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         Latin Americans Regional Information:     more books (18)
  1. Living and office operating costs in Brazil (Special circular / Division of Regional Information, Latin American Section) by Ralph H Ackerman, 1938
  2. Children's literature initiative in Mexico: the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award and the Swedish Institute join Latin American focus on children's literature.(Event ... article from: The Australian Library Journal by Anna Cokorilo, 2005-11-01
  3. A Library for the New World: The Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection by Adán Benavides, 2011-02-28
  4. Economic issues, especially unemployment, cloud Latin American future: Regional trade agreements seen as most beneficial (Opinion analysis) by Barbara Smela, 1994
  5. Latin American and Caribbean Library Resources in the British Isles: A Directory by Alan Biggins, Valerie Cooper, 2002-03
  6. A Taste of Latino Cultures: Un Toque de Sabor Latino: A Bilingual, Educational Cookbook: Un Libro de Cocina Bilingüe y Educativo by George Kunzel, 2005-10-30
  7. Breast still best (and Better Yet, Toxic-Free)!(Such sweet poison: chemicals in our environment and women's health)(evaluated information on breastfeeding): An article from: Women's Health Journal
  8. Debora Tajer: "we need much more information on the impact of health sector reform".: An article from: Women's Health Journal by Adriana Gomez, 2003-04-01
  9. Regional Lesbian Network. (On-Line Resources).(Brief Article): An article from: Women's Health Journal
  10. Information, communications and new technologies: a strategic objective. (Human rights: unfinished business).: An article from: Women's Health Collection by Montserrat Boix, 2003-01-01
  11. The Territorial Expansion of the United States: At the Expense of Spain and the Hispanic-American Countries by Fernando E. PZrez Pe-a, 2002-02-01
  12. Cuba Annual Report: 1988 by Voice of America-Radio Marti Program, Office of Research and Policy, et all 1991-01-01
  13. Cuba Annual Report: 1985 by Voice of America-Radio Marti Program, Office of Research and Policy, et all 1987-01-01
  14. Information Technology for Latin Americanists by Rory Miller, Pat Noble, 1994-06

81. DISCOVERY V16n1 Latin American Network Information Center

http://www.utexas.edu/admin/opa/discovery/disc2001v16n1/disc_lanic.html

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Latin American Network Information Center Choose a scenario: Your eighth grader has a five-page report on Andean cultures due tomorrow. You promised everyone something new and different at your next dinner party. Your company wants to start exporting to Mexico and you need to get a handle on NAFTA. You want to know more about the Pinochet case in Chile. ... LANIC Since first going online in 1992, LANIC has provided the most comprehensive directory or guide to Internet-based resources to, from, or on Latin America. The LANIC directory includes thirty-nine country pages and fifty-six subject pages containing links to more than 12,000 external sites, all of which have been individually selected, evaluated and cataloged by LANIC staff. Sites linked on the LANIC directory are briefly annotated in the language of the target site to give users additional guidance. Photo by Natalie Arsenault LANIC staff member Meredith Glueck (left) helps a participant at Explore UT work through an interactive program on the Maya culture in Mexico. LANIC averages three million hits a month. Our audience includes Latin Americans and people around the world who have an interest in this region. While designed to facilitate research and academic endeavors, LANIC is also an important resource for primary and secondary school teachers and students, private and public sector professionals and just about anyone looking for information about this region.

82. The Americas -- Regional Trade Issues
Says US Moving Ahead on regional, Bilateral Trade Treasury Official Says • OAS SaysLatin America Hurt US Holds Trade Meetings with Central South americans.
http://usinfo.state.gov/regional/ar/trade/
The Americas POLICY Official Texts Free Trade Area
of the Americas
NAFTA ... World Trade Organization SUBJECT IN DEPTH Argentina
(U.S. Embassy

in Mexico)

Argentina
... U.S.-EU Bananas RESOURCES U.S. Trade Representative U.S. Trade Representative Trade Capacity Building (PDF) U.S. Trade Representative NAFTA U.S. Trade Representative Chile Free Trade Agreement ... Mercosur FEATURE The Free Trade Area of the Americas: Expanding Hemispheric Trade
USTR: FTAA Meeting in Quito, Ecuador

FTAA Meeting in Quito, Ecuador

FREE TRADE AREA OF THE AMERICAS

New Trade Pacts Aim to Ensure Freer

Capital Flows,Says U.S.

