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Issue #225 May 1 2019 Volume 46-3

  This issue of LAP represents a step toward a better understanding of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in a Latin American context. The articles cover a range of historical and current topics and show that Arab and Jewish histories are an integral part of Latin American history, that Latin America has been an important actor in the conflict over Palestine, and that the issue is being played out today in ever-changing circumstances.  Historical topics address how specific Latin American countries dealt with the creation of Israel and the Six-Day War while other articles consider more recent topics including the role and treatment of the Palestinian diaspora and Israeli marketing of urban security expertise.     TABLE OF CONTENTS | PURCHASE THIS ISSUE

Issue #225 Mar 1 2019 Volume 46-2

  This issue continues the examination of the economic, social, and political impacts of expanded extractivism in Latin America and the perpetuation of the region’s role as a raw materials supplier for foreign markets that was started in the September 2018 issue (LAP 45 [5]).  With a broad geographic scope and consideration of a wide range of extractive industries from mining and hydrocarbons to soy, it combines critical theoretical insights with rich empirical research into the changing national and transnational structural relationships among governments, resource extracting and financial corporations, and the affected populations. Several articles critically assess the limitations of the extractivist policies of progressive governments. Others analyze the role of China and the actual experience of South-South cooperation.  Environmental justice issues and grass roots resistance are also considered  with attention to the roles of women, indigenous and Afro-descendent communities.     TABLE OF CONTENTS | PURCHASE THIS ISSUE

ROMA

ROMA (film dossier) 2018 drama film written and directed by Alfonso Cuarón By: Erynn Masi de Casanova (full story - click here) World-famous director Alfonso Cuarón’s film Roma, which recently won the Golden Globe for Best Picture and is nominated in 10 Academy Award categories, shines a light on a figure who is often invisible: the domestic worker. Called empleada, muchacha, chica, and worse, these workers, ubiquitous in Latin American cities , labor in conditions of exploitation that are not seen in other occupations. According to the International Labor Organization (ILO), nearly 30% of domestic workers in the world are explicitly excluded from national labor laws. Even when they do have rights guaranteed by law, these are not usually enforced. Latin America is home to 27% of the world’s domestic workers, and in recent years, several Latin American films have addressed the situation of domestic workers in the households where they work. Yet none has received the degree of attention and acclaim that Roma has. As film critics, audiences, and domestic worker advocates weigh in on Roma in the run-up to the Oscars later this month, the voices of the experts who conduct research on domestic work in the region have been [...]

Issue #224 Jan 1 2019 Volume 46-1

  This issue sheds light on positive and negatives sides of progressive or “Pink Tide” governments which it places in political and economic contexts, specifically destabilizing efforts by a “disloyal opposition” and disinvestment by the private sector.     TABLE OF CONTENTS | PURCHASE THIS ISSUE

Issue #222 Sept 1 2018 Volume 45-5

Ever since the elusive search for El Dorado began in the 16th century, the history of Latin America has been a tale of resource extraction. This issue focuses on the interconnections and impacts of global resource-based economies on topics as wide-ranging as local people and their environments, national policies and international financial capital. Rather than finding neat and tidy conclusions, it suggests that nuanced social, political economic analyses better enable us to understand and analyze how contemporary extractivism is reshaping Latin America.   TABLE OF CONTENTS | PURCHASE THIS ISSUE

Issue #221 July 1 2018 Volume 45-4

The Cold War  shaped and deeply impacted Latin American Studies after World War II. This special issue includes incisive essays on the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Netherlands, Soviet Union, and China. Initially LAS evolved alongside  U.S. foreign policy and a series of coups to contain progressive movements and support conservative authoritarianism, beginning in Guatemala (1954), but progressive movements emerged after the Cuban Revolution (1959). A younger  generation of radical intellectuals and Latin American exiles helped to transform   the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) from its conservative beginning into an active organization of academics focused on  issues within Latin America. TABLE OF CONTENTS | PURCHASE THIS ISSUE

Issue #220 May 1 2018 Volume 45-3

More than a half century after the publication of Rodolfo Stavenhagen’s landmark essay “7 Erroneous Thesis about Latin America”, its critique of dominant development thinking remains sharp, as was shown at a colloquium hosted by El Colegio de México 50 years to the day after the publication of  the original text. TABLE OF CONTENTS | PURCHASE THIS ISSUE

Issue #219 Mar. 1 2018 Volume 45-2

More than a half century after the publication of Rodolfo Stavenhagen’s landmark essay “7 Erroneous Thesis about Latin America”, its critique of dominant development thinking remains sharp, as was shown at a colloquium hosted by El Colegio de México 50 years to the day after the publication of  the original text. TABLE OF CONTENTS | PURCHASE THIS ISSUE