![]() |
|
|
Study
in Peru Summer 2008 Study
in Argentina Spring 2008 Latin
American Studies Centers Latin American/Caribbean Story of the Week |
Program in Latin American and Caribbean Studies The Program offers a major and minor in Latin American and Caribbean Studies (LACS). This multidisciplinary program features special emphasis on language study in Spanish or Brazilian Portuguese and study abroad. LACS faculty at the College teach the history, languages, anthropology, sociology, politics, art history and literature of this region. The LACS program has established exchange agreements with some of the areas's most renowned universities and research institutions in Latin America. These agreements facilitate dynamic intellectual interchange with leading academics and scholars in Latin America and promote joint research, conferences, and publications. They also provide our students with exciting opportunities to live and study in a Latin American or Caribbean country. Major
in Latin American and Caribbean Studies Undergraduates
can obtain a major in Latin American and Caribbean Studies by
completing 30
hours in
Minor in Latin American and Caribbean Studies Undergraduates can obtain a minor in Latin Aamerican & Caribbean Studies by completing 18 hours in LACS area courses with not more than 9 hours in any one discipline (excluding LACS). The program works closely with the department of Hispanic Studies and students are encouraged to fulfill their language requirement in Spanish or Brazilian Portuguese. Students are encouraged to spend one summer or semester in a study abroad program in Latin America or the Caribbean.
|
| Lugo,
a bespectacled former Roman Catholic bishop, appears to be among the
more moderate left-leaning leaders of South America, where only two
major nations, Colombia and Peru, continue to be run by conservatives. After sweeping to victory Sunday, he was quickly congratulated by the U.S. ambassador. State Department officials said Lugo has exhibited no outward hostility toward the United States.""We're ready to work with him," said one State Department official, who declined to be identified because of the diplomatic sensitivity of the issue. The now-dominant left in South America has taken many forms -- from the stridently anti-U.S. rhetoric of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez and Bolivia's Evo Morales to the generally pro-Washington sentiments of Brazil's Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Chile's Michelle Bachelet. Lugo, 56, dubbed "the bishop of the poor," is seen as independent from the U.S. but not hostile. "Lugo is a bit of an unknown quantity . . . but the indicators are that he's a relatively moderate type," said Gerald McCulloch, a former U.S. diplomat who heads the Paraguayan-American Chamber of Commerce, a trade group. It is a measure of the changing times in U.S.-Latin American relations that a president-elect like Lugo hardly raises eyebrows in Washington. A decade ago, a chief of state with Lugo's background probably would have sounded alarm bells. The ex-bishop endorses Liberation Theology, a doctrine criticized by the Vatican for Marxist influence. Many observers on the continent say Washington's intense focus on the Middle East in recent years has contributed to its diminished influence in Latin America. A region that was once at the center of Cold War politics is now an afterthought, according to many Latin American analysts. "I don't think this [election] is even on Washington's radar screen, given all the other stuff going on in the world," said Michael Shifter of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington. Part of the perception that Lugo will govern as a moderate stems from the broad-based representation in Lugo's victorious Patriotic Alliance for Change, whose members range from the far left to the right. The coalition's key institutional anchor is Paraguay's Authentic Liberal Radical Party, a well-established conservative party with broad U.S. contacts. Lugo's vice president is a Liberal party standard-bearer. And as president, Lugo will have to rely on the bloc of Liberal lawmakers to get anything passed in a divided Congress. "If you look at Lugo's alliance, there's a lot of mainstream political leaders," noted one Western observer here. "It's not all campesino groups. It's not the coca growers union." The latter is a reference to Bolivia's Morales, who emerged from that nation's coca growers movement -- long hostile to U.S. anti-drug policies -- before being elected president in December 2005. A cornerstone of Morales' campaign was his alliance with Chavez and antipathy toward "imperialism" from Washington. Lugo has studiously avoided such rhetoric. In a preelection interview with the Los Angeles Times, Lugo noted Washington's sometimes-contradictory role in Latin America -- and especially in Paraguay.Gen. Alfredo Stroessner, who ran the country with an iron fist for 35 years, was a U.S. Cold War ally before his government's abysmal human rights record soured ties with Washington and he was ousted in 1989. His Colorado Party held power for more than 60 years before Lugo's victory. "The United States . . . has sustained the great dictatorships, but afterward lifted the banner of democracy," Lugo noted. However, he said, Washington must acknowledge a new scenario in which Latin American governments "won't accept any type of intervention from any country, no matter how big it is." It is a sensitive issue that resounds throughout South and Central America. U.S. interventions -- coups, invasions, funding of armed groups -- have cast a shadow over relations between the United States and the region. Latin American leaders, including Lugo, are united in demanding noninterference from Washington. "They don't see themselves as part of the strategic preserve of the United States," said Shifter of the Washington think tank. Nevertheless, Shifter added: "The good news from the American perspective is that these governments still want to deal with the U.S., though on different terms." The Bush administration, in turn, has backed off somewhat from unpopular and divisive projects such as an Americas-wide free-trade zone. Brazil and Paraguay were among the nations that balked at the plan, deeming it unfair to South American producers. Just as Lugo has refrained from attacking Washington, he has also been careful not to assail Venezuela's Chavez or lavish excess praise on him. Lugo -- who won 41% of the vote, compared with 31% for his chief opponent, Colorado Party candidate Blanca Ovelar -- was forced repeatedly to deny links to the