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         Latin Americans Media:     more books (100)
  1. Latin American Media: Guidance and Censorship by Marvin Alisky, 1981-11-30
  2. Tropical Kitsch: Mass Media in Latin American Art And Literature by Lidia Santos, 2006-06-01
  3. Latin American media markets: Investment and partnership opportunities in a developing market by Amanda Dorothy, 1997
  4. Latin American Media Dictionary by Sandra Marina, 1997-01
  5. Latin American media: A pan-regional perspective by Roland Soong, 1995
  6. The 1999 National Hispanic Media Directory PT. 3: Latin American Media by Octavio Nuiry, 1998-11
  7. Talking to themselves: The search for rights and responsibilities of the press and mass media in four Latin American nations (IIE research report # 26) by Craufurd D. W Goodwin, 1995
  8. Latin American Convergence, Pay TV and Digital Media Market by Paul Budde Communication Pty Ltd, 2010-08-24
  9. Comcast Media Center to help Latin American video content providers expand their reach to U.S. cable and satellite market.(CONTRACTS): An article from: IPTV Newsletter by Unavailable, 2010-04-01
  10. Border Bandits: Hollywood on the Southern Frontier (Film and Media Studies: Border Studies, Latin American Studies, Chicano/A Studies) by Camilla Fojas, 2008-12-01
  11. Latin American Literature and the Mass Media (Hispanic Issues)
  12. Latin American Advertising, Marketing and Media Sourcebook by Euromonitor PLC, 1995-01
  13. In quest of the paraphernalia of modernity: Commonwealth Caribbean mass media : paper presented at Latin American Studies Association, Sixth National Meeting, Atlanta, Georgia, March 25-28, 1976 by John A Lent, 1976
  14. Latin American Television: A Global View by John Sinclair, 1999-02-18

1. Zona Latina: The Latin American Media Site
Complete NCM Ethnic media Directory. Milosevic Arrest Thrills latin americans. El Pais, July 16, 2001
http://www.zonalatina.com/
DIRECTORIES NEW AND DIFFERENT (UPDATED DAILY) Newspapers
Magazines

Radio

Internet
...
Television Ratings
FEB 2003
Outdoor Media

Cinema

Telecommunications

Media Trade Publications
... OTHER RESOURCES Country Information
Latin American Music

Latin American Children Resources
Latin American Photo Gallery ... Reciprocal Links Info: webmaster@zonalatina.com

2. Why Latin Americans See A US Hand Behind Every Coup | Csmonitor.com
Because of the many times the US has intervened, the public frequently sees intervention where none exists. difficult for americans, even those accustomed to dealing with latin americans, to realize how desperate latins Coup;Í U.S. A Prime Suspect Foreign media Reaction Department of State
http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0502/p09s01-coop.html
WORLD USA COMMENTARY LEARNING ... MonitorTalk Search:
Opinion

Letters to the Editor

Regular Columnists:
Dante Chinni

John Hughes

Daniel Schorr

Jeffrey Shaffer
...
Godfrey Sperling

Other columnists:
Patrick Chisholm Jeremy Dauber Helena Cobban Marilyn Gardner ... experience Sci/Tech columnists: Jim Regan Site Reviews Michelle Thaller Science Tidbits Monitorblog A weblog about technology and its impact on our lives. Liblog Our staff librarians' weblog about informative and interesting web sites Commentary Stories: for 04/09/2003 Justice After Hussein Limits on Cross Burning US, with help from friends, must lead in rebuilding Iraq Embedded in the world: no excuses ... All's up for debate, in love and war Conflict in Iraq sparks conflict at home, and family members 'agree to disagree.' Most-viewed stories: (for 04/07/03) Chaos and denial in Baghdad How the US plans to take control of Baghdad On West Bank, fear of 'dangerous precedent' Tension builds over postwar plans ... Opinion from the May 02, 2002 edition Why Latin Americans see a US hand behind every coup By Pat M. Holt

