Book Reviews

To Wisdom Through Failure

October 14, 2008

To Wisdom Through Failure: A Journey of Compassion, Resistance, and Hope By Larry Rosebaugh, OMI Reviewed by Art Kubick In the “author’s note” that begins this book, Larry Rosebaugh asks us to discern how we will live our future in this post-9/11 world by posing four questions about our past: “Where have I been?...
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Truth, Torture and the American Way

October 14, 2008

Truth, Torture and the American Way By Jennifer Harbury, Beacon PRess Book Review, by Philip E. Wheaton The title of this book says it all: truth, torture and the American Way… that is, it reveals the truth about torture by connecting the dots between specific cases of torture in Latin America (Chapters Two and...
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Posted in Book Reviews, Guantanamo & Torture, Torture & Human Dignity | Comments Off

Guatemala: Through a Glass Darkly

October 10, 2008

THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY: The U.S. Holocaust in Central America, by Thomas R. Melville, (Philadelphia, PA: Xlibris Corporation, 2005), 651 pages, $28.99 Reviewed by ARTHUR J. KUBICK Rivier College, Nashua, NH   In Daniel Berrigan’s recounting of the trial of the Catonsville Nine, the nine defendants explain why they had gone to the selective...
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RSS News from Latin America & the Caribbean

  • RIGHTS-CUBA: Dissident Group Reports Uptick in Arrests September 8, 2011
    The Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation criticised the situation in this Caribbean island nation in a report released three days after government media warned that a new smear campaign was being organised against the country. […]
  • MEXICO: Traditional Maize Can Cope with Climate Change September 8, 2011
    Maize, Mexico's staple food as well as a symbol, has the potential to adapt to climate change and mitigate its effects without any need for genetically modified seeds, according to agricultural scientists. […]
  • ARGENTINA: Against the Current in Nuclear Energy September 8, 2011
    While the tendency in the industrialised world in the wake of the Mar. 11 nuclear meltdown in Japan is to abandon plans for further nuclear energy development, in Argentina the capacity of existing plants is being strengthened, and new reactors are being built. […]
  • US-LATAM: Human Trafficking Scourge Needs More Than Policing September 7, 2011
    South American experts and officials met in Washington this week to discuss current policy initiatives to combat human trafficking in their respective countries, part of a broader U.S.-wide tour to share information and strategies to deal with the issue. […]
  • Nicaragua's Antidote to Violent Crime September 7, 2011
    The so-called "Northern Triangle" of Central America, plagued by poverty, violence and the legacy of civil war, is considered one of the most violent areas in the world. But neighbouring Nicaragua has largely escaped the spiralling violence, and many wonder how it has managed to do so. […]
  • Q&A: Mighty Maya Cities Succumbed to Environmental Crisis September 7, 2011
    The latest archeological findings in the Mirador Basin of Guatemala lend further credence to the theory that the Maya civilisation that once flourished there was brought down by environmental causes such as deforestation. […]
  • OP-ED-RIGHTS: "We Just Want to Know Where They Are" September 7, 2011
    The last time Supaya Serrano saw her sisters Erlinda and Ernestina, they were just three and seven years old, respectively. […]
  • ARGENTINA: Purging the Legal System of Dictatorship Accomplices September 6, 2011
    As human rights cases from Argentina's 1976-1983 military dictatorship move ahead in the courts, cases of judges and prosecutors who were accomplices in the crimes are coming to light. […]
  • BOLIVIA: Rainforest Road Will Have Environmental and Cultural Impacts September 6, 2011
    A richly biodiverse rainforest the size of 3,000 soccer fields in central Bolivia will be the first victim of the road planned to run through the Isiboro Sécure Indigenous Territory and National Park (TIPNIS), say environmental activists. […]
  • CUBA: Catholic Church Takes the Pulse of Religious Sentiment September 6, 2011
    The Catholic Church seems to be expecting a rise in religious sentiment among the Cuban population as a result of the climate of dialogue and more relaxed relations with the government seen since the 1998 visit of Pope John Paul II. […]