U.S.-Created Group Monitoring Summit of
Americas to Meet in Washington ... FTAA: An Integral Part of the Summit of the Americas NORTH AMERICAN FREE TRADE AGREEMENT (NAFTA) Bush Announces Modification of NAFTA Rules of Origin NAFTA Tribunal Rules in Favor of U.S., Dismisses ADF Claims Tri-Government Study Promotes Greater Energy Trade in North America ... NAFTA: Building on a North American Partnership TRADE PROMOTION AUTHORITY Asst. Secretary of State Reich Praises Chile’s Democracy USTR Zoellick Hails Passage of Trade Promotion Authority U.S. Labor Sec. Urges Passage of Trade Promotion Authority President Calls for Congress to Pass Trade Promotion Authority ... Senator Grassley on FTAA Negotiations, Fast Track UNITED STATES TRADE REPRESENTATIVE U.S. and Argentina Convene Trade Consultations

83. Berkeley Library Information Network - CD-ROM Descriptions/guides
GOVERNMENT information CDROM DATABASES. Bibliography of Native North Americanson Disc; Black Studies on Disc; CRC Handbook of latin American Studies, Vol.
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/CDROM/LISCDs.html
CD-ROM Databases on the Berkeley Library Information Network
The Berkeley Library Information Network provides access to over 80 CD-ROM databases throughout the UCB Libraries, covering a variety of subject areas. To use these resources, you must be working at a networked PC in one of the campus libraries ; you cannot access these databases remotely at this time. To connect to a CD-ROM database from a networked library PC:

84. SIX MONTH PROGRESS REPORT
was designed and launched by latin americans in August To strengthen its regionalactivities and further its quality watchdog journalism in latin America, PFC
http://www.portal-pfc.org/english/reports/200103.html
SIX MONTH PROGRESS REPORT
March 1, 2001

Journalists Against Corruption: A New
Anti-corruption Strategy for the Americas
Since 1989, the anti-corruption strategies for Latin America promoted by U.S. based donors have fallen short of expectations. Most have consisted of costly public sector reforms and training that have not been rigorously applied because of local governments? disinterest and inadequate public pressure. They have also included expensive conferences and other activities that are typically academic or generic in content and lack sustainability and impact. Journalists use the PFC web page, email network (PFC-listserv) and advisory services to request and obtain contacts and information needed for their investigations. On the PFC web page they publish articles about corruption, or register them in a clippings file, as well as essays about the anti-corruption role of investigative journalism and the obstacles impeding it. When they turn to PFC after suffering reprisals because of their investigations of corruption, PFC uses its email network with international human rights organizations to disseminate information and rally their support. The PFC web page offers draft projects for local initiatives - that can be adapted and implemented to provide journalists with databases, investigative and legal support, and other needs - as well as descriptions of existing ones that can be consulted by journalists. It provides bibliography about investigative journalism and corruption and links for publications. One section compiles legislative bills and laws related to access of information, censorship, protection of news sources, defamation, journalist codes of ethics, and other legal issues of interest to journalists who cover corruption.

85. NCADI: Asian/Pacific Islander Heritage Month
my veil. I pledged the most diverse sorority I could find, which consistedof two latin americans and three Asians. I even tried
http://www.health.org/seasonal/asianpi/walk.aspx
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Walking in Two Worlds:
A Young Woman's Journey to the Philippines The Unveiling
It was an eerie feeling... I arrived in the Philippines for the first time as an adult. An overwhelming sense of relief graced my body. As if a bolt of lightening had struck me, my blood surged and I knew right then and there who I was. It did not matter anymore that I was born in Richmond, Virginia. As I roamed the cities, like a new mother's instinct to her child, everywhere I went the "strange but familiar" feeling could not be ignored. The smells were pungent and the vinegary food bit my tongue, but I still managed to get by. During my stay in the Philippines I constantly asked myself "Why am I here?" After 23 years of the great American Dream that thousands of people yearn for, what was I doing here? All my life, the constant struggle between being an American and a Filipino has always been an underlying factor in my search for an identity. Many do not realize how difficult it is to live in two completely different worlds. W.E.B. DuBois understood though, in his creation of "Wearing the Veil," referring to the lives of African-Americans during their struggle for equality. Wearing the veil symbolizes ones portrayal as an American to the outside world, while hiding ones culture in order to fit into North American society.

