
CrossCurrents Vol. 4 No. 2
The June 2002 issue of CrossCurrents.
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The June 2002 issue of CrossCurrents.
The December 2002 issue of CrossCurrents.
The October 2003 issue of CrossCurrents, which celebrates the creation of CICIACS in Guatemala and discusses WOLA’s civil society delegation to Colombia, Lula’s first year in office, prospects for a free trade agreement with Central America, and Cuba’s crackdown on dissidents.
“A Time for Change” offers a critique of current U.S. policy toward Cuba and proposes policy alternatives. It also includes a timeline of U.S.- Cuba relations, web resources and talking points.
The July 2005 issue of CrossCurrents, covering a conference on youth gang violence in Central America, Cuba Action Day on Capitol Hill, protests in Bolivia, and investigations on murders in Juárez, Mexico.
A guide to U.S.-Latin America policy issues for first-term Members of Congress
Produced by WOLA and the Latin American Working Group, this manual provides guidance on organizing and implementing community-based advocacy strategies to change the United States’ Cuba policy.
A joint project by the Washington Office on Latin America and the Latin America Working Group Education Fund documents the effects of tighter U.S. travel restrictions on Cuban-Americans and their families on the island.
Engagement with Cuba not only makes good sense domestically but is also far more likely to benefit dialogue and human rights in Cuba than isolation.
WOLA’s plan for an overhaul of U.S.-Latin America relations gives the next administration important recommendations on how the United States can rebuild its standing in Latin America by putting relations on a new footing based on engagement, respect, and collective action on common challenges.
Waiting for Change documents the complexities and disappointments of the Obama Administration’s relations with Latin America in its first year. The report identifies an underlying trend toward greater militarization of U.S. foreign policy which spans Democratic and Republican administrations alike.
This congressional education packet shows how existing restrictions on travel and trade harm U.S. national interests, and why reform is consistent with our values, our economic interests, and efforts to improve the U.S. image abroad.
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