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Brazil’s impeachment debate has exposed some of the most alarming issues facing the country today, from political polarization and endemic corruption to lingering nostalgia for Brazil’s military dictatorship.
Cuba’s new labor code and foreign investment law both raise important questions about the future of social protections and labor rights in Cuba’s changing economy.
Since Raúl Castro became president in 2008, Cuba has taken modest but significant steps to move from an almost entirely state-run economy to a more mixed model, but there has been little debate about the potential trade-offs and social costs of these reforms.
A new WOLA publication reviews the resurgence of family agriculture in political discourse, focusing on Mexico and Central America, where persistent poverty and underdevelopment in the rural sector has helped drive immigration to the United States in recent decades.
The new law responds to the desires of Cubans on the island and Cubans living abroad, and it takes one more step in reducing the interference of the state in the lives of ordinary Cuban citizens.
In evaluating the pace of reforms and the Cuban government’s sometimes ambivalent approach, it is useful to reflect on the complicated effects the reforms have on daily life in Cuba.
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