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         Latin Americans Media:     more books (100)
  1. The Social Documentary in Latin America (Pitt Latin American Studies)
  2. From Tejano to Tango: Essays on Latin American Popular Music (Perspectives in Global Pop)
  3. The Latin American City by Alan Gilbert, James Ferguson, 1998-06
  4. Centuries of Silence: The Story of Latin American Journalism by Leonardo Ferreira, 2006-10-30
  5. Latin American Popular Culture: An Introduction
  6. Cinema and Social Change in Latin America: Conversations with Filmmakers (Institute of Latin American Studies)
  7. Leftovers: Tales of the Latin American Left
  8. The New Latin American Cinema: A Continental Project (Texas Film Studies Series) by Zuzana M. Pick, 1993
  9. Latin American Telecommunications: Telef-nica's Conquest by Gabriela Martinez, 2008-08-28
  10. Rereading Women in Latin American and the Caribbean : The Political Economy of Gender by Jennifer Abbassi, Sheryl L. Lutjens, 2002-05-15
  11. Women Through Women's Eyes: Latin American Women in 19th Century Travel Accounts (Latin American Silhouettes) by June E. Hahner, 1998-08-01
  12. Real Life in Castro's Cuba (Latin American Silhouettes) by Catherine Moses, 1999-11-01
  13. Newsrooms in Conflict: Journalism and the Democratization of Mexico (Pitt Latin American Studies) by Sallie Hughes, 2006-06-28
  14. Contemporary Latin American Cultural Studies

21. Pravda.RU Argentineans Apathetic As Elections Are Underway
Independent online news and analytic resource.Category News Current Events Global Politics and War...... for the vast majority of Russian media outlets to Trade Area of the americans Theproject to create a is to put more pressure on latin American representatives
http://english.pravda.ru/
Say what you want! PRAVDA.Ru will hear you!
Apr, 09 2003 In Russian Em Portugues Former USSR Top Stories ... About Pravda.RU:Top Stories
Argentineans Apathetic As Elections Are Underway
Despite 27 April presidential elections are underway, people pays more attention to the events on Iraq than on candidates.

As the country enters into the final stages of the first elections after the popular rebellion of December 2001, candidates cannot make the people talk about them. In bars and restaurants, friends, students and clerks join to exchange ideas about what is going on in Baghdad, but not many spend their free time talking about the election campaign
More details
Tremendous Flood Might Happen in Russia on Account of Bombing in Iraq
Scientists believe that the bombing of Iraq might speed up earth crust processes

Oleg Martynov, a professor of the Tula University, predicted an earthquake in Central Asia, which might lead to disastrous consequences in the Volga region of the Russian Federation. Oleg Martynov said that the seismic activity increased a lot on the eastern coast of the Caspian Sea. The peak of the seismic activity is to occur during the period of October-December. However, the bombing of Iraq is capable of speeding up processes in the earth's crust
More details
Alex Ferguson Stands Against UEFA
Manchester United manager has to pay for his statements

As it became known, UEFA instituted disciplinary proceedings against Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson, who doubted the honesty of the Champions League quarter-final draw. Several English newspapers cited the Scotch coach, who stated that the results of the draw turned out to be very good for Italian and Spanish clubs

22. Media Management Center | News | EDP 2002: Media Trends
urbanization. In 1950 only 30 percent of latin americans lived in major cities. Withgreater urbanization comes greater exposure to media. The
http://www.mediamanagementcenter.org/news/EDPmedia_trends.htm
Media Trends As Latin American newspapers grow in size and sophistication, they face many of the same problems as their U.S. neighbors The demographic and technological trends that have caused intense competition for American newspapers are beginning to weigh heavily upon newspapers in Latin America, Stacy Lynch reported during her session of the joint Northwestern University and Inter-American Press Association seminar in Miami. Lynch said that the newspapers in Latin America will continue to face greater fragmentation of audience as cable TV continues to grow. She also cites great opportunities for the Internet world. Among her points were: Age Disparities: Metro Areas More Important: Another trend that continues to shape life in Latin America is continued urbanization. In 1950 only 30 percent of Latin Americans lived in major cities. That number will reach 85 percent in the coming decades. Much of this will come from higher birth rates in cities rather than ongoing migration from rural areas. With greater urbanization comes greater exposure to media. The pace of change will continue to accelerate so ideas and new technologies will be accepted more readily. It also points to greater numbers of women working outside the home and lower fertility rates in the future. The structure of families will change as well as the routine of daily life.

