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In South Florida, Latin America and the Caribbean are a local story - and the Latin America Report, which was a weekly WLRN feature from 2013 to 2023, looked at how the two often intersected and affected each other politically, economically and culturally. Its award-winning reports included the six-part Migration Maze series, which examined new U.S. policies to address illegal immigration at its source in Central America instead of at the border; the three-part series Escape From Venezuela, examining the Venezuelan refugee crisis in South America and Venezuelan exile efforts to alleviate it; and reporting from Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria 2017, which revealed how Florida Puerto Ricans essentially filled the aid needs that U.S. relief efforts couldn’t.
- 395 - Miami's fixated on Biden's Cuba moves — but his Venezuela move matters, too.
President Biden's Cuba policy changes got wall-to-wall South Florida coverage last week. His Venezuela move, not so much — but it could be just as consequential.
Tue, 24 May 2022 - 394 - Bitcoin boosters see Latin America as 'cryptopia.' Does the idea have any currency?
El Salvador wants to build Bitcoin City; Cuba hopes to skirt the U.S. trade embargo. But so far Latin America looks like anything but a cryptocurrency utopia.
Tue, 03 May 2022 - 393 - The controversial sale of Miami's Radio Caracol halts — but the controversy doesn't
Cuban and Latino Democrats scored a rare victory in their effort to counter right-wing Spanish-language radio in Miami. But is it really the win they hope for?
Tue, 26 Apr 2022 - 392 - Iguanacorn Dreams: Miami's upstart tech joins Latin America's tech startups
Tech startups are helping Latin America's battered economy recover from the pandemic — and Miami's aspiring tech economy is helping them get that done.
Tue, 12 Apr 2022 - 391 - Miami's International Queer Tango Festival invites LGBTQ dancers to the milonga
After years of feeling excluded from the elegant Argentine dance, gay and trans partners are bringing more creativity to its traditionally male and female roles.
Tue, 05 Apr 2022 - 390 - Being a republic would be symbolism for Jamaica — but powerful enough to change it?
Britain's queen is a figurehead in Jamaica, but could the psychological effect of dumping her as the Caribbean island's head of state put it on a more developed path?
Tue, 29 Mar 2022 - 389 - New year, new elections in Latin America and the Caribbean. Will the left roll on in 2022?
In 2021, leftists won presidencies in every Latin American election but one, including Peru and Chile. In 2022, they could take Brazil and Colombia too. Why?
Tue, 04 Jan 2022 - 388 - Protest, pandemic, Haitian tailspin: a look at 2021 in Latin America and the Caribbean
The good news in Latin America and the Caribbean: much of the region turned vaccination tragedy into triumph. The bad news? Just about everything else.
Tue, 28 Dec 2021 - 387 - Las Posadas tradition returns to Homestead as a community rises from the pandemic
The traditional Christmas procession festival, cancelled last year by COVID-19, is an expression of Mexican and Latino identity — and, lately, an immigration statement.
Tue, 14 Dec 2021 - 386 - FARC Fight: Biden learns — again — that South Florida is a Latin America policy minefield
Biden's decision to remove Colombian guerrillas from the U.S. terrorist list sparks a new disinformation spree in Florida — and more Latino lessons for Democrats.
Tue, 07 Dec 2021 - 385 - Honduras looks set for its first woman president. What could it mean for immigration?
Leftist Xiomara Castro is routing her conservative rival in the vote tally for Sunday's election. Can she improve Hondurans' lives — and stem migration to the U.S.?
Tue, 30 Nov 2021 - 384 - U.S. diplomat helping Haiti rebuild its police: elites tied to gangs are 'on notice'
Assistant Secretary of State Todd Robinson has the daunting task of helping Haitians restore their collapsed security — so they can restore their collapsed country.
Tue, 23 Nov 2021 - 383 - Feid-ing in: Colombia, Latin America are riding a wave of protests — and protest music
This is the second of two reports on a potent new synergy between protests and protest music in Latin America, from Cuba to Colombia, San Juan to Santiago.
Fri, 19 Nov 2021 - 382 - 'Patria y Vida,' up for a Latin Grammy, leads a protest music boom in Latin America
This is the first of two reports on a potent new synergy between protests and protest music in Latin America — from Cuba to Colombia, from San Juan to Santiago.
