Statistical Yearbook For Latin America And The Caribbean, 2009
Latin America Caribbean Statistical information Trackbacks (0)UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) published Statistical yearbook for Latin America and the Caribbean, 2009. The report is only available online in both English and Spanish and can be downloaded from the ECLAC web site. The report focuses on
From UN Pulse: Permanent Link: Statistical yearbook for Latin America and the Caribbean, 2009
Technology For Transparency
Africa Democracy Latin America Asia Eastern Europe Technology ICTS Trackbacks (0)The Transparency for Technology Network was co-funded by Open Society Institute's Information Program and Omidyar Network's Media, Markets & Transparency initiative, during the first three months of 2010 it is creating an online mapping of over 30 case studies of technology projects that increase transparency, government accountability, and civic engagement in Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, South Asia, China, and Central & Eastern Europe. Users to the site may view summaries of the projects, listen to interviews with their founders and materials relating to them. They highlight good use of web 2.0 technology and citizen participation to increase democracy. Copyright and technical information is displayed on the website. http://transparency.globalvoicesonline.org/
From Intute.ac.uk
Latin America: Rise Of Populism And The Left
Latin America The Left (politics) Populism Trackbacks (0)This site provides free access to the text of this journal article by Mitchell A. Seligson which was published in the Journal of Democracy, Volume 18, No. 3 (July, 2007), pp. 81-95. The 15 page article considers recent increases in popularity of left wing political parties in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela and the increasing importance of populism. It uses evidence from public opinion surveys (derived from Barometer de la Americas led by Vanderbilt University and Latin American Public Opinion Project (LAPOP). to consider the extent of the left wing support in Latin America.From Intute.ac.uk
http://sitemason.vanderbilt.edu/files/hsPCWQ/Journal%20of%20Democracy%20Rise%20o
Economic Survey: Latin America And The Caribbean, 2008-2009. UN
Economic conditions and policy Latin America Caribbean Trackbacks (0)Economic Survey for Latin America and the Caribbean 2008-2009
Source: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (UN)
The publication of the sixty-first edition of the Economic Survey of Latin America and the Caribbean, corresponding to 2008-2009, comes at a critical point in the economic development of the Latin American and Caribbean region. A growth phase that the region’s recent history cannot equal in nature and duration has come to an end and output is contracting. The toll this state of affairs is taking on the well-being of the population will inevitably be reflected in setbacks in social variables. Two traits set the current situation apart from the many crises that have beset the region in decades past. First, this crisis did not originate in the region or even in another emerging economy, but in the world’s largest economy, whence the effects spread worldwide, albeit with significant differences among countries and regions. Second, since the countries have (albeit with major exceptions) reduced their debt and built up their reserves during the boom years, the region overall is better prepared than in the past, and than other regions this time around, to tackle the crisis. These traits, in turn, have two implications. First, the rate of contraction forecast for 2009 is relatively moderate although, again, with sharp differences among the countries of the region. Second, the recovery depends to a great extent on an upturn in the global economy overall.
The first part of this edition of the Economic Survey looks at the channels through which the crisis is affecting the economies of the region and its impact on variables such as economic growth, employment and external-sector indicators. It also discusses the strengths and weaknesses of the countries in dealing with the fallout from the global crisis and the economic policies they have deployed to this end. The analysis covers the performance of the region’s economy in 2008 and the first semester of 2009 and concludes with a discussion of the outlook for the second half of the year. This chapter draws on an extensive statistical appendix.
