Hot Spot: Latin AmericaBloomsbury Academic, 28. feb. 2008 - 288 síđur From border crime in Mexico to Chavez's revolution in Venezuela, this volume presents up-to-the-minute coverage of the key conflicts, corruption, and revolutionary movements simmering or raging in every region of Latin America. In-depth, comprehensive chapters explore drug wars, immigration issues, terrorism, youth gangs, government corruption, controversy over oil, and political instability, including: The Zapatista Rebellion, the Darien Gap controversy, Evo Morales, Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso) and Tupac Amaru, the Falklands, and Guantanamo Bay. |
From inside the book
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... Mexican government has tried to eliminate the ERP because it has a more revolu- tionary agenda and operates closer to the economic heart of Mexico . The ERP has made numerous appeals throughout Mexico , but its pro- gram for change has ...
... Mexican workers in the United States got huge coverage in the Mexican press . Unlike his opponents , López Obrador spoke of emigra- tion in negative tones , arguing that the flow northward is a “ tragedy for Mexico " and something that ...
... Mexican government agreed to the San Andrés Accords in 1996 in an effort to bring peace to the region , but conflicting claims of compliance undermined the negotiations over conflicting demands . The situation deteriorated further the ...
Efni
The Meaning of Hot Spot Terminology | 1 |
Mexico | 55 |
Central America | 81 |
Höfundarréttur | |
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