Tue, 16 Nov 2021 - 381 - Cubanía Calling: 'Picturing Cuba' is a thorough look at Cuban art — and identity
Florida International University Cuban Research Institute head Jorge Duany has put together one of the few (if only) comprehensive Cuban art histories. It will be featured at the Miami Book Fair.
Fri, 12 Nov 2021 - 380 - Abortion-rights advocates hope a video campaign can help tip Colombia's court
Colombia's Constitutional Court is expected to rule in the coming weeks on whether to legalize abortion. Can social media sway justices, as well as public opinion?
Tue, 26 Oct 2021 - 379 - Why Alex Saab's extradition to Miami threatens Venezuela's kleptocracy in Caracas
Alex Saab — Venezuela's alleged money-laundering master — could turn up the heat on Nicolás Maduro's authoritarian regime if he sings to U.S. officials.
Tue, 19 Oct 2021 - 378 - 'Sea of dreams.' Guyana's prime minister addresses its oil boom — and its Venezuela crisis
Prime Minister Mark Phillips sees no contradiction in Guyana being both a fossil-fuel leader and a climate-change mitigator. But will Venezuela try to grab its oil?
Tue, 12 Oct 2021 - 377 - Cuba's exporting vaccines, but will countries import them without WHO approval?
Cuba has started selling its COVID-19 vaccines abroad. It insists its trials show they're safe and effective — so why hasn't the World Health Organization said so too?
Tue, 05 Oct 2021 - 376 - Civil Society Solution: Can Non-Governmental Groups Fix Haiti's Governmental Crisis?
With Haiti's government, economy and public security in collapse, "civil society" organizations propose a reboot of their democracy. Will the U.S. buy into it?
Mon, 04 Oct 2021 - 375 - Venezuelans Say Most Of Guyana Is Theirs. Guyanese Call That A 'Jumbie' Story
Venezuela's regime and opposition are repeating a century-old claim that three-fourths of Guyana belongs to their country. Is it valid — or nationalist nonsense?
Tue, 14 Sep 2021 - 374 - Photographic Memory: Gentile's 'Wait For Me' Recalls 1980s Central America Conflicts
In an interview about his memoir, acclaimed photojournalist Bill Gentile discusses how aggressively but sensitively war and conflict need to be covered.
Tue, 07 Sep 2021 - 373 - 'We Have Nothing.' Earthquake Aid Arriving — Slowly — In Haiti's Desperate Communities
The remoteness of Haiti's southwest peninsula has made humanitarian aid delivery difficult, after the Aug. 14 earthquake. Is a new approach helping?
Tue, 31 Aug 2021 - 372 - 'We Know Haiti.' After 2010 Debacle, Diaspora Wants Bigger Earthquake Aid Role
After Haiti's epic 2010 earthquake, Haitians were largely shut out of the international relief effort. Haitian-Americans want to change that in 2021.
Tue, 24 Aug 2021 - 371 - Vaccine Tourist Season: How South Florida Became A Shot In The Arm For Colombia
Last winter, vaccine tourism was frowned on — but this summer developing countries like Colombia realize it actually aided their own fledgling vaccination efforts.
Tue, 10 Aug 2021 - 370 - Why The Cuban Regime's Post-Protest Crackdown Isn't Surprising — And Yet It Is
Cuba's dictatorship always claimed anti-regime protesters weren't "the Cuban people." This time it can't, which makes its harsh response look more deplorable to Cubans and the international community.
Tue, 03 Aug 2021 - 369 - Change In The Caribbean: A New PM In Haiti — And A New Protest Paradigm In Cuba?
Haiti's prime minister says he'll step down to make way for a new post-assassination government — and Cuban dissidents insist anti-regime protests are far from over.
Tue, 20 Jul 2021 - 368 - Moïse Assassination Leads Diaspora To Question Its Involvement In Haitian Politics
Many expats feel their economic contribution to Haiti merits political clout, too. But the murder of Haiti's president may prompt a reality check for the diaspora.
Tue, 13 Jul 2021 - 367 - Elsa Not As Destructive To Caribbean As Feared — But Raises Specter Of Earlier Hurricanes
As Tropical Storm Elsa churns out of the Caribbean toward Florida, it leaves the realization that earlier and later storm activity may be the trend.
Tue, 06 Jul 2021 - 366 - Rage And Reggaetón In Colombia: J Balvin Documentary Ponders An Artist's Duty
In "The Boy From Medellín," superstar J Balvin must find his social voice as Colombian street protests erupt before the biggest show of his life — in his hometown.