3. New California Media Content
El Andar The latino magazine for the new millennium Complete NCM Ethnic media Directory.Milosevic Arrest Thrills latin americans El Pais, July 16, 2001 While
http://www.ncmonline.com/content/ncm/2001/july/0716milosevic.html
NCM Content Ethnic Press NCM Home African African - American Asian ... Contact NCM TV
New California Media - The New America Now
NCM Network Profile
El Andar
The Latino magazine for the new millennium
Complete NCM Ethnic Media Directory
Milosevic Arrest Thrills Latin Americans
El Pais, July 16, 2001
While Serbs living in Spain demonstrated against the handover of Slobodan Milosevic to the Hague's for trial for war crimes, throughout Latin America the reaction have been of satisfaction.
While many Latin Americans agree that the timing of Milosevic's handover to the Hague coincided to the deadline for Yugoslavia receiving financial aid from the West Yugoslavia received a $1.1 billion US commitment in aid within forty-eight hours of Milosevic's arrival in the Netherlands that, for the first time, a former head of state would face trial was seen as a victory that could only occur with an important precedent: the request by Spain for the arrest of former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.
Legal moves to make Augusto Pinochet accountable for his actions while president of Chile galvanized both the rule of law and challenged the impunity with which leaders on the world stage have acted. It was the case against Augusto Pinochet by, what Christopher Hitchens has called, the "splendid activism" of the Spanish judiciary that prompted the House of Lords in England to confirm the principle that "sovereign immunity" does not apply for crimes against humanity.

4. New California Media Content
latin americans Disagree With Leaders On War Reforma, October 2, 2001 Many latinAmerican citizens are wary of participating militarily in any conflict
http://www.ncmonline.com/content/ncm/2001/oct/1002latin.html
NCM Content Ethnic Press NCM Home African African - American Asian ... Contact NCM TV
New California Media - The New America Now
Latin Americans Disagree With Leaders On War
Reforma, October 2, 2001
Many Latin American citizens are wary of participating militarily in any conflict, contrary to what their leaders may say. Experts say this discrepancy could test leadership in some countries.
Latin Americans only now recovering from decades of terrorism, civil conflict and the violence of drug trafficking know all too well that a war against a faceless enemy is a dangerous quagmire.
Opinion polls show that: 8 out of 10 Mexicans do not want to participate in any multinational military strike; 8 out of 10 Brazilians oppose any military response; 6 out of 10 Argentines want to remain neutral; 9 out of 10 Venezuelans oppose participating in any military strike.
Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela and Mexico have considerable populations of Middle Eastern origin (former Argentine President Carlos Menem is of Syrian descent).

5. Latin Americans In The USA
media or from a layman. I know that the ones living in North America may feel a lot of sympathy toward the latin americans
http://goinside.com/00/4/latin.html

6. News & Media Relations, Rice University
latin americans in Houston (top) Stephen Klineberg Professor of Sociology (713)348 Theology in Central latin America and in the Return to media Guide Index.
http://www.rice.edu/projects/reno/mg/latinamerica.html
Speech Archive Photo Archive
- News Release Photos
Rice Image Library
News Release Archive Rice News Archive
Marg ot Dimond
Director of News
Office: (713) 348-6775
email: mdimond@rice.edu B.J. Almond
Associate Director of Media Relations
Office: (713) 348-6770
email: balmond@rice.edu Jade Boyd
Science Editor Office: (713) 348-6778 email: jadeboyd@rice.edu Ellen Chang Media Relations Specialist Office: (713) 348-6777 email: ellenc@rice.edu Business School Debra Thomas Office: (713) 348-6343 or Maileen Hamto Office: (713) 348-6364 Need an Expert? Latin America Argentina, Politics and Art Argentinians, Speech of Brazil Brazilian History ... Tango Argentina, Politics and Art top Julie M. Taylor Professor of Anthropology E-mail: jtaylor@rice.edu

