NACLA is working on a nationwide grassroots campaign to ensure that Obama brings to the Americas not just change, but justice. But we need to move fast – and so we need your help, right now.

To take advantage of this historic opportunity, NACLA needs to raise $32,360 by the end of November. Will you join us and support this fight?

 


Venezuela Elections Pose Big Test
Pablo Vivanco
Thursday November 20 2008

Venezuela's local elections on November 23 are the first major test for the government of Hugo Chávez since his socialist-oriented constitutional reforms were defeated last year. Although the elections are unlikely to dramatically shift the national balance of power, the results will help gauge the momentum of Chávez's project to create a “twenty-first century socialism."


What's Driving El Salvador's Left Turn?
Susan Fitzpatrick Behrens
Wednesday November 19 2008

The leftist FMLN party is the current favorite to win El Salvador's March 2009 presidential elections. Besides the economic downturn, the party's success at the polls is being driven by a series of political innovations that have helped broaden the party's appeal and boost its inclusiveness—both at home and abroad. Could this new strategy make El Salvador the next Latin American country to make a turn to the left?


Building the Homeland Security State
Roberto Lovato
Tuesday November 18 2008

The U.S. government’s huge new Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) was established to battle a new kind of domestic enemy, undocumented immigration. Yet the creation of ICE was not so much motivated by a perceived need to enforce migration policy as by a desire to build up the domestic security apparatus.


Obama and Myths of Racial Democracy
Marisol LeBrón
Monday November 17 2008

When Barack Obama clinched the presidency, pundits immediately began claiming the United States was on its way toward becoming a "post-racial" or "color-blind" society. But Latin America shows how claims of an emerging "racial democracy" easily coexist with mass discrimination and racism. Until racial hierarchies are systematically dismantled, myths of racial democracy will continue to mask and perpetuate injustice—both in Latin America and the United States.


Bolivia: Reform and Reaction in the Hemisphere
Seemin Qayum and Sinclair Thomson
Thursday November 13 2008

Nowhere in the hemisphere have recent political tensions between progressive and reactionary forces been sharper than in Bolivia. The country has become a flashpoint for international contests over natural-resource exploitation and revenue, constitutional reform, and U.S. influence in Latin America.


Another Economic Casualty: Mexican Remittances
Zach Dyer
Wednesday November 12 2008

Remittances, the money immigrants send to their home countries, have become an essential economic lifeline for several Latin American nations. Mexico receives more remittances from migrants in the United States than any country in the world. But amid a tanking U.S. economy, the amount Mexicans are sending home dropped this year for the first time on record. Strangely, while Mexico reels, remittances to Central American countries have continued to rise—for now.


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