Tue, 22 Jun 2021 - 365 - Growing Desperation Forces Record Number Of Venezuelans To Cross U.S. Border
As doors close to them in South America – and as they misconstrue TPS in the U.S. – Venezuelan refugees are flocking to the U.S.-Mexico border and South Florida.
Thu, 03 Jun 2021 - 364 - Guaidó Gambit 2.0: Exiles Wrestle With Venezuelan Leader's Negotiation Tack
Expats have long insisted negotiating with Venezuela's dictatorial regime is tantamount to surrender. Reality is forcing a growing number of them to reconsider it.
Tue, 25 May 2021 - 363 - In South Florida, Colombia's Turmoil Morphs (Again) Into 'Socialismo' Scare
Colombia's social unrest is rooted in Latin America's crushing economic inequality — but in Florida, the GOP scores bigger points by falsely blaming it on Marxism.
Tue, 18 May 2021 - 362 - Rise In Deportations Spawns Effort To Aid Deportees Struggling In Haiti
For an increasing number of Haitian deportees, Haiti is actually an unfamiliar — and seemingly unfriendly — country. A group called DipsOrg hopes to change that.
Wed, 05 May 2021 - 361 - Why The Sale Of A Miami Radio Station Has Set Off A National Alarm For Democrats
Radio Caracol is one of Miami's rare moderate Spanish-language stations. Democrats fear a new owner will use it to broadcast more right-wing disinformation.
Tue, 27 Apr 2021 - 360 - Communist Congress Leaves Cuba Castro-less At The Top. Little Else Changes
Raúl Castro has stepped down as Cuba's communist boss — but the regime's old guard's still making sure the new guard keeps its rigid system intact.
Mon, 26 Apr 2021 - 359 - Why Are So Many Latinos Obsessed With Demonizing Black Lives Matter? It's Complicated.
Many Latinos who back President Trump bring the racial — and racist — complexities of Latin America to their attacks on the racial justice movement.
Mon, 05 Oct 2020 - 358 - Is Colombia Interfering In The U.S. Election In Florida – With Tactics It Exported To Florida?
Critics say Colombian elected officials are increasingly involved in — and helped create — President Trump's 'socialismo' scare campaign against Joe Biden.
Mon, 28 Sep 2020 - 357 - Venezuelan Medical Workers Dying Of COVID-19 At Alarming Rate. How Can The World Get PPE To Them?
A third of Venezuela's reported COVID deaths are frontline healthcare workers. Efforts are underway to protect them – but the regime may block the help.
Mon, 14 Sep 2020 - 356 - Is The Western Hemisphere's Most Important Development Bank Headed For A Radical Change?
As the Inter-American Development Bank prepares to help Latin America rebuild post-COVID, will an American take over, breaking one of its core traditions?
Mon, 07 Sep 2020 - 355 - Why A Proposal To Rename A Miami Street For A Former Colombian President Is So Controversial
Supporters of former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe want Miami-Dade County to honor him. Critics say it would honor a human rights violator.
Mon, 31 Aug 2020 - 354 - Calling Colombians: With Florida In Play, Trump And Biden Reach Out To A Latino 'Sleeping Elephant'
Florida's large Colombian community never got much attention from U.S. presidential candidates. Until now.
Mon, 24 Aug 2020 - 353 - Marriage Punishment: U.S. Citizens Wed To Immigrants Fight For Federal Benefits Trump Denied Them
The White House created a rule that denies pandemic economic relief to U.S. citizens married to non-citizens. They're now hoping Sen. Marco Rubio can break it.
Mon, 17 Aug 2020 - 352 - As COVID-19 Ravages Latin America, Expat Families Confront 'Appalling' Tragedies
Controversial coronavirus deaths like Carlos Henríquez's in El Salvador leave Latin American relatives in the U.S. feeling increasingly helpless.
Mon, 10 Aug 2020 - 351 - Venezuela's Health System Was Already Destroyed. Now Comes The COVID Calamity?Mon, 27 Jul 2020
- 350 - Cuban Sandwich Saga: Hialeah Native Stars In Popular 'Hamilton' Parody 'Jamónton'
You've no doubt heard of the smash-hit Broadway musical “Hamilton.” But you probably don't know the saga of Alejandro Jamónton – the founding father who brought the Cuban sandwich to America:
Mon, 20 Jul 2020 - 349 - Expats Ask: Is Trump's Venezuela Campaign 'Under Control' Or Under Chaos?Mon, 13 Jul 2020
- 348 - Small Uruguay Is Big Proof That Committing To Public Health Can Contain COVID-19
Uruguay has recorded the lowest number of COVID-19 cases and deaths per capita in South America, if not the entire western hemisphere. The small but progressive country has done that despite sitting right next door to Brazil – which has the world’s second-highest number of COVID-19 infections and fatalities behind the U.S.
