
CrossCurrents Vol. 4 No. 2
The June 2002 issue of CrossCurrents.
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The June 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.
Report by WOLA, LAWG, and CIP, exploring the “war on terror” as the new guiding mission for assistance programs in Latin America.
The February 2005 issue of CrossCurrents, which covers the Bush administration’s trade and development agenda, challenges in Colombia, the Pentagon’s drug war authority, and recent WOLA activities and publications.
A report providing alternatives and recommendations for U.S. policy in Colombia to substantially shift aid from a security-first package to a more balanced plan with economic and social support.
This major work is the first systematic, region-wide documentation and analysis of the collateral damage caused by the U.S. war on drugs.
A joint publication from the Center for International Policy, the Latin America Working Group Education Fund, and the Washington Office on Latin America analyzing trends in U.S. military programs in Latin America.
A guide to U.S.-Latin America policy issues for first-term Members of Congress
A guide created by the Consultancy for Human Rights and Displacement (CODHES) and WOLA as a comprehensive source of information about the legal rights of and resources available for urban internally displaced peoples of Colombia.
Throughout Latin America, organized crime is a serious and growing problem. Clandestine power groups are in part responsible for the surge in crime rates and, in some countries, have accumulated vast influence over government institutions.
Intensive aerial herbicide spraying of coca crops in Colombia has backfired badly, contributing to the spread of coca cultivation and cocaine production to new areas of the country and threatening human health and the environment.
In a little-noticed but disturbing transformation, U.S. foreign policy decision-making is moving from the Department of State to the Department of Defense.
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