7. Inter-American Understanding: Helping North Americans And Latin Americans Work S
Helping U.S. businessmen and diplomats work more successfully with latin americans Herald Americas Coverage. latin American media Trade Publications. latin American Newsletters
http://users.erols.com/iiaunau/Understanding.htm
Inter-American Understanding
Sponsored by
William A. Naughton, Ph.D.
A Web Site Dedicated to Helping North Americans and Latin Americans Work More Successfully Together
"We cannot recall a time when the opportunities for constructive and sustained cooperation among Western Hemisphere nations have been greateror when the potential payoffs from such cooperation have been larger."
Convergence and Community , A Report of The Inter-American Dialogue
Articles Concerning Inter-American Understanding:
The Need for Greater Inter-American Understanding
The Importance of Shared Values in Inter-American Relations

Conflicting Interests in Inter-American Relations

Cultural Conflict in Inter-American Relations
...
Two Core Studies on Inter-American Understanding
Working Successfully With Latin Americans
Negotiating Successfully With Latin Americans
About Dr. Naughton
To Contact Dr. Naughton at iiaunau@erols.com:
Useful Links:
U.S. State Department (Latin American commercial guides, country trade practices)
U.S. State Department Notes on Latin American Countries

U.S. Agency for International Development (Latin American issues)

Organization of American States
... Latin American Newsletters

8. Media Relations And Information, Rice University
latin americans in Houston Stephen Klineberg Professor of Sociology(713) 3483484 E-mail slk@rice.edu. Return to media Guide Index.
http://www.rice.edu/projects/reno/mg/houston.html
Speech Archive Photo Archive
- News Release Photos
Rice Image Library
News Release Archive Rice News Archive
Marg ot Dimond
Director of News
Office: (713) 348-6775
email: mdimond@rice.edu B.J. Almond
Associate Director of Media Relations
Office: (713) 348-6770
email: balmond@rice.edu Jade Boyd
Science Editor Office: (713) 348-6778 email: jadeboyd@rice.edu Ellen Chang Media Relations Specialist Office: (713) 348-6777 email: ellenc@rice.edu Business School Debra Thomas Office: (713) 348-6343 or Maileen Hamto Office: (713) 348-6364 Need an Expert? Houston Architecture Stephen Fox Adjunct Lecturer on Architecture E-mail: sfox@rice.edu Environmental Control Philip Bedient (713) 348-4953 or (713) 348-4656 E-mail: bedient@rice.edu

9. Documentary On Japanese Latin Americans To Feature Art Shibayama July 10, 2000
Documentary on JLA Internment Reprinted from NikkeiWest, July 10, 2000 dark as to the story of Japanese latin americans who were interned in U.S. Department of Justice footage and other forms of media, Peek, in close association with JPOHP,
http://home.hawaii.rr.com/moritas/document.htm
Documentary on JLA Internment Reprinted from NikkeiWest, July 10, 2000 Though the Civil Liberties Public Education Fund has drawn to a close, most Americans remain in the dark as to the story of Japanese Latin Americans who were interned in U.S. Department of Justice camps during World War II. With the help of the Japanese Peruvian Oral History project, Bay Area filmmaker Casey Peek has begun production on a documentary intended to reveal their story. From December 1941 to 1945, the U.S. government orchestrated the forcible deportation of 2,264 men, women and children of Japanese ancestry from 13 Latin American countries to be used as hostages in exchange for Americans held in Japan. Of these, about 1,800 (80 percent) were Japanese Peruvians. After the enactment of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, Japanese Latin Americans were denied redress as they were not citizens or permanent residents at the time of internment, though many did go on to settle in the U.S. and become citizens. On Aug. 28, 1996, five former Japanese American internees filed a class-action lawsuit against the U.S. government seeking inclusion into the Civil Liberties Act. In January 1999, a controversial settlement was reached between the government and members of the affected class.