Mon, 06 Jul 2020 - 347 - Mora Stepping Down As FIU's Latin America Director; Bridged Academia, Policy
Seven years ago, Miami native Frank Mora left the Pentagon and came home to take over Florida International University’s Kimberly Green Latin American and Caribbean Center, or LACC. Since then, Mora has turned the center into a more nationally important forum of conversation on Latin America.
Tue, 30 Jun 2020 - 346 - Venezuela's Dark Laundering Loop: Saab Nabbed, Bagley Pleads Guilty, Maduro Sweats
Ten days ago, Colombian businessman Alex Saab was arrested in Cape Verde, an island republic off Africa’s west coast, as his private jet was refueling. Saab is wanted in the U.S. on money-laundering charges involving hundreds of millions of dollars – but his detention in Cape Verde and his possible extradition to Miami carry big political stakes in Venezuela.
Mon, 22 Jun 2020 - 345 - Do Latin American Expats Consider Trump A Democracy Crusader Or Dictatorial Caudillo?
In one of the most controversial moments of one of America’s most controversial presidencies, Donald Trump this month sent National Guard troops to Washington's D.C.'s Lafayette Square, near the White House. Pepper spray was fired to disperse what videos show were largely peaceful protesters demonstrating against police brutality and racism.
Mon, 15 Jun 2020 - 344 - Aid In The Time Of COVID: Young Latino, Caribbean Expats Help Their Native Countries
Col5Vid – a Spanish pun that stands for Colombia Sin COVID, or Colombia Without COVID-19 – is one of Colombia’s most dynamic new charity groups. But Col5Vid's founder admits the idea wasn’t born at a board room table – but on a bedroom sofa.
Mon, 08 Jun 2020 - 343 - Carmen Question: A Politically Correct Venezuelan Exile – Or A Chavista Fraud?
They're a familiar sight and sound in South Florida’s Venezuelan community: videos of exiles defending themselves against accusations that they’re “Chavistas," or sympathizers of Venezuela’s authoritarian socialist regime, a government despised by almost every expat here.
Mon, 01 Jun 2020 - 342 - Cocaine Comeback: New Book Warns Drug Is More Plentiful – And Destructive – Than Ever
In South Florida we tend to think of the golden age of cocaine (if it can be called that) as the 1980s – iconic Colombian drug lords like Pablo Escobar and cocaine cowboys marauding through Miami. But according to British-American journalist Toby Muse, cocaine's real golden age is…today.
Tue, 26 May 2020 - 341 - Tico Triumph? How Little Costa Rica Beat Back A Giant Coronavirus Pandemic
Like so many doctors around the world, pediatric surgeon Roberto Herrera was exposed to the new coronavirus back in early March.
Mon, 11 May 2020 - 340 - Expats: Ecuador's COVID-19 Meltdown Is A Warning For Americans Too
No country in Latin America and the Caribbean has been hit as hard by the new coronavirus as Ecuador. Brazil, a far larger country, may have more COVID-19 cases; but Ecuador’s death toll is thought to be twice as high as Brazil’s. And no place in Ecuador has suffered as terribly as the port city of Guayaquil.
Tue, 28 Apr 2020 - 339 - COVID Cold War: Trump And Cuba Tout Their Coronavirus Meds. But Do Scientists?
In Washington this month, President Trump announced the U.S. had just “bought a tremendous amount of hydroxychloroquine.” That’s the anti-malaria drug he insists is the most promising treatment for the new coronavirus, or COVID-19. "A game-changer,” the conservative leader likes to say.
Tue, 21 Apr 2020 - 338 - No Longer Immune? Latin America & Caribbean See Significant Rise In COVID-19 Cases
Until this month, it looked like Latin America and the Caribbean might be spared the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic. Then the world saw the tragic images from Ecuador of a sudden and overwhelming number of deaths from the new coronavirus – of corpses lining the sidewalks in the port city of Guayaquil. Meanwhile, the number of cases in Brazil is doubling or tripling every week – and so are the number of deaths.