23. U.S. Senator Mike Crapo | Idaho
Home Mike Crapo - media - Contact Info - Legislative - Outreach SeniorCitizens Veterans Native americans latin americans Women Education Rural
http://crapo.senate.gov/menu2.htm

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24. Unnecessary C-Sections Common In Wealthy Latin Americans At StorkNet's Cesarean
CSections Common in Wealthy latin americans ~ Reproductive Health and upper-classwomen in latin America, minimal health-care workers, and the media need to
http://www.storknet.com/cubbies/csections/unneccsections.htm
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Unnecessary C-Sections Common in Wealthy Latin Americans
~ Reproductive Health News
January 28, 2000 A new study has revealed that Latin American women have a very high rate of caesarean delivery. Twelve nations, which represent about 81 percent of all deliveries in the region, had caesarean section rates ranging from 16.8 to 40 percent. Guidelines from the World Health Organization (WHO) recommend that caesarean sections should encompass more than 15 percent of all births. Researchers from WHO examined data from 19 Latin American countries. Their report, which appeared in November 27, 1999, issue of the "British Medical Journal," found the elevated rate of caesarean section births related to a higher income and social class. The section rate in private hospitals was much higher than in public facilities, which are generally free and serve a less affluent population than private facilities. Three countries reported that caesarean sections accounted for 50 percent of all births in private facilities. Giving birth by caesarean section involves making a surgical incision in the woman's abdomen, cutting into the uterus and then manually lifting the baby out. While the procedure has become much safer in the past few decades, it is still a major surgery and carries risks for both mother and baby. Caesarean sections are indicated only if it is not possible for the women to give birth vaginally and in emergency situations. The 15 percent figure was proposed by WHO in 1985, based on the section rate of nations which reported extremely low perinatal mortality. This WHO guideline has been adopted by the United States Department of Health and Human Services as a goal for the year 2000.

25. The Internalization Of Scholarship And Scholarly Societies (ACLS Occasional Pape
Membership fees are subsidized for latin americans, which is especially to the outstandingbook on latin America in LASA also confers a media Award, given to
http://www.acls.org/op28reading.htm

ACLS

Publications
A merican C ouncil of L earned S ocieties
Occasional Paper No. 28
The Internationalization of Scholarship and Scholarly Societies
Introduction
American Council of Learned Societies
Steven C. Wheatley
LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION
Reid Reading
Middle East Studies Association
Anne H. Betteridge
American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies
Dorothy Atkinson
Association for the Advancement of Baltic Studies
Valters Nollendorfs
American Historical Association
Sandria B. Freitag with Robert Townsend and Vernon Horn
American Political Science Association
Robert J.-P. Hauck
Modern Language Association I An Institutional Perspective Phyllis Franklin
Modern Language Association II A Report from the Field Michael Holquist
American Academy of Religion Warren G. Frisina
Society for Ethnomusicology Anthony Seeger
Society for the History of Technology Bruce Seely
American Society for Aesthetics Roger A. Shiner
Dictionary Society of North America Louis T. Milic
American Numismatic Society William E. Metcalf
American Folklore Society Barbro Klein
Latin American Studies Association
Reid Reading Executive Director, LASA