10. Kent State University - Libraries And Media Services - Ethnic Heritage Studies -
Provides subject and country directories to information on latin America and latin americans. Updated 01/23/2003. Libraries media Services. Kent State University
http://www.library.kent.edu/subjects/ethnic_studies/ethniclat.html

Return to the Ethnic Studies main page
Ethnic Heritage Studies - Latin American and Latino/a Resources
Andanzas al Web Latino
http://lib.nmsu.edu/subject/bord/latino.html

An excellent place to begin investigating Latin American and Latino websites, bulletin boards, political, cultural and economic organizations, research collections, and online publications. Azteca Web Page
http://www.azteca.net/aztec/

Provides links to information for and about Mexicans, Chicanos, and Mexican-Americans. The Borderlands Encyclopedia
http://www.utep.edu/border/

A growing collection of resources for use in education on and about the Mexican-American Border Region. BUSCOPIO
http://www.buscopio.com/scripts/proel/buscopio/molly/molly.dll?idPag=bscprt.htm

A Spanish language directory of international search engines that allows you to search by country then type of search engine. Coloquio: Revista Cultural http://coloquio.com/coloquio.html A Hispanic cultural magazine published monthly in the Spanish language in the Washington-Baltimore Metropolitan area.

11. A Meta-Analysis Of Gender Differences In Consumer Behavior
Comparison of News media (6/7/1997) A comparison of how latin americans use newspapers,radio and television as sources of news and information (data source
http://www.zonalatina.com/Zlmednew.htm
This page contains Latin American research data from various primary data sources, including a number of major surveys. These reports were prepared exclusively for Zona Latina . You are welcome to use these data in your articles and presentations as long as you indicate the source. SUBJECT CLASSIFICATION MULTIMEDIA INTERNET PRINT MEDIA RADIO ... MAFALDA MULTIMEDIA

12. London Diabetes Clinic Receives Award For Nonprofit Innovation, The University O
of Canada’s 1.5 million latin americans, and London is The latin American DiabetesProgram has been operating 64694 or, Kris Dundas , media Relations Officer
http://comms.uwo.ca/media/archives/releases/2002/sept_dec/Nov4a.htm
November 4 London Diabetes Clinic Receives Award for Nonprofit Innovation A London-based solution to the high incidence of diabetes among Latin Americans was recognized nationally on Friday, November 1 by the Peter F. Drucker Canadian Foundation. The program is a partnership between Centre for Studies in Family Medicine at The University of Western Ontario and the London InterCommunity Health Centre. The clinic helps screen and manage type 2 diabetes and related complications in an often marginalized population with limited access to health and social services. A special diabetes-screening clinic is held at the London InterCommunity Health Centre Saturday mornings, where Dr. Harris and his colleagues see 15-30 people each week. Individuals are tested for risk factors such as high blood pressure, cholesterol, weight and blood sugar levels. While waiting for test results, the participants receive a presentation in Spanish about risk factors and lifestyle choices to prevent diabetes. Because many individuals do not have a family doctor, Dr. Harris offers treatment out of the clinic for those who test positive for diabetes.

13. Eduardo Moncada | The Progressive Media Project
As the United Nation's report demonstrates, millions of latin americans have foundout the hard way that The Progressive media Project About Us link. Contact Us.
http://www.progressive.org/Media Project 2/mpmj3102.html
July 31, 2002
Free markets promote unrest, not democracy, in Latin America
Eduardo Moncada
A recent U.N. report flies in the face of Washington's mantra that free markets are the only path to economic growth and democracy.
The Human Development Report 2002 warns that many countries that took steps toward democracy following the end of the Cold War are either stalling or "slipping back to authoritarian rule." The application of free-market nostrums throughout the developing world has actually aggravated poverty. It has led to declining standards of living and widening income disparities. By the end of the 1990s, 52 countries wound up poorer than at the beginning of the decade, according to the report.
Despite this, Washington has long proposed that countries should first focus on economic growth and trust that lagging social indicators will follow. In a speech President Bush delivered last year to Latin American leaders alarmed at the Argentine implosion then an avid supporter in the region for U.S. economic policy prescriptions Bush insisted that "nationals throughout our hemisphere … need to strengthen our commitment to market-based reform, not weaken it."
Today, 211 million out of Latin America's population of 510 million live in poverty, with 86 million too poor to purchase even the most basic necessities. Seventy percent of those polled for the report in the region complain of increasing levels of poverty, crime, corruption, drug trafficking and addiction.