Mon, 13 Apr 2020 - 337 - Undocumented Migrants: If We're 'Essential' Workers During COVID-19, Why Detain Us?
The federal government has designated farm workers as "essential" to the U.S. food supply chain during the COVID-19 crisis. Ironically, about two-thirds of U.S. farm workers are undocumented immigrants from Latin America. Either way, they do most of our food picking and processing, especially in Florida.
Tue, 07 Apr 2020 - 336 - U.S. Sanctions And Coronavirus: Why Aid Offers To North Korea, But Not To Cuba?
Last week, we asked if the U.S. should loosen economic sanctions against countries during grave crises like the new coronavirus. We considered Venezuela; this week we look at Cuba — and U.S. sanctions against its communist regime.
Tue, 31 Mar 2020 - 335 - In Crises Like COVID-19, Should U.S. Ease Sanctions On Countries Like Venezuela?
Since COVID-19 is a global pandemic, more Americans are asking a relevant question: In life-and-death emergencies like this, should the U.S. loosen economic sanctions against countries like Cuba, Iran – and especially Venezuela?
Mon, 23 Mar 2020 - 334 - In Coronavirus Storm, Latin America & Caribbean A Sea Of Relative Calm. Will It Last?
When São Paulo, Brazil, reported Latin America’s first case of the new coronavirus last month, South Florida had reason to worry.
Tue, 10 Mar 2020 - 333 - Trump SuperPAC: President Confronts LatAm Dictators; Sanders 'Underwater' In Florida
Since taking office, President Trump has worked to gain more Latino support in Florida by casting his rival Democrats as socialists – like the regimes in Cuba and Venezuela. Last week, WLRN talked to the Democratic SuperPAC Priorities U.S.A. about the Trump's strategy. They claim it’s the President who resembles Latin American dictators.
Mon, 02 Mar 2020 - 332 - Florida #CaudilloDay Creator Defends Trump-Dictator Comparisons, But Quiet On Sanders?
Last week, the Democratic Super PAC Priorities U.S.A. launched a social media ad campaign that's created a lot of buzz in South Florida.
Tue, 25 Feb 2020 - 331 - Colombia's Upcoming Abortion Ruling Could Have A Big Impact On Latin America
Colombia’s highest court is about to issue a ruling that could return the country to a total ban on abortion – or bring it in line with Roe v. Wade, the decision that legalized abortion in the U.S. Either way, because Colombia is one of the region's largest and more culturally influential countries, the decision could have a profound effect on abortion rights in Latin America.
Tue, 18 Feb 2020 - 330 - Award-Winning LGBTQ Film From Guatemala Here This Week. Why Its Star Isn't
“José” is an award winning film from Guatemala about a young gay man’s struggles to find love in a socially conservative, homophobic society. “José” opens this Friday in South Florida theaters. But its star, Guatemalan actor Enrique Salanic, won't be here for the film's American premiere, as he'd hoped. That's because the U.S. has denied Salanic a visa to enter the country.
Mon, 10 Feb 2020 - 329 - Guaidó Game Plan: Did World Tour Revive Stalled Quest To Oust Venezuelan Regime?
Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó rallied Venezuelan expats on Saturday at the Miami Airport Convention Center, an event that marked the end of a two-week world tour that included Europe and Canada. The aim was to rekindle international support for his campaign to oust authoritarian Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, which started a year ago.
Tue, 04 Feb 2020 - 328 - How Venezuelan Exiles Helped Expose 'Perfect Example' Of Maduro Regime Corruption
Early last year, Bulgarian officials discovered almost $70 million had been transferred from Venezuela to a bank in their capital, Sofia.
Tue, 28 Jan 2020 - 327 - Could El Salvador's Draconian Abortion Ban Become Part Of Florida's Debate?
Two months ago, Democratic state Rep. Cindy Polo of Miami Lakes visited a prison in El Salvador. Polo met an inmate named Berta Margarita Arana, a Salvadoran woman serving eight years for attempting an abortion.
Mon, 20 Jan 2020 - 326 - Ghost Flights, Terror Frights: Why Iran, Hezbollah 'Footprint' In Venezuela Matters
In 2012, the Presidents of Venezuela and Iran met at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas. The bromance between Hugo Chávez and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad alarmed Washington, since Venezuela and Iran were (and still are) sworn enemies of the U.S. So Chávez had fun joking that Ahmadinejad had come to help him “fire large missiles” at America.