26. Rutgers Focus - March 16, 2001 - Latin American Writers Invent Their Own Vision
Go back to the main media Relations department page Paris on their mind For postcolonialLatin americans weary of the influence of Spain and Portugal, France
http://ur.rutgers.edu/focus/index.phtml?Article_ID=664&Issue_ID=86

27. Latin America's Getting Pounded Like Piñatas
According to Jupiter media Metrix (Nasdaq JMXI), 37 million latin americans willhave Internet access by 2003, up from 9 million today, making them one of
http://www.redherring.com/industries/2000/1221/ind-mag-88-latin122100.html
MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_home_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_tech_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_vc_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_investor_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_mag_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_conferences_on.gif') Gainers Millennium Pharm Advanced Micro Devices Tpsa Telekom Polska
Decliners Silverline Technologies Orascom Telecom Holding Net One Systems Co
The once-sizzling Internet market south of the border has cooled, leaving investors and entrepreneurs in the cold.
By Hildy Medina
December 21, 2000
A year ago, Yupi Internet (Nasdaq : YUPI ) Spanish for yippee had reason to cheer. Launched as a simple Spanish-language search engine, the Miami-based company had quickly grown into a portal offering entertainment and news, and boasting more than 5 million registered users in Latin America. In 1999, Yupi raised $101 million from investors like News Corporation (NYSE : NWS ) and Sony (NYSE : SNE ). The company envisioned striking IPO gold and staking a claim in the burgeoning Spanish-language online world. "I was overwhelmed by the investor interest," recalls Oscar Coen, Yupi's chief executive.

28. From Famine To Feast
Witter reports that 4.6 percent of latin americans owned PCs of local angel investorsin the region, latin American entrepreneurs Copyright 2003 RHC media, Inc
http://www.redherring.com/mag/issue80/mag-famine-80.html
MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_home_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_tech_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_vc_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_investor_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_archive_on.gif') MM_preloadImages('/images/nav_images/nav_conferences_on.gif') Gainers Millennium Pharm Advanced Micro Devices Tpsa Telekom Polska
Decliners Silverline Technologies Orascom Telecom Holding Net One Systems Co
From famine to feast
Venture capital is on the upswing in Latin America.
By Karie Atkinson
From July 2000 issue
Three years ago, Argentine entrepreneur Wenceslao Casares was optimistic about his trip to Sand Hill Road to raise funding for his Latin American startup. But the 23-year-old left empty-handed, and disappointed by venture capital firms that weren't interested in investing in anything that wasn't within driving distance of their offices. When Mr. Casares, a sheep rancher's son, returned to Argentina, he approached local Argentine financial groups, only to be looked down upon for not wanting to climb up the corporate ladder within a stable company like everyone else. Mr. Casares's online financial services company, Patagon.com, eventually received a first round of funding from

29. CONTACTO Magazine - 2003 Media Kit
CONTACTO Magazine media Kit (Advertising) - 2003 a collectible magazine since itpublishes in-depth news features on US Hispanics and latin americans as well
http://www.contactomagazine.com/exposure.htm
CONTACTO Magazine - Media Kit (Advertising) - 2003
Home

About Us

Demographics

Circulation
...
Home Page

Once a year, CONTACTO publishes a
special edition on Hispanic contributions
to the United States.
Founded on July 1, 1994 CONTACTO Magazine is a Spanish-language monthly magazine mostly aimed at a middle class, well educated Hispanic living in Los Angeles area.
It is a collectible magazine since it publishes in-depth news features on U.S. Hispanics and Latin Americans as well as exclusive interviews with entertainers, artists, writers, professionals, business people and community leaders.
Since it was launched, CONTACTO has published a number of special issues on Hispanic topics such as Latin music, Latin food, Hispanic contributions to the United States, and many others. With a free distribution in market stores, bakeries, restaurants, law offices, medical centers and travel agencies, CONTACTO is ideal to advertise products and services CONTACTO also helps advertisers gain a wider exposure by offering ad buttons on its online edition ( www.contactomagazine.com

