 2 min. read

Orbitz, a large and well-known online travel booking company, and Ipsos, a survey-based market research company, released the results of a public opinion survey today, showing that a great majority of Americans favor lifting the ban on travel to Cuba. Orbitz simultaneously launched a campaign aimed at getting Congress to allow travel to Cuba by […]

Read more
Quick peeks into life on the island
May 11, 2009 2 min. read

This weekend, the department of sociology at Queen’s University in Ontario, Canada hosted a conference called “The Measure of a Revolution: Cuba 1959-2009.” Today was the close of the conference, which was rare and interesting not because it sought to analyze the successes and failures of the Cuban Revolution at 50 years—indeed, this has been the […]

Read more
Breaking news: Internet out of Cubans' reach
May 8, 2009 2 min. read

In a previous post, we noted that only 2% of the Cuban population, or about 200,000 individuals, have any access at all to the World Wide Web. The individuals who make up that 2% (those that are not government employees, academics or researchers) circumvented the limitations imposed by the Cuban government by using hotel Internet […]

Read more
Cuban tourism: continuing the discussion
May 8, 2009 3 min. read

Thirty years ago, in April 1979, Carlos Muñiz Varela was murdered in Puerto Rico. The native-born Cuban was the 26-year-old founder of Viajes Varadero, a travel agency that booked the first flight from the United States to Cuba after over 15 years without. He was one of the group of Cuban exiles that negotiated with […]

Read more
Cultural exchange and the "blockade"
May 5, 2009 2 min. read

The most recently publicized victim of Washington’s policy of stifling U.S.-Cuban exchange was Cuban musician Silvio Rodríguez. He applied well in advance from his current residence in Paris for the visa he would need to travel to New York for last evening’s celebration of Pete Seeger’s 90th birthday, but as of the time he would […]

Read more
Paradigm Shifts and Policy in Latin America: Not for the Fainthearted!
May 4, 2009 10 min. read

The last few weeks in the Latin American world has been anything but calm. Coming off meeting of the G20 and Summit of the Americas, the region has moved towards many intended transformations in policy and relations with the US and the EU. Some of these major changes are discussed below. Mexico: With a severely […]

Read more
Terrorist nations: Syria, Sudan, Iran and… Cuba
May 4, 2009 1 min. read

On April 30, the U.S. State Department made public its annual list of countries that back or abet terrorism. There are only four countries included, and Cuba was left on again this year. Iran, Syria and Sudan join the Caribbean island on the list. But some point to a softening of report’s language as yet […]

Read more
The question of Guantanamo
May 4, 2009 2 min. read

Julia Sweig of the Council on Foreign Relations had an excellent piece in today’s Washington Post that detailed the contentious past, present and future of the U.S. base at Guantánamo Bay. She presented a controversial but necessary proposition that I’ve mentioned before: the United States should return the property to Cuba. True, the United States has […]

Read more

Popular from Press