Tue, 14 Jan 2020 - 325 - Haiti 10 Years After The Earthquake: Why So Little Recovery Progress In A Decade?
Port-au-Prince was a canyon of crushed concrete and horrified screams as Jean Samson Edouard ran panicked and barefoot through the capital’s Carrefour-Feuilles district.
Tue, 07 Jan 2020 - 324 - Latin America And The Caribbean 2019: From Fire In The Streets To Ire In The Skies
It's hard to wrap your arms around everything that happened 2019 in Latin America and the Caribbean. It's even harder to find any good news — from the violent political unrest that rocked capitals from La Paz to Port-au-Prince, to a record number of fires that ravaged the Amazon rainforest.
Mon, 30 Dec 2019 - 323 - How A Miami Bank Became HQ For Efforts That Led To Panama Invasion 30 Years Ago
Thirty years ago this Friday – Dec. 20, 1989 – the U.S. invaded Panama. The main objective was to capture the Panamanian dictator, General Manuel Noriega, who was wanted in the U.S. for drug trafficking. The invasion also restored democracy in Panama.
Mon, 16 Dec 2019 - 322 - Back To The U.S.-Cuba Future? New Animosities Raise Fears Relations May Be Severed AgainTue, 03 Dec 2019
- 321 - The Elián Drama 20 Years After: Miami Judge Remembers The 'Hardest Decision'
Twenty years ago this week, on Thanksgiving Day, a 5-year-old Cuban boy named Elián González was found floating on an inner tube in the Atlantic off Fort Lauderdale. His mother had taken him with her fleeing communist Cuba. She drowned. For the next seven months, Elián was the focus of a bizarre tug-of -war between his father in Cuba and his Cuban exile relatives in Miami – who wanted to keep Elián in the U.S.
Mon, 25 Nov 2019 - 320 - The Immigration Crisis Falls On Her Doorstep. 'Where We Come From' Explores What Happens Next.
Few issues dominate our politics today more passionately than immigration, but we rarely see the crisis on the U.S.-Mexico border dramatized in fiction. Now Texas author and border native Oscar Cásares has written what one critic calls a “quietly suspenseful” novel titled “Where We Come From.”
Mon, 18 Nov 2019 - 319 - Lawsuit Confronts Venezuelan Witch-Hunt Campaigns – And Social Media Sites
Two years ago, Levin de Grazia told WLRN he was the victim of a malicious online defamation campaign.
Tue, 12 Nov 2019 - 318 - Venezuelan Venture: Immigrant Women Learn To Be Entrepreneurs In South Florida
Of all the problems immigrants need to solve when they settle in the U.S., Yllis Hernandez faced the kind that so often leads to a business.
Mon, 04 Nov 2019 - 280 - Why Florida's Republican Power Grabs Remind Some Critics Of Venezuela's Socialist Regime
Some political experts say Florida's efforts to usurp local government authority are uncomfortably reminiscent of the late strongman Hugo Chávez's playbook.
Mon, 12 Apr 2021 - 279 - A Brutal Story We Missed? New Film Recalls Obscure Chapter Of Guatemala Genocide
The Guatemalan film "1991," which just premiered in Miami, recalls horrific — but lesser known — racist violence that stalked the country's streets during its civil war.
Mon, 22 Mar 2021 - 278 - There's A New Push To Make Puerto Rico A State. Thanks To The State Of Florida's Pull?
Florida's large and more recently arrived diaspora is a key force driving the new — and potentially successful — Puerto Rican statehood effort in Washington.
Wed, 10 Mar 2021 - 277 - Why Biden Granted Venezuelans TPS — And What It Means For South Florida
On Monday, because of the terrible humanitarian crisis in Venezuela, President Biden granted Venezuelans currently living in the U.S. Temporary Protected Status, or TPS. It means more than 300,000 eligible Venezuelans, most of whom are here in South Florida, can live and work legally in the U.S. for 18 months. After that time, TPS can and likely will be renewed.
Tue, 09 Mar 2021 - 276 - Moïse Refusal to Exit Locks Haiti – And Haiti's Diaspora – In Constitutional Crisis
With Haiti in economic and security collapse, President Jovenel Moïse's increasingly authoritarian rule is a point of bitter debate in the country – and South Florida.