30. U.S. Presidents And The Foreign Media
presidents and the foreign media By Andres Oppenheimer of The Miami Herald. MONTERREY,Mexico. If President Bush did not convince many latin americans about the
http://www-irps.ucsd.edu/irps/innews/sdut032902
IR/PS In the News News Releases Faculty Experts Newsline ... Speeches San Diego Union-Tribune/March 29, 2002
U.S. presidents and the foreign media
By Andres Oppenheimer of The Miami Herald
MONTERREY, Mexico If President Bush did not convince many Latin Americans about the wisdom of U.S. policies during his four-day trip to Mexico, Peru and El Salvador last week, it may be because he did not try very hard, or because he did not try at all. In fact, Bush's performance here at an anti-poverty summit of more than 50 heads of state was a case study of why the United States often loses the propaganda war abroad. It is because the White House press machine devotes its entire energies to the U.S. media, and often does not even talk to the foreign press. Consider what happened here. President Fidel Castro of Cuba showed up at the summit a day before Bush, and made a fiery speech attacking the summit's U.S.-backed agreement whereby rich countries will increase their foreign aid to poor nations that follow free-market policies and respect human rights. Castro blamed the United States and other rich nations for carrying out a "true genocide" against the world's poor. Several Middle Eastern, African and Venezuelan officials applauded wildly.

31. Juno Teams With The Black World Today To Provide Web Access To
site advertising for advertisers to reach Africanamericans, latin-americans andAsian-americans online. through e-mail marketing, 24/7 media has expanded
http://www.tbwt.com/mediakit/Press_Clips/pressclip9.asp

32. UCSD Communication | People | Faculty | DeeDee Halleck
She received two Rockefeller media Fellowships for The Gringo in Mañanaland, a feature film about stereotypes of latin americans in US films, which was
http://communication.ucsd.edu/people/f_halleck.html
Name: DeeDee Halleck , Professor Emeritus Independent Filmmaker dhalleck@weber.ucsd.edu
Paper Tiger Television

Independent Media Center

Deep Dish
...
Her Life - Her Work
Research: DeeDee Halleck is a media activist and founder of Paper Tiger Television and co-founder of the Deep Dish Satellite Network . Her first film, "Children Make Movies" (1961), was about a film-making project at the Lillian Wald Settlement in Lower Manhattan. "Mural on Our Street" was nominated for Academy Award in 1965. She has led media workshops with elementary school children, reform school youth and migrant farmers. In 1976 she was co-director of the Child-Made Film Symposium, which was a fifteen year assessment of media by youth throughout the world. As president of the Association of Independent Video and Film Makers (AIVF) in the seventies, she led a media reform campaign in Washington, testifying twice before the House Sub-Committee on Telecommunication. She has served as a trustee of the American Film Institute, Women Make Movies and the Instructional Telecommunications Foundation. She has authored numerous articles in Film Library Quarterly Film Culture High Performance The Independent Leonardo Afterimage and other media journals.

33. MailCreations.com, Inc. - News MailCreations.com Partners With VisionPoint Media
com Partners with Mindarrow to Provide the Latest in Rich media Solutions for TOECOMMERCE NEWS AND E-BUSINESS INFORMATION MADE EASIER TO latin americans.
http://www.mailcreations.com/ENGLISH/NEWS/index.asp

MailCreations.com Launches an Online Co-Registration Network

MailCreations.com Adds MadeForChina.com to its Email Marketing Network

MailCreations.com Partners with KeyWordRanking.com for Total Search Engine Marketing

MailCreations.com Partners with VisionPoint Media to Provide Rich Media Services.
...
ACCESS TO E-COMMERCE NEWS AND E-BUSINESS INFORMATION MADE EASIER TO LATIN AMERICANS
For PR inquiries contact Malena Cutuli
malena@mailcreations.com