Venezuelan leader and insisted he would not be beholden to any side in the ongoing chill in relations between Chavez and the United States. Asked to define his politics, Lugo has said he would negotiate an "intermediate line," somewhere between the hard left of Chavez and Morales and the more moderate stance of Lula and Bachelet. "We have to make our own road toward integration and not be an island between progressive governments," Lugo told the Spanish daily El Pais. "Today in Latin America there are no unified, common paradigms." During the campaign, many of Lugo's foreign policy pronouncements focused on two giant neighbors -- Brazil and Argentina -- rather than on the U.S. The president-elect has vowed to get better deals from both nations on a pair of joint hydroelectric projects. Lugo's election has raised more public concern in Brazil than in the United States, which has relatively little investment here. Lula has firmly declared that Brazil is unwilling to renegotiate the terms of a major hydroelectric treaty that Lugo says cheats Paraguay out of hundreds of millions of dollars annually. "The treaty will not change," Lula declared after congratulating Lugo on his victory. Here in Paraguay, a nation of 6.6 million best known for decades of poverty, smuggling and right-wing rule, there is much speculation about what a Lugo administration will bring -- in foreign policy and most everything else. "We don't know if Lugo will try to take the country closer to Hugo Chavez," said Hugo Estigarribia, a senator-elect from the Colorado Party, which will now be the opposition bloc. But many Paraguayans were euphoric at the prospect of change of a party apparatus condemned as corrupt and incompetent. Thousands celebrated on the streets. "I'm 59 years old. I was born with the Colorado Party in power," said Eladio Casanova, a waiter downtown. "But I didn't want to die with the Colorado Party still in power. |
|
Monday, May 5, 2008 United States Maneuvers to Carve Up Bolivia with Autonomy Vote by: Roger Burbach The illegal referendum held on Sunday to declare
autonomy
in Santa Cruz, Bolivia's richest province, is backed by the Bush
administration in an attempt to halt the leftward drift of South
America.
While the US embassy in La Paz blandly declares its support for "unity
and
democracy" in Bolivia, the government's Interior Minister Alfredo Raba
states
what is widely known, that the United States "has an agenda more
political
than diplomatic in Bolivia, and this agenda is linked to |
![]() |
| opponents of the
current government." Evo Morales, the first indigenous
president of the
country, bluntly declares: "The imperialist project is to try to
carve up Bolivia, and with that to carve up South America because it is
the
epicenter of great changes that are advancing on a world scale."
Morales has aligned Bolivia with the nemesis of the United States, Hugo Chavez of Venezuela. Along with President Rafael Correa of Ecuador, who is closing down the largest US military base on the continent, the three presidents constitute what can be called a radical axis in South America. All three countries have convened constituent assemblies to draft new constitutions and to "refound" their nations. It is Bolivia's new constitution that is to be voted on in a national referendum that has sparked the separatist opposition of the wealthy oligarchs in Santa Cruz. It grants autonomous rights to Bolivia's majority indigenous population, places the country's abundant mineral, gas and petroleum resources under greater national control, and sets limits on the size of the large landed estates that are heavily concentrated in Santa Cruz. The Podemos (We Are Able) Party, which is strongest in Santa Cruz, first tried to use its control of just over one third of the votes in the constituent assembly to block its actions by insisting that a majority vote was not sufficient to approve statutes to the new constitution. When that failed, it resorted to helping stir up violence against assembly members, targeting its indigenous members and its woman president, Silvia Lazarte Flores. At the turn of the year, Evo Morales, backed by popular mobilizations in the streets of La Paz, compelled the existent Congress to approve the call for a national referendum to vote on the new constitution. It was then that the Santa Cruz elite launched its referendum for autonomy, which the country's National Electoral Court has declared unconstitutional. The referendum voted for on Sunday grants the provincial government the power to tax and collect revenues, to set up its own police force and to block any efforts by the national government to carry out agrarian reform. The US ambassador, Philip Goldberg, who was appointed by the Bush administration in September 2006, has maneuvered behind the scenes to support the political forces opposed to Morales and his governing party, the Movement Towards Socialism (MAS). It is notable that Goldberg came to Bolivia from Pristina, Kosovo, where as the US Chief of Mission, he played a central role in orchestrating Kosovo's independence from Serbia, which it had been a province of for centuries. Last year Goldberg was photographed in Santa Cruz with a leading right-wing business magnate and a well-known Colombian narco-trafficker who had been detained by the local police. Then in late January of this year, the Embassy was caught giving aid to a special intelligence unit of the Bolivian police force. The embassy rationalized its aid by saying "the US government has a long history of helping the National Police of Bolivia in diverse programs." US-Bolivian relations were next roiled in February when it was revealed that Peace Corps volunteers and a Fulbright scholar had been pressured by an Embassy official to keep tabs on "Venezuelans and Cubans" in the country. Since Morales took office over two years ago, more than $4 million has been provided by the US Agency for International Development to the political opposition. Bolivia's neighbors are strongly opposed to the separatist movement and its destabilizing impact on the region. Brazil and Argentina are both dependent on natural gas from Bolivia and fear that an internal conflict would interrupt their supplies. Argentinean David Caputo came to Bolivia as head of a mission of the Organization of American States to try set up a dialogue between the government and the opposition. He found the government willing to engage in discussions, but the opposition vehemently opposed. The United States has provided no support to these regional diplomatic efforts to avoid civil strife in Bolivia. |
|
|
![]() |