86. Conservation Training In Latin America
and many of the latin americans who trained together international experts withregional specialists and this group of fifteen latin American conservation
http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/waac/wn/wn13/wn13-2/wn13-210.html
Volume 13, Number 2, May 1991, pp.18-21, map
Conservation Training in Latin America
by Suzanne Deal Booth Latin American countries have a tremendously rich and varied cultural heritage, including Precolumbian artifacts and sites; textiles, paintings and polychrome sculpture from the Spanish-Colonial period; as well as contemporary art and architecture. This vast heritage exists in a wide range of environments and conditions, from tropical rain forests in Brazil to the deserts and cold regions of Argentina, Chile and Peru. It is really quite difficult to generalize about the problems and conditions for the artistic and cultural heritage in a region as large and diverse as Latin America; however, some general observations can be made as long as we keep in mind that we are speaking of 21 independent countries spread over approximately 7,000,000 square miles12% of the earth's land surface. Many countries in Latin America have well-established policies and institutions that govern the protection of their cultural wealth. During the past twenty years, the protection of cultural property in Latin America has taken great strides, and many regional conservation centers, as well as conservation training programs, have been established. Even with these developments, Latin America's enormous and diverse cultural heritage continues to be in great need of conservation, and increasing demands are being placed on the small yet growing number of professionals in these areas, largely because funds are not always adequate for the pressing conservation tasks at hand.

87. AFSC Coffee Project
by AFSC's New England regional Office, 2161 The program helps hundreds of latin Americansliving in training workshops help local latin American communities to
http://www.equalexchange.com/interfaith/afscproject.html
THE AFSC
COFFEE PROJECT Good Coffee for a Good Cause

www.afsc.org./nehp
COFFEE:
A BITTER CUP?
Coffee is big business - it's one of the most heavily traded commodities in the world. But for the majority of small coffee farmers, the benefits are small. The chain of events that leads from the coffee farm to your cup is long and expensive, often leaving the farmer with very little to live on. Most small coffee farmers live in isolated communities in some of the poorest countries in the world. They usually sell their coffee through middlemen, known to Latin American farmers as "coyotes." With world prices in constant flux and coyotes offering the lowest price possible, farmers never know how much they'll get for their crops. Coffee farmers - some 20 million people near the equator - often struggle just to make a simple living. The producers of a rich crop are often trapped in poverty. But there is an alternative: FAIR TRADE . Fair trade shares the bounty of the coffee trade with those who grow the crop, helping them build a better future for themselves and their communities. WHAT IS THE
AFSC COFFEE PROJECT?

88. LI Executive Managua: Technical Information
Executive Managua Technical information
http://www.worldlib.org/executive/managua/navarro.html
163rd Executive Committee Meeting
Welcoming speech
by the National President of the Nicaraguan Constitucionalist Liberal Party, Dr Leopoldo Navarro, to representatives of the world's liberal parties on the occasion of the Progressive and Liberal Party Executive Committee gathering at Managua, Nicaragua, on September 3rd, 1999 Ladies and Gentlemen:
We, the Nicaraguan liberals, in pursuing the noble spirit of the Oxford Public Declaration issued during the last fifty years and as members of the Progressive International Liberal, welcome most cordially all world liberal party representatives and all related organisations who have had the kindness of joining us today in writing one of the Nicaraguan Liberal's main pages of its history. This gathering that outlines the essence of a political platform of common liberal objectives, aspires to turn into a great world agora where men and women that love and cherish liberty can express our ideas to revitalise and pursuit human rights defence, tolerance, freedom, pluralism, democracy and a market economy that allows for the development of men's best performances. Taking advantage of this valuable and not too frequently called for opportunity to address such a select group of world liberals, I lay open some brief notes of the accomplishments of liberalism and the new challenges and defiance put up to us by the Liberal Agenda for the XXI Century.

89. OAS Foreign Trade Info System
Organization of American States resources includes full text of major trade agreements and investment treaties, a trade forum and trade data.
http://www.sice.oas.org/

About SICE
What's New? Sitemap Calendar ... português
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SICE, the OAS Trade Unit’s Foreign Trade Information System, makes available
information about hemispheric integration and trade trends. Information on the
Free Trade Area of
the Americas process (FTAA). Classified by Type of Agreement
Classified by Signatory Country
The Trade Unit supports the OAS member states in matters related to trade policy and economic integration. Anti-Dumping
Competition Policy

Dispute Settlemen
t ... Trade Data Information by Country Argentina Bahamas Barbados Belize Bolivia Brazil Canada Colombia Chile Costa Rica Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador El Salvador Grenada Guatemala Guyana Haiti Honduras Jamaica Mexico Nicaragua Panama Paraguay Peru St. Lucia Suriname Uruguay United States Venezuela Glossary Calendar

90. National Insititute For Research Advancemant(NIRA) Think Tanks

http://www.nira.go.jp/ice/tt-info/nwdtt99/c1256.html

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