34. Media RelationsNews Releases
americans, Chicano/Mexican americans, latin americans, Puerto Ricans, Pacific Islandersor Native americans. Chandler, Senior Editor, media Relations c
http://www.northwestern.edu/univ-relations/media/news-releases/*archives/*scienc
CONTACT: Chris Chandler at (847) 491-3115 or by e-mail at c-chandler@nwu.edu FOR RELEASE: Immediate
    Northwestern Offers Life Sciences Research Program For Minorities
    Evanston, Ill. - Northwestern University is offering a summer program that matches outstanding minority high school and college students as well as those who teach minority students - - with senior faculty to conduct research. The program begins Monday, June 24 and ends Friday, Aug. 16. The Minority Summer Research Program now in its 13th year is intended to encourage students of ethnic origins who are underrepresented in the biomedical sciences to consider pursuing careers in that field. This year, five high school students, three undergraduates and two teachers are participating. The high school students are Carelton Chambers from Luther High School South, Trina Jenkins from the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy, Moise Ortiz from Lake View High School, Courtney Snelling from Carver High School, and Millicent Southern from Kenwood Academy. Participants first complete a two-week course in fundamental laboratory techniques and safety, including such topics as DNA isolation and subcloning.

35. Media Clips - 2002
environmental rules. Many latin americans fear that the United Stateswants to impose its system on them, and they are correct.
http://www.amazonwatch.org/newsroom/mediaclips02/ec/ftaa/021103_ftaa_nyt.html
November 3, 2002
New York Times
Outside Halls of Power, Many Fear Free Trade
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS
QUITO, Ecuador Two heated debates about free trade
took place here last week, yet they were so different
they might as well have been on separate planets. The most visible one was at a meeting of trade
ministers from the United States and 33 other
countries, who tried to hammer out a road map for
negotiating a free-trade zone from Canada to
Argentina. The other was led by ordinary citizens. Inside a heavily fortified Marriott Hotel, the ministers were deeply divided about practical issues but shared many basic assumptions: more trade is better than less; open borders are better than closed; cross-border investment is healthy. The United States wants more access to Latin American markets for services like insurance, telecommunications and even health care. Latin

36. Latinos Find An America On The Border Of Acceptance --by Sergio Troncoso (sergio
another reason for this dichotomy between recent public and media acceptance of a2000mile border with Mexico, and 500 million latin americans live south of
http://sergiotroncoso.com/essays/immigrants/
Home Stories and Essays News Articles and Interviews Appearances ... E-mail Latinos Find an America on the Border of Acceptance By Sergio Troncoso Drawings by Jorge Enciso R ecently I have seen a deepening appreciation of Latino culture throughout America from literature to movies to popular music and art and I have never been prouder to say I am the son of Mexican immigrants. When I went to Harvard and Yale years ago, I felt like an alien, in more ways than one. Imagine starting out without running water and electricity on the Mexican-American border and finding yourself, at eighteen years of age, in Harvard Square. Many things seemed strange to me on the East Coast, but the strangest was the almost complete Euro-centric view in everything from economics to politics to philosophy. I was determined to bust open closed minds, to point them toward Latin America, Latinos, especially Chicanos. The future of America, as I saw it. Now that this future is arriving at a frenzied pace, now that the doors are starting to crack open for the popular acceptance of Latino culture, at least among the media elite, I see it's a pick-and-choose acceptance. There is little patience for discussing immigration issues and particularly the plight of day laborers and farm workers and other recent immigrants, who often can't yet defend themselves in English. Why this dichotomy? Men and boys salivate over Salma Hayek as an absolute babe. Having 'Lopez' or 'Martinez' for a surname doesn't disqualify you anymore from being a top box-office draw or the best pitcher in America's pastime. The definition of an intense and intelligent American actor has to now include one Benicio del Toro. And yet, in each case, if they are not outright Latin American, they are the sons or daughters of Latin Americans, recent immigrants to the United States who have made it, and big. Shall we not also turn our eyes to those poor immigrants in this country who are still struggling against racism and poverty and language barriers, who might one day raise a son or a daughter even Hollywood or MTV can be proud of?

