Archive for 'Integration & Trade'

From Perote to Tar Heel

Posted 09 February 2012 | By | Categories: Biodiversity & Sustainable Development, Immigration, Integration & Trade, Mexico & Border, Regular Columnists | 1 Comment

For over two decades, Smithfield has used NAFTA and the forces it unleashed to become one of the world’s largest growers, packers and exporters of hogs and pork. But the conditions created in Veracruz to help it make high profits, as one of Mexico’s largest pig producers, also plunged thousands of Veracruz residents into poverty.

“Bilateralizing” Relations between Peru and Venezuela

“Bilateralizing” Relations between Peru and Venezuela

Posted 03 February 2012 | By | Categories: Integration & Trade, South America | 2 Comments

After President Ollanta Humala’s state visit to Venezuela Jan 7, and despite some adverse reactions to the visit in Peru, Humala announced that the two countries have “succeeded in turning away from the bilateral politics of the past in which nothing major had been accomplished in diplomatic, commercial and cultural relations.”

Mexico Climate Politics Heats Up

Posted 01 February 2012 | By | Categories: Biodiversity & Sustainable Development, Citizen Action, Climate Change, Indigenous People, Integration & Trade, Mexico & Border, Military | 2 Comments

History has not been kind to the indigenous Raramuri people of the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua. Pushed to remote mountains of a harsh land by Spanish and mestizo colonists, the Raramuri managed to hang on to their culture while eking out an existence based on rain-fed farming and small herd grazing. In recent decades their lands have been invaded again, this time by cattlemen, loggers, miners, dope growers, tourism developers, and soldiers.

The Modern Immigrant Rights Movement

Posted 14 January 2012 | By | Categories: Caribbean, Central America, Citizen Action, Immigration, Indigenous People, Integration & Trade, Mexico & Border | 3 Comments

Over the 27 years since IRCA, a general division has marked the U.S. immigrant rights movement. On one side are well-financed advocacy organizations in Washington DC, with links to the Democratic Party and large corporations. They formulate and negotiate over immigration reform proposals that combine labor supply programs and increased enforcement against the undocumented. On the other side are organizations based in immigrant communities, and among labor and political activists, who defend undocumented migrants, and who resist proposals for greater enforcement and labor programs with diminished rights.

Increasing Reliance on Guest Worker Programs

Posted 14 January 2012 | By | Categories: Caribbean, Central America, Immigration, Indigenous People, Integration & Trade, Mexico & Border | 4 Comments

Over the last 25 years, guest worker programs have increasingly become a vehicle for channeling the migration that has stemmed from free market reforms. Increasing numbers of guest workers are recruited each year for labor in the U.S. from Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean under the H1-B, H2-A and H2-B programs. Recruiters promise high wages and charge thousands of dollars for visas, fees and transportation. By the time they leave home, the debts of guest workers are crushing.

Migration: A Product of Free Market Reforms

Posted 12 January 2012 | By | Categories: Immigration, Indigenous People, Integration & Trade, Mexico & Border | 3 Comments

A political alliance is developing between countries with a labor export policy and the corporations who use that labor in the global north.

Zapatistas: 18 Years of Rebellion and Resistance

Posted 03 January 2012 | By | Categories: Citizen Action, Indigenous People, Integration & Trade, Mexico & Border | 4 Comments

Desinformemonos.org, an “autonomous, global communications project”, covers grassroots movements throughout the world and the ideas and aspirations behind them. Its team reported on the international seminar held in Chiapas to commemorate and reflect on the 18th anniversary of the Zapatista uprising. In collaboration with Desinformemonos, the Americas program presents this summary in English of their coverage of the event.