Difference between revisions of "Latin America"

From Rachel Carson College Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m
Line 1: Line 1:
This is a new page.  Send suggestions for content to pmmckerc@ucsc.edu
+
This is a new page.  Send suggestions for content to pmmckerc@ucsc.edu. See also [http://www.ic.ucsc.edu/college8core/c8wiki/index.php/Category:Colonialism Colonialism].  [http://lals.ucsc.edu/about/history.html Latin American and Latino Studies] at UCSC.
  
  

Revision as of 17:46, 25 September 2012

This is a new page. Send suggestions for content to pmmckerc@ucsc.edu. See also Colonialism. Latin American and Latino Studies at UCSC.


News/Articles

Mystery Disease In Central America Kills Thousands dehydration and chemicals suspected. 2/12.

SAO PAULO -- Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff used a line-item veto Friday to send back parts of a congressional bill that loosened the nation's benchmark law protecting the Amazon rainforest – a veto the government said would prevent increased deforestation.

Environmentalists were not satisfied because they had called for a veto of the entire bill, known as the Forest Code, saying any weakening of the law would put the world's largest rainforest at risk. Government officials said the partial veto went far enough to keep Brazil on track in its efforts to quell the destruction of the Amazon and other biomes.

"It's the code of those who believe it's possible to produce food and preserve the environment," Agriculture Minister Jorge Ribeiro Mendes told reporters.

Mendes and other officials said the government made 12 vetos and 32 other alterations to the bill, including a requirement for large landowners to reforest land they had illegally cleared, with less stringent requirements the smaller the area involved. Rousseff long indicated she wanted a bill that was less rigorous for smaller, poor farmers and ranchers in the Amazon and elsewhere.

"The big (farmers) have vast extensions of land and have the means to recover all the areas of permanent preservation," Teixeira said.

The bill now goes back to Congress, and legislators have 30 days to override Rousseff's changes with a simple majority, which is considered unlikely.

The Amazon rainforest is considered one of the world's most important natural defenses against global warming because of its capacity to absorb huge amounts of carbon dioxide. More. 5/12

Cuban organic (and urban) agriculture. See also Urban Agriculture


Books

Juan González's Harvest of Empire takes an unflinching look at the role that U.S. economic and military interests played in triggering an unprecedented wave of migration that is transforming our nation’s cultural and economic landscape. It's now the basis of a new documentary. Democracy Now segment.

The Greening of Cuba: A National Experiment in Organic Farming by Peter Rosset, Medea Benjamin of Global Exchange (Go Slugs!)


Video

My Village, My Lobster tells the harrowing story of an industry and a Guatemalan community in crisis.

Living under the constant threat of assassination, Francisco Pineda courageously led a citizens' movement that stopped a gold mine from destroying El Salvador's dwindling water resources and the livelihoods of rural communities throughout the country. Learn more at Link.

Director Lucy Walker spent months filming the stories of garbage pickers working at Rio de Janeiro's Jardim Gramacho, one of the world's largest landfills, for her 2011 Academy Award-nominated documentary, Waste Land. (trailer)After her Waste Land experience, Lucy set out to learn what happens to Los Angeles' garbage. slideshow and video) 7/11


Images

Belo Monte Dam Threatens Brazilian Amazon (PHOTOS)


UCSC Resources

Latin American and Latino Studies

Dana Frank one of top academic experts on Honduras, and has written on women in banana labor unions.

Global Exchange resources.

Dawn Gable holds a double BA in Environmental Studies and Biology from UCSC. She spent 2+ years living and working as a field ornithologist in Venezuela where she became acquainted with the Bolivarian Revolution and the Chavez program as well as with Venezuelan culture. The coup attempt of April 11, 2002 that mobilized the Chavez supporting majority, catalyzed her involvement in the movement as well. Dawn is the founder of the International Bolivarian Circle: Cyber-Solidarity, the co-creator and co-manager of the Bolivarian Circles official website. She has been instrumental in organizing internships with Venezuela NGOs for US university students and cooperates with Global Exchange Venezuela programs and is a member of the Santa Cruz Cuba Study Group.