37. IMDiversity.com - Internet Gold Rush Strikes Latino Vein
help disadvantage latinos and Africanamericans get online. both the United Statesand latin America, the an Internet consultant and new media journalist based
http://www.imdiversity.com/villages/hispanic/Article_Detail.asp?Article_ID=501

38. Looking For Da Silva Lining In Brazil, By Roger Bybee
The media vision of a vicious cycle selfinflicted by latin americans’ “anti-businessrhetoric,” leaves out one vital element in the cycle the role of
http://www.zmag.org/ZMagSite/Feb2003/bybee0203.html
February 2003
Volume 16 Number 2
American Newspeak Quiz

MEDIABEAT
: Not All White House Reporters are Pushovers
FOREIGN POLICY
: Bush Preparing for War on Two Fronts?
AFGHANISTAN
: Change of Hat
CONSERVATIVE WATCH
: FOIA Exemption in the HSA
: Privacy Doesn't Promote Safety
ECO-ACTIVISM
: Oregon's Struggle to Save Ancient Forests
LABOR ORGANIZING
The Barbed Wire Straitjacket
LATIN AMERICA
Looking for Da Silva Lining in Brazil ASIA : Elections in Pakistan ENVIRONMENT : Another Tragically Beautiful Day GREEN TIDE : Nuking Food For Profit FOG WATCH : Johnstone on the Balkan Wars HISTORY HANDBOOK : Cultivating African Anti-Capitalism BOOK REVIEWS Living in Hope Battling Big Business Women of the Wall FILM REVIEWS HOTEL SATIRE : Fearing Saddam October 2002 November 2002 December 2002 January 2003 ... Minimum Security Latin America
by Roger Bybee printer friendly version T New York Times Brazzil Financial Times Folha de Sao Paulo B Business Week Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Washington Post Post Post would make it impossible for Lula to devote adequate funding to precisely such aims as quality education or land reform.

39. Tallahassee-RedHills IMC: Feature/498
Of 43 Human Rights Advocates Adjudicated by SOA Watch Email media (at) soaw report) Foreign Aid must no longer be used to train latin americans in terrorism
http://tallahassee.indymedia.org/feature/display/498/index.php
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40. UB-Center For The Americas
of Ideas in Puerto Rico LLS308 Black Presence in latin America LLS401 AS270 AsianAmerican Women Writers AS348 Asian americans and Visual media ENG241242
http://cas.buffalo.edu/centers/cfta/doc6.htm

About Us
Undergraduate Graduate People ... Course Descriptions
AMERICAN STUDIES B.A.
To complete the Bachelor of Arts degree (major or minor) in American Studies, students will obtain thirty-three (33) credit hours while maintaining a minimum 2.0 GPA overall, with a minimum 2.5 GPA in AMS1O7, Introduction to American
Studies, and two of the following courses:
AMS162 New World Imaginations
APY106 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
APY1O8 Introduction to Archaeology
DMS107-108 History of Film I and II
DMS1O9 Introduction to Film Interpretation
HIS161-162 United States History I and II PSC1O1 Introduction to American Politics SOC2O1 Structure of American Society WS1O1 Introduction to Women's Studies WS213 Women in Contemporary Society PREREQUISITE COURSES TO ADMISSION AS MAJORS: AMS1O7 Introduction to American Studies AMS162 New World Imaginations UNDERGRADUATE COURSE REQUIREMENTS Eight required courses will include AMS364, Seminar for Majors plus seven other courses selected from at least four of the following six groups: Indigenous Studies, Latin American Studies, African American Studies, Caribbean Studies, United States and Canadian Studies, and American Environments. Of the seven courses, at least four will be at the 300-400 level. Additional courses may be designated by the Director of Undergraduate Studies.

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