14. Latin Americans And Caribbeans Know Little About Blood Donation, Study Shows
latin americans and Caribbeans know little about blood donation and practices of thepopulation of latin America and Back to PAHO Centennial Press/media Center.
http://www.paho.org/English/DPI/100/100feature31.htm
Quick Search
Latin Americans and Caribbeans know little about blood donation, study shows Washington, DC, August 8, 2002 (PAHO) Many people in Latin America and the Caribbean know little about blood donation and have difficulty accessing blood services, according to a study in 15 countries sponsored by the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO). The study demonstrated that Latin American and Caribbean citizens have little information on how donated blood is obtained, processed and utilized. Furthermore, it is difficult for them to gain access to these services and blood bank hours pose obstacles. The findings also confirmed that many myths about blood donation are prevalent, including the mistaken idea that donating blood will cause people to gain weight, lose weight, or induce disease. Photos
available.

Click here
PAHO, which launched a Regional Blood Safety Initiative in 2001 to achieve sufficient safe blood in the Region, developed guidelines to explore the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of the population of Latin America and the Caribbean regarding blood donation. With the support of experts and in consultation with health authorities of each country, personnel were trained to carry out the surveys. The survey's main result was that there is a need to educate people to eliminate false beliefs and to give precise information on blood and blood donation.

15. Narco News: Welcome To Our Nightmare
violence, corruption, collusion and dishonesty by State, media, banking and otherpowerful sectors are all too clear to the great majority of latin americans.
http://www.narconews.com/opstate1.html
Opening Statement
The American Nightmare
The nations of Latin America each standing alone before the US imposed war-on-drugs are out-hollered and out-dollared, but not outsmarted.
"The badly informed North American public," as one Mexican columnist terms the phenomenon, has little idea to what degree the hemispheric "consensus" that certain drugs ought to be prohibited has collapsed in recent years.
This newsletter relays what the Mexican and Latin American press is saying about the drug war. Many of these stories will appear to English-speaking readers as out-of-context to the media-driven "consensus" within the United States regarding the drug war. These stories are not reported in the United States or other world powers: the very nations that pride themselves on freedom of the press. Why not? Ineptness? Intent? The imposed silence of a market-driven media? Each of these ills is a factor and Narco News will take no prisoners in afflicting the comfortable members of the Fourth Estate, one at a time, for their role in the whole mess. Artificially created consensus - based on untruths and lack of information - always breaks. Each time it shatters, that fracture is called history.
The Narco News Bulletin does not claim objectivity: we are out to break the manufactured consensus north of the border, where the illusion that the drug war is about combatting drugs remains the dominant discourse. In the South, as the stories we translate and summarize demonstrate, a new consensus, based on the reality of drug prohibition between nations and peoples, is already under construction.

16. Narco News: Narco News Launches Tri-Lingual Coverage
start working. He is one of the latin americans who won a scholarshipto attend this culture jamming of media makers. Gilmore thinks
http://www.narconews.com/Issue28/article604.html
April 9, 2003 Home Mailing List Search Print
Narco News Launches Tri-Lingual Coverage
Drug Legalization Summit, Authentic Journalists, Merge in Mexico
By Adriana Veloso
Narco News Authentic Journalism Scholar
February 12, 2003
Trilingual introductions on the first night of the Narco News School of Authentic Journalism, on Monday, February 10th: at the beginning of a project that will broaden the coverage of Narco News to Brazil… Different backgrounds heading up to the Yucat¡n peninsula… People from various parts of the world with a common interest, reporting what is not being told by mainstream media, getting the news out to the world, from the cocaleros – the farmers who grow the coca leaf in Bolivia, the activists in Colombia, the grassroots media makers in Venezuela, from the Brazilian favelas to the suburbs in New York, California, New Mexico etc.
George Sanchez
Photo D.R. John Gilmore 2003
Anthony Lappe
Photo D.R. Jeremy Bigwood 2003
The School of Authentic Journalism, an effort launched by Al Giordano, the Narco News publisher, will have one main assignment which is the coverage of the Drug Legalization Summit held in Merida from the 12th to the 17th of February. John Gilmore, one of the Narco News advisors in the school, hopes to inspire people writing on the drug war issue and Alex Contreras, writing Evo Morales’ biography in Bolivia, are ready to start working. He is one of the Latin Americans who won a scholarship to attend this culture jamming of media makers. Gilmore thinks that people in Latin America should combine efforts to reform the drug war laws since everyone who is here was touched in some way by the drug war.

