manu chao, music
Friday, June 16, 2006
Proxima Estacion: Estados Unidos- Manu Chao to tour U.S. this summer
manu chao, music
Can remittances hurt countries?
latin america, international economy, remittance
Coffee production to hit four-year high
brazil, colombia, honduras, coffee
Latin American stocks make formidable gain
international economy, latin america, stocks
World Cup: Ecuador soar into the next round; T&T lose to England; Costa Rica and Paraguay eliminated; Mexico and Argentina ready to play today
For 80 minutes,
Speaking of
Friday:
Thursday, June 15, 2006
Regularly scheduled posting tomorrow. I promise.
In the meantime, I'll leave you with this brief lesson on how to be more observant courtesy of Overheard in New York.
Wednesday, June 14, 2006
Stocks stabilize during Wednesday trading
international economy, latin america
UN calls for Puerto Rican self-determination
puerto rico, united nations
Panama eager to expand canal
panama, canal, development
Back to school for striking Chilean students
Chile, education, protest
What time is it? For the Aymara the answer may not be what you think
latin america, aymara, language
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Lawsuit filed against law banning academic travel to Cuba
cuba, ACLU, travel
World Cup: Kaka blast enough for Brazilian victory
No Latin America or Caribbean teams play on Wednesday, though four teams from the region will play on Thursday including
Stay tuned tomorrow as The Latin Americanist will post on the economic and political impact of the World Cup on
World Cup: Brazil ready to defend title; U.S. caught flat-footed by Czechs
Yesterday no Latin American or Caribbean teams played, though the
Latin American stocks continue to tumble
Update (5.40pm): Latin American markets slumped again today, with Colombia's market index losing nearly 9% and almost shutting down.
international economy, latin america, mexico, colombia
Follow-ups on previous headlines from Ecuador, Peru, Mexico, Argentina, and Uruguay
“Mexico: LĂłpez Obrador and CalderĂłn tied”: The final debate between Mexican presidential candidates last week did little to sway voters towards either one of the two leaders- Felipe CalderĂłn and AndrĂ©s Manuel LĂłpez Obrador. CalderĂłn and LĂłpez Obrador have aimed their sharpest insults at each other and have been trying to distinguish each other as polar opposites on the ideological spectrum.
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“Mill dispute continues…”:
“Surrealist” author Salvador Plasencia discusses his latest book
Salvador Plasencia, literature
Monday, June 12, 2006
UN: “10 stories the world should know more about”
latin america, united nations, media
Petrobras extends into Uruguay
petrobras, energy, latin america
Sunday, June 11, 2006
World Cup: Two goals by Bravo key in Mexican win
soccer, world cup, mexico,