Browse Items (193 total)
- Collection: 1998 - Present
41. Interview with Gregorio Feliciano 2004
42. Interview with Tato Guadalupe and Gregorio Feliciano 2004
Tags: Bars (1950s), Children (1940s), Conflicts (with Navy: 1950s), English use, Expropriations, Fights with Navy (1950s), Food (1950s), Games, Gregorio Feliciano, Hunger and poverty, Impact of Militarization, Korean War, Marriages, Prostitution, Rations (1950s), Recycling (1950s), Remolcadores, Solidarity (Viequenses and Koreans), Tato Guadalupe, Viequense soldiers, Vieques (1950s), Waste disposal (1950s)
43. Interview with Zaida Torres A 2004
Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses, Biopolitics, Business/Services incubators, Cancer, Civil disobedience, Comite Pro Rescate y Desarrollo de Vieques, Community organizations (Boycott to organizations), Community organizations (concerns about lack of participation), Community organizations (international visibility vs. community work), Consensus, Cooperatives, Dámaso Serrano, Dialogues (Fish and Wildlife), Education, Estudios Técnicos, Gender, Gentrification, Health services (Vieques), Hegemony, Hospital, Internal Conflicts, Land Rescues (vs. people rescue), Land Speculation, Land transfer, Law 153, Leadership, Megaprojects, Microbusinesses, Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy exit, New challenges, New struggle, Participatory development, Patriarchy, Peace culture, Single mothers, Strategies, Struggle (after Navy exit May 1 2003), Struggle (as dialogue), Struggle (changes), Struggle (unity), Styles of resistance, Sustainable development, Sustainable economy, Teen pregnancy, Tourism, Trip to Washington, Unemployment, Viequense women (Challenges), Vieques (local businesses), Vieques as model of development, Vieques Development, Vieques future, Vieques Master Plan, Vieques talents, Vieques Youth, Villa Borinquen, Women in Struggle (role), Zaida Torres, Zaidy Torres (family), Zaidy Torres (life experience)
45. Interview with Kathy Gannett 2004
Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses, American Residents (Denial of Vieques problems), Americans in Vieques, Discrimination (of Puerto Rican buyers in Puerto Rico), English use (vs. Spanish use), Gentrification, House sales in Esperanza, Housing problems, Kathy Gannett, Kathy Gannett (arrival in Vieques), Kathy Gannett (experience as organizer), Kathy Gannett (experience with the Vieques Struggle), Kathy Gannett (relationship with Viequenses), Media coverage (Vieques news reporting in USA), Navy exit, Participation, Real estate agents, Real Estate Market, Real Estate speculation, Sustainable development, Tourism, Tourists, Tourists (Denial of Vieques problems), Vieques Development, Vieques future, Vieques social problems ignored by tourists, Vieques Youth
46. Interview with Norma Torres A 2004
Tags: Adolfina Villanueva, Arrests (May 4 2000), Barrio Puerto Real, Biopolitics, Cancer, Cancer and poetry, Carlos Romero Barcelo, Civil disobedience, David Sanes (death), Expropriations, Impact of Militarization, Josefina Pantojas, La Voz de Vieques, Manuel Otero, New poems, Nomos of the earth, Norma Torres, Norma Torres (Born in Luquillo), Norma Torres (childhood), Norma Torres (first book of poetry), Norma Torres (growing up in Vieques), Norma Torres (life after Navy arrival), Norma Torres (life in Fajardo), Norma Torres (Losing Fear), Norma Torres (poetry), Norma Torres (reads her poem "Arbol de mis recuerdos" returning to her old house), Norma Torres (reads her poem "Cuánta riqueza"), Norma Torres (reads her poem "Desalojo" about the Arrests of May 4 2000), Norma Torres (reads her poem "Eres Vieques"), Norma Torres (reads her poem "La incursión" about her own participation in an act of civil disobedience), Norma Torres (reads her poem "La verja silente" about the Navy's fence), Norma Torres (relation to the struggle), Norma Torres (writing during the 1970s), Norma Torres (writing experience), Resistance, Robert Rabin, Sandra Reyes
47. Interview with Norma Torres B 2004
Tags: Biopolitics, Cancer, Norma Torres, Norma Torres (passion for rivers), Norma Torres (reads her poem "A Naida Cruz en memoria"), Norma Torres (reads her poem "Aunque no te puedo ver" about Jesus), Norma Torres (reads her poem "Cancer-bero" about her experience with chemotherapy), Norma Torres (reads her poem "Créeme Señor"), Norma Torres (reads her poem "Mi nueva realidad" written after being diagnosed with cancer)
48. Interview with Antonio Corsino and Nandy Camacho A 2004
Tags: Alliances, Antonio Corsino, Camp Luisa Guadalupe, Camp Monte Carmelo, Civil disobedience, Civil disobedience (pacific vs. combative), Civil disobedience camps, Conflicts (with Police), Internal Conflicts, Nandy Camacho, Navy (Repression), Police repression, Police Surveillance, Posthegemony, Resistance, Sept 11 2001, Sept 11 2001 (break of moratorium), Styles of resistance, Tactics, Use of violence, Zenón family
49. Interview with Antonio Corsino and Nandy Camacho B 2004
Tags: Anonymous heroes, Antonio Corsino, Arrests (May 1 2003), Arrests (May 4 2000), Arrests (strategies), Biopolitics, Camp Luisa Guadalupe, Cancer, Civil disobedience, Civil disobedience camps, Collaboration, Conflicts (with Police), David Sanes (death), Donations, Economic development before Navy, Fights with Navy (1960s), Fish and Wildlife, Fish and Wildlife (abuses), Health issues, Internal Conflicts, Job opportunities (1960s), Lack of economic development (1960s), Land transfer, Luisa Guadalupe, Nandy Camacho, Navy (Abuses: 1960s), Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy exit, Navy jobs, Need of unity, Negotiations, Pollution, Posthegemony, Prison, Pro-Navy movement, Prostitution (1960s), Resistance, Resistance (1960s), Ruben Berrios, Ruben Blades, Styles of resistance, Tito Kayak, Viequenses guards