17. Cisneros Group Of Companies Broadcast Media Entertainment
Broadcast media and Entertainment, New media and Technology, Consumer Products, AOL ShowProductions aims to satisfy the cultural preferences of latin americans.
http://www.cisneros.com/company/bigShowProductions.asp

18. Cisneros Group Of Companies: Fundación Cisneros: Preserving & Promoting Culture
media Library, curators from The Museum of Modem Art, New York, to travel to latinAmerica, and the Cisneros Fellowship, enabling latin americans to pursue post
http://www.cisneros.com/company/cultural.asp
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19. Salon Media Circus | Why Do Movie Subtitles Stink?
BROWSE THE media CIRCUS ARCHIVES. might assume that Rodriguez the person who isessentially responsible for how millions of latin americans will understand
http://www.salonmagazine.com/media/1998/03/23media.html
T A B L E T A L K Does anyone still believe the media have a built-in liberal bias? Debunk or prove the theory in the Media area of Table Talk R E C E N T L Y Hollywoodland
By Catherine Seipp
Who is Rod Lurie, and why is he incessantly being thanked on Oscar night?
Let my people go to the movies

By Joyce Millman
A new cable documentary profiles the Jewish immigrants who founded Hollywood
Under the Covers

By James Poniewozik
The Magazine kicks sand in the swimsuit issue's face
Old age and treachery defeat youth and beauty, again

By Liesl Schillinger How Leonardo's Oscar was stolen by senile old sea-lions protecting their unhappy harems Como se dice "doh!"? By Sam Quinones How "The Simpsons" has changed the way Mexicans view the U.S. BROWSE THE MEDIA CIRCUS ARCHIVES Why do movie subtitles stink The man who rewrote "Primary Colors" reveals the sad truth about the words at the bottom of the screen. BY CYNTHIA JOYCE J anet Maslin recently wrote in the New York Times that John Sayles has directed "Men With Guns," his new film, "in Spanish, English, Nahuatl, Tzotzil, Maya and Kuna so exactingly that there is no true language barrier at all." Assuming Maslin is not a linguist of New World tongues and was depending like most viewers on reading the English subtitles, one is prompted to ask: How the hell would she know?

20. Advertisers Face Unexpected Obstacles In Latin America
and presented by latin americans for latin americans. They say will be seen in everylatin American country this proliferating panregional media is helping
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/sipa/PUBS/SLANT/SPRING97/vitale.html
Advertisers Face Unexpected Obstacles in Latin America
David Lipschultz and Elena Vitale When Federal Express came rolling into Latin America, it missed an important psychological beat while preaching its gospel of efficiency. "Because of the word 'federal' in its name, Federal Express suffered from the consumer perception that it was a government-run organization," said Deborah Van Valkenburg, managing director of marketing for Latin America in an industry publication. In the end, the image of Latin America's infamous medieval bureaucracy didn't inspire much confidence in FedEx's speedy, trustworthy service. Advertising follies such as this one have been numerous in the fight for control over Latin America's consumer attention. In the past 10 years, advertisers and their agencies in Latin American markets have become increasingly aware of the different cultures existing within Latin America. Yet, despite these difficulties, advertisers aren't backing away.
The Boom
U.S. marketing strategists are converging on the region as it emerges from economic and political instability, ready to tap into its consumer market bustling with more than 100 million people and an estimated $1 trillion in buying power. The region has become a make-or-break market for many companies, and media choices are exploding for advertisers. Latin America is the only world region forecast to post double-digit growth in ad sales every year this decade. Ad spending in the region is expected to reach $31 billion in 1999, up from $17 billion in 1995. Zenith Media, a leading consultant firm in London, expects the region to see the biggest advertising boom yet over the next three years, with an annual growth of 13.4 percent. In addition, the firm says that most of the region's economies are on the right track with easing inflation and rising growth, and in future years will depend more on advertising to drive consumption.

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