Mon, 01 Mar 2021 - 275 - America's Vaccine Rollout May Be Dysfunctional, But Latin America's Is Disastrous
Due to limited resources, delayed start-ups, chronic shortages — and official scandals — only a fraction of Latin America and the Caribbean has been inoculated.
Mon, 22 Feb 2021 - 274 - Mardi Gras Mix: Documentary Trumpets New Orleans' — And America's — Debt To Haiti
On Mardi Gras, 'Kanaval' host Leyla McCalla talks about the rich cultural connection between New Orleans music — meaning, really, American music — and Haiti.
Tue, 16 Feb 2021 - 273 - Vaccine Race: COVAX Launching Millions Of Doses For Latin America And Caribbean
A leader of the global COVID vaccine procurement mission acknowledges the pandemic disaster in Latin America and the Caribbean is its "greatest priority."
Tue, 09 Feb 2021 - 272 - Venezuela Crisis Not Going Away — But What Can Biden (And Exiles) Do Now?
President Trump built diplomatic leverage on Venezuela, then lost it. President Biden can get it back — but Venezuelan exiles need to adjust expectations.
Mon, 01 Feb 2021 - 271 - Trump's Deportation Suspension Both Gratifies And Galls South Florida Venezuelans
Venezuelan exiles were happy to see President Trump finally grant their community relief from deportation — but many are angry he didn't order it years ago.
Tue, 26 Jan 2021 - 270 - Both Sides In Cuba Debate Agree: Biden's Engagement With The Island Won't Be Obama's
When Joe Biden becomes president this week, Florida politics will compel him to engage both sides of the Cuban-American street before he engages Cuba.
Tue, 19 Jan 2021 - 269 - Cuba's Fledgling Entrepreneurs Are Determined To Survive The Island's Currency Chaos
Cuentapropistas, or private Cuban business owners like Marta Deus are under threat but "getting strategic." They're convinced they're the island's economic future.
Tue, 12 Jan 2021 - 268 - Cuba Starts 'Monetary Ordering.' But Will Cubans See More Economic Chaos?
As Cuba unifies its two currencies, ordinary Cubans brace for skyrocketing prices — with still no structural reform of the island's failed economic system.
Mon, 04 Jan 2021 - 267 - Latin America And The Caribbean 2020: From COVID-19 Devastation To Cuban Artist Defiance
As if the region's coronavirus catastrophe wasn't enough, 2020 heaped human rights crises and historic hurricanes on Latin America and the Caribbean too.
Mon, 28 Dec 2020 - 266 - Cuban Artists Are Captivating The World. But Can They Challenge The Regime?
Artists' sudden, stunning push for free speech and expression in Cuba is resonating with ordinary citizens in ways authorities have rarely seen.
Mon, 07 Dec 2020 - 265 - Venezuela's Holding Elections Sunday — Most Of The World's Dismissing Them
Venezuelan exile journalist Francisco Poleo explains why his country's political opposition — and most of the world — refuse to legitimize this Sunday's vote.
Mon, 30 Nov 2020 - 264 - What Eta and Iota Tell Us About The Hurricane Future In Latin America And The Caribbean
The strongest storms ever to form so late, and so far south, in the Caribbean could force us to revise our expectations about hurricanes in this part of the world.
Mon, 23 Nov 2020 - 263 - 'Black Superhero': Toussaint Louverture Biography An 'Opening' To Historic Haiti Revolt
Sudhir Hazareesingh's "Black Spartacus" illuminates the remarkable Haitian liberator Toussaint Louverture — and the universal importance of the revolution he led.
Mon, 16 Nov 2020 - 262 - To Reclaim Florida, Democrats Must Reimagine Who Florida Latinos Are
Joe Biden's decisive defeat in Florida reflected a big underperformance with Latino voters — whom critics say Democrats still take for granted and misread.
Tue, 10 Nov 2020 - 261 - Trump And Haitians: He Said He'd Be Their Champ. Many Now Feel Like Chumps.
Donald Trump won a surprising number of Haitian-American votes in 2016. But since then he's burned a lot of bridges to Little Haiti. Will it burn him next week?
Tue, 27 Oct 2020 - 260 - Toro Time: Did 'Bidenistas' Take The 'Socialista' Bull By The Horns In Florida?
Biden and his campaign didn't take the GOP's "socialista" attacks seriously enough. On-the-ground Latino activists did. It may help him win Florida.
Mon, 12 Oct 2020
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