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Outsourcing the Iraq War: Mercenary Recruiters Turn to Latin America
Eric Stoner
Tuesday July 1 2008

Despite the fact that public sentiment in Latin America has been strongly against the Iraq war since it began, thousands of Latin Americans have the joined the occupation, many of them as private contractors hired by U.S. companies like Blackwater and Triple Canopy.


The Rise of Food Fascism in Bolivia
Roger Burbach
Monday June 30 2008

Landed elites in eastern Bolivia have allied themselves with multinational agribusiness corporations to consolidate their wealth and power, which they are using to destabilize the government of president Evo Morales. The rising food prices and shortages driven by those same corporations have only made their radical right-wing project stronger.


Chile’s Kelwo: Stitching Together a Better Future
Víctor Hugo Robles
Thursday June 26 2008

The Kelwo Association of Chiloé, an organization of Mapuche residents of Chile’s island-province, was formed in 2001 to bring to public attention one of the great social debts of Chilean democracy: the right to health and life of people in indigenous communities affected by HIV/AIDS.


Obama and the School of the Americas
Nikolas Kozloff
Tuesday June 24 2008

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama likes to employ soaring rhetoric when discussing human rights. But he has failed to take a strong position opposing the infamous School of the Americas, which trains Latin American militaries. When pressed, the candidate praised Congress’ revision of the school’s curriculum but said that he wanted to continue to evaluate the institution.


Interview with Boaventura de Sousa Santos
Raphael Hoetmer
Friday June 20 2008

The Portuguese thinker says several events in Latin America have put the brakes on Washington's hemispheric agenda. At the root of this process, he says, is the unprecedented strength of social movements that led to the election of left-leaning Latin American governments at a time in which the U.S. was using the discourse of democracy to justify interventions around the planet.


Two Frentes, One Revolution?
Tim Rogers
Tuesday June 17 2008

El Salvador’s FMLN shares revolutionary roots with Nicaragua’s FSLN; now the former Salvadoran guerrillas hope to also share the FSLN’s success in the voting booth next year.


Reflections on Immigration From Guatemala
Iraida H. López
Monday June 16 2008

Students from a U.S. university recently visited the town of Cajolá in the highlands of Quetzaltenango in Guatemala. Almost half of the town's population has emigrated to the United States. The students visited Cajolá to help and learn from those who stayed behind.


Homeland Security's Enemy Next Door
Tom Barry
Friday June 13 2008

What began as a war on terrorists has become a war on immigrants. The Department of Homeland Security says that it prioritizes its immigration enforcement actions by "targeting the greatest national security and public safety threats"—an approach not taken prior to 9/11.


President Obama? The Likely Reception From Brazil
Nikolas Kozloff
Wednesday June 11 2008

While it’s still unclear what kinds of policies Obama might pursue towards South America if he's elected president, his mere presence in the White House would have enormous emotional and symbolic value, particularly in Brazil, a country whose African roots are strong but where many blacks still struggle against racism and discrimination.


Crossing the Wayúu: Pipeline Divides Indigenous Lands in South America
Jonathan Luna
Monday June 9 2008

Touted as the first step in a major regional integration project, the 225 kilometer TransCaribe pipeline travels underground across Colombia's Guajira Peninsula to the gas refineries of Maracaibo, Venezuela. Protesting the mega project's impacts on the peninsula's indigenous communities, the Wayúu community of Mashiis-Manaa is leading the struggle against oil giant Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA).


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