+ Full Document (PDF; 1 MB)
Via: UN Pulse and Docuticker
Statistical Yearbook For Latin America And The Caribbean. ECLAC
Latin America Caribbean Statistical information Trackbacks (0)The 2008 edition of the Statistical Yearbook for Latin America and the Caribbean has been issued (full text, 2.78 MB) in English and Spanish (press release). The Yearbook is divided into four chapters:
Economic Crisis And Governmental Policies In Latin America And Caribbean. ECLAC
United Nations Economic conditions and policy Latin America Caribbean Trackbacks (0)Latin America And The Caribbean In The World Economy 2007. Trends 2008
United Nations Latin America Caribbean Trackbacks (0)UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) published Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007. Trends 2008
report. It focuses on trends and developments in the regional trade,
Doha Round of trade negotiations, globalization and new trends in
international trade, integration, trade relations with the European
Union and international integration.Download the full text (pdf, 3028 KB) or Executive summary (612 KB)
Press-release
UN Pulse Permanent Link: Latin America and the Caribbean in the World Economy 2007. Trends 2008
Started in 1992 and affiliated with the Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, the Latin American Network Information Center (LANIC) is designed to "facilitate access to Internet-based information to, from, or on Latin America." Their site was redesigned in the spring of 2008, and currently their various directories contain over 12,000 unique URLs for use by the general public. These links can be browsed by subject headings or by country, and visitors can look into more discrete topical headings like "food", "political science", and "social work". Along with these high-quality links, visitors can then click on over to their "Digital Initiatives" area. Here they will find digital collections that cover documents from the New Mexican Revolution and the full-text Fidel Castro Speech database. Visitors will also appreciate that many of the site's resources are available in Spanish and Portuguese. [KMG] Scout Report
Latin America And The Caribbean Statistical Yearbook 2007
United Nations Latin America Caribbean Trackbacks (0)The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) issued Statistical Yearbook for Latin America and the Caribbean 2007. The Yearbook covers demographic, social, economic issues; it also provides data on natural resources and environment. Read the press-release or view the Yearbook online. Permanent Link: Latin America and the Caribbean statistical yearbook 2007 UN Pulse
SciELO - social sciences edition
SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online aims to provide free
access to scientific and technical literature from developing nations,
with a particular focus on materials from Latin America and the
Caribbean. This section of its website is produced in association with
The Edelstein Center for Social Research and offers free access to
journal articles related to social science research. They include
coverage of political science, sociology, anthropology, human sciences
and religious studies. It is a particularly good starting point for
tracing recent scholarly research articles from journals published in
Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay. Some materials
are offered in Spanish only. Most date from approximately 2006 onwards.
http://socialsciences.scielo.org/
http://lasa.international.pitt.edu/
Colombian Paramilitaries and the United States: “Unraveling the Pepes Tangled Web”
Source: National Security Archive
U.S. espionage operations targeting top Colombian government officials in 1993 provided key evidence linking the U.S.-Colombia task force charged with tracking down fugitive drug lord Pablo Escobar to one of Colombia’s most notorious paramilitary chiefs, according to a new collection of declassified documents published today by the National Security Archive. The affair sparked a special CIA investigation into whether U.S. intelligence was shared with Colombian terrorists and narcotraffickers every bit as dangerous as Escobar himself.
The new documents, released under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act, are the most definitive declassified evidence to date linking the U.S. to a Colombian paramilitary group and are the subject of an investigation published today in Colombia’s Semana magazine.
Documents in PDF.
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Inequality in Latin America : determinants and consequences
Source: World Bank Policy Research Working Papers
Latin America is together with Sub-Saharan Africa the most unequal region of the world. This paper documents recent inequality trends in the Latin American region, going beyond traditional measures of income inequality. The paper also reviews some of the explanations that have been put forward to understand the current situation, and discusses why reducing income inequality should be an important policy priority. In particular, the authors discuss channels through which inequality can affect growth and output volatility. On the whole, the analysis suggests a two-pronged approach to reduce inequality in the region that combines policies aimed at improving the distribution of assets (especially education) with elements aimed at improving the capacity of the state to redistribute income through taxes and transfers.
+ Full Paper (PDF; 241 KB)
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Latin America and Caribbean : FRIDE resources
FRIDE (La Fundación para las Relaciones Internacionales y el Diálogo
Exterior) is a private, independent, non-profit organisation based in
Madrid, Spain. It seeks to study democratisation, peace, human rights
and development processes worldwide. Its website is offered in English
or Spanish. It contains details about the aims of the organisation, its
research and activities. It includes access to many full-text
newsletters, reports and papers published since approximately 2005. The
section on Latin America includes coverage of Cuba and the rule of
Fidel Castro; Colombia; and Venezuala. Topics covered include foreign
policy , international relations, regional security and democracy.
