Upside Down World
 
Sunday, 22 January 2012
Regional Strike Paralyzes Hydroelectric Project in Colombia
Written by Polinizaciones and ASOQUIMBO   
Thursday, 19 January 2012 13:34

The three main demands of the strike are that the environmental licenses for the Quimbo Hydroelectric Project and Emerald Energy be immediately suspended, public environmental hearings be held for the project in affected communities and for multinational corporation Emgesa to immediately repair the Paso del Colegio Bridge and other highways that have been damaged while working on the Quimbo project.

 
Remembering the Social Movements that Reimagined Argentina: 2002 - 2012
Written by Francesca Fiorentini   
Tuesday, 17 January 2012 11:24

A decade after Argentina’s economic collapse, what remains of the popular movements that demanded change and inspired the world?

 
The Narco’s Gag in Tamaulipas, Mexico: “Nothing left but to obey”
Written by Erick Muñiz, Translation by Natasha da Silva   
Monday, 16 January 2012 09:27

María Elizabeth Macías Castro had a great fondness for the internet. It gave her comfort and hope, and was an indispensable element of her work as moderator of a website where organized crime is reported. This everyday tool would also be the cause of her death. 

 
Honduras: Return to Rigores
Written by Chuck Kaufman   
Wednesday, 11 January 2012 09:05

Exactly one week before our July 1 visit, police entered Rigores and at gunpoint burned the homes of 135 families, killed their animals, bulldozed their orchards, the school, and two churches. Six months later all but four families remain on their land. They have rebuilt their houses, although now from branches and mud wattle where before stood larger block or poured cement homes.

 
The Michoacán Debacle: Fault Lines Ahead of the Mexican Presidential Election
Written by Paul Imison   
Tuesday, 10 January 2012 15:15

Surrounding the November 13 elections in Michoacán, one mayor was shot dead, fifty candidates from several parties stepped down due to threats, an indigenous community boycotted the election and instituted their own electoral processes, and an entire city’s police force resigned.  In the last five years, Michoacán has seen some of the worst gang violence in the country outside of the border region and has been heavily militarized. Both institutionalized political pressure and “narco-influence” have continue to call in to question the possibility of free and fair elections in Mexico.

 

 
A Temporary Suspension of Exile in Chile: Interview with Former MIR Militant Hugo Marchant
Written by Ramona Wadi   
Thursday, 05 January 2012 13:27

Chile’s supreme court of appeals has temporarily suspended the exile sentence imposed upon an ex-militant of the Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria (MIR).  Accused of involvement in the killing of former Santiago mayor Carol Urzúa Ibáñez, Hugo Marchant and his family were arrested and tortured by Centro Nacional de Intelligencia (CNI) agents.

 

 
New U.S.-Colombia Base in Panama to Combat Undocumented People
Written by John Lindsay-Poland   
Tuesday, 03 January 2012 07:59

The U.S.military approach to undocumented immigrants has moved further south - to a new military academy in Panama. The new school, which Panama announced in early December, will bring together U.S. and Colombian trainers to train Central American police units in border patrol, countering drug traffic, and “combatting undocumented persons.”

 
And the Farmworkers are Still Poor
Written by Michael Yates   
Friday, 30 December 2011 12:37

Trampling out the Vintage explains better than any other book how the UFW under Chavez’s leadership became in the 1960s and 1970s one of the most remarkable and successful unions in U.S. history but then crashed and burned so breathtakingly fast that by the end of the 1980s it had pretty much disappeared from the fields.

 
Security Issues on the Texas-Mexico Border?
Written by Belén Fernández   
Wednesday, 18 January 2012 10:55

The current hype over an alleged Latin America-based alliance against the U.S. between Iranian Revolutionary Guards, Hezbollah and Hamas militants, drug cartels, leftists, and any other potentially unsavory regional outfit or trend has produced such ludicrous assessments as that, given similarities between Mexican and Lebanese terrain, Hezbollah is instructing drug smugglers in the art of tunnel construction.

 
Decline 'Friend' Request: Social Media Meets 21st Century Statecraft in Latin America
Written by Cyril Mychalejko   
Monday, 16 January 2012 20:17

A Senate report released in October 2011 urging the US government to expand the use of social media as a foreign policy tool in Latin America offers another warning for activists seduced by the idea of technology and social media as an indispensable tool for social change.

 
A Cycle of Death: Inside Nicaragua's Sugar Cane Fields
Written by Tom Laffay and Inka Haukka   
Thursday, 12 January 2012 18:10

La Isla is a small community located on the outskirts of Chichigalpa, Nicaragua in the Central America lowlands. Its sole economy is the sugar cane industry which relies on young men desperate to provide for their families ensuring an endless supply of labor.

 
Peru: Elected by the Left, Ruling with the Right
Written by Oscar Ugarteche, Translation by Marybeth Stocking   
Tuesday, 10 January 2012 16:32

Ollanta Humala’s first hundred and fifty days in office as President of Peru have produced a “political massacre,” leaving those who built him as a candidate, wrote his speeches, and paid for his electoral campaign in the streets. His refusal to live up to his campaign promises, and dismissal of environmental complaints of citizens living in communities attacked by mining, leave the population who elected him with little option but to take to the streets again.

 

 
Follow Upside Down World on Twitter and More
Written by Upside Down World   
Friday, 06 January 2012 15:12

América invertida (1943) by Joaquín Torres García (Uruguay)

Good news! You can now follow Upside Down World via Twitter and our new RSS Feed. Thanks for reading UDW!

 
Mesoamerica Project: Obama’s Message to the Latin American Governments
Written by Emma Volante, Translation by Victoria Robinson   
Wednesday, 04 January 2012 22:15

On December 5, 2011, representatives from Mexico, Colombia and the countries of Central American attended the 13th Summit of the Tuxtla Mechanism for Dialogue and Coordination in Merida, Mexico. The summit’s main purpose was to discuss the progress of different initiatives included in the Mesoamerica Project’s framework, which is the new version of the Plan Puebla-Panama (PPP).

 
Chile Rising: Behind the Student Protest Movement
Written by Fault Lines   
Monday, 02 January 2012 23:52

Chilean students have taken over schools and city streets in the largest protests the country has seen in decades. This video follows Chile's student protest movement and examines the underlying issues driving the anger.

 
Mexico: Youth on the Front Lines of Protest Movement
Written by Daniela Pastrana   
Wednesday, 28 December 2011 17:02

"We need to be the ones to provide the answers to the questions of our times, because we are the main victims of the voracious policies of capitalism," says Alexis Jiménez, a 23-year-old ethnologist who has spent the last two months camping out in front of the Mexico City Stock Exchange.

 

"If the world is upside down the way it is now, wouldn't we have to turn it over to get it to stand up straight?" -Eduardo Galeano

En Español
Agrotóxicos: Los condenados rompen el silencio

 
La mordaza del narco en Tamaulipas: “No queda más que obedecer”
 
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