Archive for 'Regular Columnists'

The Murdered Women of Juarez

Posted 20 January 2011 | By | Categories: Citizen Action, Integration & Trade, Mexico & Border, Regular Columnists | 5 Comments

Marisela Escobedo’s life changed forever in August 2008 when her 16-year-old daughter Rubi failed to come home. What was left of Rubi’s body was found months later in a dump — 39 pieces of charred bone.

Rubi became one more macabre statistic in Ciudad Juarez’s nearly two-decade history of femicide. The murder of young women, often raped and tortured, brought international infamy to the city long before it became the epicenter of the Calderon drug war and took on the added title of murder capital of the world.

The Decade that Transformed a Continent

The Decade that Transformed a Continent

Posted 11 January 2011 | By | Categories: Citizen Action, Integration & Trade, Regular Columnists, South America | 1 Comment

In many ways, the first decade of the 21st Century was the flip side of the last decade of the twentieth century in South America. There have been numerous and significant changes. We still don’t know if it’s a glitch in time or a new beginning. In any case, the region will never be the same.

San José of Apartadó, Peace Community: Liberty as a survival instinct

San José of Apartadó, Peace Community: Liberty as a survival instinct

Posted 30 December 2010 | By | Categories: Citizen Action, Indigenous People, Regular Columnists, South America | 1 Comment

Heaven and hell are reversed, traveling to the edge of the abyss, they transform into their opposite: an atrocious war with a community of peace; desperation with hope; life and death dance in an impossible trance. This is Colombia. Where peasants tired of war take refuge in peace in order to continue living. This is the story of a visit to the community from the perspective of a supportive photographer.

Cancun Agreement Succeeds in Meeting Low Expectations

Posted 16 December 2010 | By | Categories: Biodiversity & Sustainable Development, Climate Change, Indigenous People, Integration & Trade, Mexico & Border, Regular Columnists, South America | 2 Comments

They did it! After pre-announcing that no major decisions would result from Cancun talks and nearly two weeks of debates and discussions, the army of international climate change negotiators reached an agreement fully in line with the low expectations for it. In fact, they even managed to lower the bar on key issues.

Peasant, Indigenous Organizations Reject Market Schemes for Global Warming

Posted 10 December 2010 | By | Categories: Biodiversity & Sustainable Development, Citizen Action, Climate Change, Food Politics, Indigenous People, Integration & Trade, Mexico & Border, Regular Columnists, South America | 2 Comments

The UN Climate Conference (COP16) in Cancun is turning out to be both anti-climactic and anti-climatic.

Negotiators have given up on a binding agreement to limit emissions of greenhouse gases. Instead, they are seeking to expand schemes to allow contaminating industries and nations to continue with business as usual and add another lucrative area to their portfolios–trade in carbon offsets and credits.

In Mexico City, a Message for Cancún

Posted 04 December 2010 | By | Categories: Biodiversity & Sustainable Development, Citizen Action, Climate Change, Food Politics, Indigenous People, Regular Columnists | No Comments

On Tuesday, as U.N. negotiations on climate change geared up in the Caribbean beach resort of Cancún, thousands of people marched through the streets of Mexico City to demand grassroots solutions to global warming—and to the slew of other crises they face.

The peasants and workers, students and environmentalists gathered here don’t draw lines around issues. Demands for rural development and the release of political prisoners mix with calls to stop global warming and save the jungles. Peasant farmers from the poor southern states of Mexico walk somberly down the Paseo de la Reforma in four straight lines, their silence broken by the occasional collective slogan. Their discipline and gravity are a far cry from the image of destructive “globalphobics” that the Mexican government has reportedly been warning Cancún locals about. The smaller groups of students and activists are rowdier, dancing down the streets, holding banners, and laughing along the way.

Brazilian Foreign Policy under Dilma: Interview with Igor Fuser

Posted 23 November 2010 | By | Categories: Integration & Trade, Regular Columnists, South America | 1 Comment

On Oct. 31, Brazilians elected their new president, Worker’s Party (PT) candidate, Dilma Rousseff. Over the last eight years, President Luiz Inácio “Lula” da Silva, has turned the world’s attention to Brazil like never before, as his country has increasingly participated on the international scene.

To understand what this will look like under the Dilma government, I sat down with Igor Fuser, international journalist and Professor at the Cásper Libero University in São Paulo. Fuser has a Masters degree in International Relations and is the author of the book “Petroleum and Power: U.S. Military Involvement in the Persian Gulf.”