From Intute.ac.uk
http://www.fride.org/section/45/latin-america-caribbean
The Social Panorama of Latin America 2007 (preliminary version, pdf 407K) presents an overview of the main social trends in Latin America today. The report highlights the importance of advancing toward a social pact to overcome poverty and promote social cohesion as priority issues for public expenditure. This year's report has five chapters, covering the following topics:
- Progress in poverty reduction and challenges in social cohesion
- Public social expenditure and the need for a social pact in Latin America
- The quality of education: Inequalities beyond access and educational progression
- Internal migration and development in Latin America and the Caribbean: Continuity, change and challenges to policy
- Social agenda: Policies and programmes for the health of Latin America's indigenous peoples, and the international social agenda
Latin America Public Opinion, Including AmericasBarometer
United States of America Latin America Trackbacks (0)By Shirl Kennedy, Senior Editor
This week’s resource falls under the heading of “content you are unlikely to find anywhere else in an easily accessible format.” LAPOP’s director, Mitchell Seligson, is the Centennial Professor of Political Science and Fellow of the Center for the Americas at Vanderbilt University. But the project is not new; Seligson founded it back in the late 1970s, when he was at the University of Pittsburgh.
Since the 1970s, Seligson, his colleagues and students have systematically surveyed the citizens of Latin America on their political views—specifically on democratic values and their behaviors related to democracy. These surveys and the studies that have emerged from them have sought to determine the extent to which women may be excluded from political participation, the effect of education on tolerance for the rights of minorities, and the effects of government corruption on citizens. The project has regularly published in-depth analyses of the data collected in Spanish-language monographs in countries throughout Latin America. These are all available for free downloading on the LAPOP webpage Studies by Contry & Year.
Through years of polling in most of the countries of Latin America, Seligson and the LAPOP have developed a treasure-trove of databases of public opinion information about political viewpoints across Latin America. This data has been the basis of scores of articles in professional journals, and has been the basis of many of the 25 Ph.D. dissertations that Seligson has supervised over the years; it has also been utilized by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in its efforts to promote Latin American democracy and, perhaps most significantly, by the governments of several Latin American countries. The data produced has been utilized as well by the World Bank in its Governance measures.
A highlight of this website is the AmericasBarometer, “an effort by LAPOP to measure democratic values and behaviors in the Americas using national probability samples of voting-age adults.” Some 20 nations were included in the 2006 iteration. You can access the reports by theme or by country and year. Most items are available in Spanish as well as English.
A press release last month highlighted some of the most recent findings:
A strong indicator of the prospects for democratic stability in a given country is citizens’ belief in the legitimacy of their governments and their willingness to respect the right to political opposition. By that standard, the highest scoring countries (on a 0-100 scale) are Canada (68), the United States (64), Costa Rica (50), Uruguay (46) and Mexico (41). At the low end are Nicaragua (25), Haiti (24), Paraguay (20), Bolivia (20) and Ecuador (12).
While the majority of citizens in the Americas believe that democracy is the best possible political system, percentages still vary dramatically, with 91 percent in the United States, 87 percent in Canada, 82 percent in Uruguay, 77 percent in Costa Rica, 69 percent in Mexico and 60 percent in Nicaragua and Peru ranking democracy the best.
More than 15 years after the end of the Cold War, ideology still matters in Latin America, a region that is slightly to the right of the world average (on a 1-10 left/right scale). For the region as a whole, those on the left are significantly less likely to believe in the legitimacy of their political systems and much less likely to believe that democracy is the best possible system.
Countries included in the survey: Mexico, the United States, Canada, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Ecuador, Bolivia, Colombia, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile, Peru, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Guyana and Jamaica.
There’s also an online tool for data analysis in English and Spanish.
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Source: Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College (More)
From The UN: Disarmament; MDG Data Updated; Latin America & Carbbean In World Economy
United Nations Development Economic conditions and policy Latin America Caribbean Trackbacks (0)Millennium Development Goals (MDG) data Updated
Latin America and the
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