Latin American Perspectives

Informações:

Sinopsis

To encourage class analysis of sociocultural realities and political strategies to transform Latin American sociopolitical structures. We make a conscious effort to publish a diversity of political viewpoints.

Episodios

  • Media, Politics, and Democratization in Latin America

    02/09/2019 Duración: 11min

    Issue #: 220  | Volume #: 45  | Number #: 3 Date: May 2018 Interviewer: Alexander Scott Interviewees: Javier Campo and Tomás Crowder-Taraborrelli Short Description: This special issue of Latin American Perspectives investigates a matter that has undergone critical transformations in recent years. From the period of progressive governments to the current neoliberal restoration, the media went from being thought of as a public service to a private business. This issue features articles on Ecuador, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Mexico and Argentina and covers a broad disciplinary spectrum of studies: from the laws of communication put into practice or projected, to the deregulation of the most advanced legislations of Latin America, to communication rights, audiovisual analysis, memory studies and historiographies of the Latin American left. The editors were committed to organizing a special issue about the favorable democratization of the media, but in the process, the media landscape was transformed into a reactio

  • The Cold War and Latin American Studies

    02/09/2019 Duración: 15min

    Title: The Cold War and Latin American Studies Issue #: 221  | Volume #: 45  | Number #: 4 Date: July 2018 Interviewer: Alexander Scott Interviewees: Ronald Chilcote Short Description: The Cold War shaped and deeply impacted Latin American Studies after World War II. This special issue includes incisive essays on the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Netherlands, Soviet Union, and China. Initially LAS evolved alongside U.S. foreign policy and a series of coups to contain progressive movements and support conservative authoritarianism, beginning in Guatemala (1954), but progressive movements emerged after the Cuban Revolution (1959).

  • Open Veins Revisited: The New Extractivism in Latin America

    02/09/2019 Duración: 15min

    Title: Open Veins Revisited: The New Extractivism in Latin America Issue #: 222 | Volume #: 45  | Number #: 5 Date: September 2018 Interviewer: Alexander Scott Interviewees: Linda Farthing and Nicole Fabricant Short Description: Ever since the elusive search for El Dorado began in the 16th century, the history of Latin America has been a tale of resource extraction. This issue focuses on the interconnections and impacts of global resource-based economies on topics as wide-ranging as local people and their environments, national policies and international financial capital. Rather than finding neat and tidy conclusions, it suggests that nuanced social, political economic analyses better enable us to understand and analyze how contemporary extractivism is reshaping Latin America.  

  • Immigrants, Indigenous People, and Workers Pursuing Justice

    02/09/2019

    Title: Immigrants, Indigenous People, and Workers Pursuing Justice Issue #: 223  | Volume #: 45  | Number #: 6 Date: November 2018 Interviewer: Alex Scott Interviewees: Lynn Stephen, María L. Cruz-Torres and Seth M. Holmes Short Description: This issue covers a number of topics that are very much in the forefront of political discussion, among them immigration, indigenous rights, workers’ struggles, and governance.

  • Pink-Tide Governments: Pragmatic and Populist Responses to Challenges from the Right

    02/09/2019 Duración: 35min

    Title: Pink-Tide Governments: Pragmatic and Populist Responses to Challenges from the Right Issue #: 224 | Volume #: 46 | Number #: 1 Date: January 2019 Interviewer: Alexander Scott Interviewees: Steve Ellner Short Description: This issue sheds light on positive and negatives sides of progressive or “Pink Tide” governments which it places in political and economic contexts, specifically destabilizing efforts by a “disloyal opposition” and disinvestment by the private sector. The issue looks at the ways the government reacted to these challenges by making concessions and carrying out policies that in the long run undermined economic and political stability and the achievement of stated goals. Along these lines, Pink Tide governments implemented pragmatic strategies to win over or neutralize the business class and populist initiatives to meet the short-term needs of the popular sectors.

  • Israel, Palestine, and Latin America: Conflictual Relationships 226/46/3 May 2019

    02/09/2019 Duración: 23min

    Issue #: 226  | Volume #: 46  | Number #: 3 Date: May 2019 Interviewer: Alexander Scott Interviewees: Pablo Pozzi Short Description: This issue of LAP represents a step toward a better understanding of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in a Latin American context. The articles cover a range of historical and current topics and show that Arab and Jewish histories are an integral part of Latin American history, that Latin America has been an important actor in the conflict over Palestine, and that the issue is being played out today in ever-changing circumstances. Historical topics address how specific Latin American countries dealt with the creation of Israel and the Six-Day War while other articles consider more recent topics including the role and treatment of the Palestinian diaspora and Israeli marketing of urban security expertise.

  • Brazil’s Crisis Of Memory: Embracing Myths And Forgetting History

    30/08/2019 Duración: 30min

    Title: Brazil’s Crisis Of Memory: Embracing Myths And Forgetting History Issue #: 227  | Volume #: 46 | Number #: 4 Date: July 2019 Interviewer: Alexander Scott Interviewees: Paulo Simões Short Description: This issue is devoted to Brazil and examines how the last few years have brought significant transformations to the government and society, which defy earlier expectations, both positive and negative. Articles focus on political and economic subjects ranging from public demonstrations and labor unionization, the results of the PT administrations’ policies of land reform and healthcare management, to the difficulties brought on by the international recession, as well as questions of historical formation, cultural construction, self-identity, self-definition and criticism, and the conservative backlashes which have led to the rise of the rightist regime now in power. LATIN AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES is a theoretical and scholarly journal for discussion and debate on the political economy of capitalism, imperi

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