Browse Items (42 total)
- Tags: Navy exit
65. Interview with Ruben Reyes Hidroponicos 2004
Tags: Agriculture, Agriculture (hydroponic), Agriculture (use of GMOs), Animal studies, Anthropocene, Biopolitics, Cattle, Education, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Environmental studies, Food security, Health studies, Heavy Metals Pollution, Housing, Job opportunities, Junta de Calidad Ambiental, Land Speculation, Land transfer, Land use, Lettuce, Media coverage (Vieques in the Media), Navy exit, Navy Land (No prospects for future agriculture), Perception of Vieques as toxic waste: effects on economic development, Pineapple, Pollution, Puerto Rico government (investment), Rubén Reyes, Scientific studies, Social problems, Sustainable development, Tourism, Toxic waste, Unemployment, Viequenses vs. other farmers, Vieques (agriculture), Vieques Development, Vieques future, Water resources
154. Interview Camp Garcia Sanes OP 2019
Tags: Anthropocene, Biopolitics, Bombings, Cerro Matías, Conservation of polluted areas, David Sanes (20th anniversary of his death), David Sanes (death), David Sanes (impact), Endangered species law, Environmental destruction, Fish and Wildlife, Fish and Wildlife (1980s), Fish and Wildlife (origins of the agency), Fish and Wildlife (presence in Vieques), Land transfer (Navy to Fish and Wildlife), Mirta Sanes, Navy, Navy (environmental record), Navy exit, Oscar Diaz
153. Event for David Sanes Ismael Guadalupe 2019
Tags: Anthropocene, Archive, Biopolitics, Elections (Puerto Rico 2020), Environmental destruction, Filiberto (documentary screening), Friend/enemy, Ismael Guadalupe, Jorge Fernandez Porto, Judith Conde, Land and sea, Land Speculation, Media coverage, Memory, Museum of Peace, Navy exit, New leadership, New struggle, Nomos of the earth, Political repression, Resistance, Struggle (achievements), Sustainable development, Time, Tourism, Vieques (after Navy exit), Vieques cleaning process, Vieques Development, Vieques future, Vieques Youth, War
86. Interview with Zenón I (Lino Lanzo Self Reflex) 2018
Tags: Aleida Encarnación, Bahía de Cochinos, Carlos Zenon, Centroamérica, Civil disobedience (1978-1983), Civil disobedience (Feb 6 1978), Civil disobedience (interrupting Navy training/maneuvers), Corruption allegations, Cuba, Donald Trump, Estudios Técnicos, Fish and Wildlife, Hurricane Hugo (1989), Hydroponics project, José Santana, Land rescues (1989), Land rescues (Fish and Wildlife), Land transfer (Fish and Wildlife to Viequenses), Lino Lanzó (fisherman), May 1 2003, Navy (threat of returning to Vieques to begin new trainings), Navy exit, Navy funds to Vieques ($40 million), New Civil disobedience (strategy against Fish and Wildlife), New struggle, Nomos of the earth, Plan de Desarrollo Sustentable de Vieques, Posthegemony, Puerto Rico government funds ($65 millions), Renacer Viequense, Resistance, Rubén Reyes, Sila María Calderón, Struggle (against Fish and Wildlife), Struggle (by sea), Struggle (unfinished), Sustainable development, Venezuela, Vieques (after Hurricane Maria), Vieques (electric service), Vieques (relationship with Puerto Rico), Vieques Development, Vieques development (after Navy exit), Vieques development (potential), Vieques Youth, Wilda Rodríguez
81. Interview with Zenón D (at Home 1) 2018
Tags: Aleida Encarnación, Bahía de Cochinos, Carlos Zenon, Centroamérica, Cuba, Donald Trump, Fish and Wildlife, Hurricane Hugo (1989), Land and sea, Land rescues (1989), Land transfer (Fish and Wildlife to Viequenses), May 1 2003, Navy (threat of returning to Vieques to begin new trainings), Navy exit, Nomos of the earth, Resistance, Struggle (unfinished), Venezuela, Vieques Youth, War, Wilda Rodríguez
87. Interview with Zenón J (Photo Lino Lanzo) 2018
Tags: Aleida Encarnación, Carlos Zenon, Civil disobedience (1978-1983), Civil disobedience (Feb 6 1978), Civil disobedience (interrupting Navy training/maneuvers), Fish and Wildlife, Lino Lanzó (fisherman), May 1 2003, Navy exit, Nomos of the earth, Posthegemony, Resistance, Struggle (by sea), Struggle (unfinished)
53. Interview with Oscar Díaz A 2004
Tags: Anthropocene, Biopolitics, Community outreach (Casa Abierta Open house event), Community outreach (environmental education), Community outreach (Fish and Wildlife outreach efforts), Community outreach (people's participation in refuge), Conservation and Protection, Conservation Plan, Fires, Fish and Wildlife, Fish and Wildlife (legal aspects), Fishing, Hurricanes, Land transfer (Navy to Fish and Wildlife), National Environmental Protection Act, Natural Resources, Navy exit, Nomos of the earth, Oscar Diaz, Refuge (educational opportunities), Refuge (operation), Refuge (recreational opportunities), Refuge (uses), Refugio de Vida Silvestre de Vieques
76. Interview with Stacey Notine B 2004
Tags: American Residents (Denial of Vieques problems), Americans (contradictory view of Vieques: conservation vs. denial of political and economic problems), Americans (defensive attitudes), Americans (denial of Vieques situation), Americans (Wealthy American's perception of Vieques), Angel Rodríguez Cristóbal (reaction to death), Anthropocene, Bill Clinton, Biopolitics, Bob Marley, Bombings (Conservation), Camacho family, Casa del Frances, CIA Infiltration, Clean Water Act, Comite Pro Rescate y Desarrollo de Vieques, Community organizations, Community perception of the struggle, Contamination, Denial of oppression, Dialogues, Dialogues (Government), Difficult dialogue Vieques-US, Education, El Gallo Beach, Elizabeth Langhorne, endangered species, English use, Environment, Environmental destruction, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Family vs. community struggle, Fear (of military violence), Federal Government, Generational attitudes, Gentrification, Great Depression, Hazardous components, Impact of Militarization, Infiltration, Internal Conflicts, Ismael Guadalupe, John Kerry, Laws, Legal aspects of Struggle, Martineau Bay housing development, Meaning of lucha/struggle, Meaningful dialogue, Military documents, Military lack of respect for Vieques, Military's munitions rule, Navy (Abuses), Navy exit, Navy never left, Navy's intentions to keep whole island to themselves, Navy's lack of dialogue with Vieques, Need of dialogue, Need of education, Need of politics or need of jobs, Need of training, Nilda Medina, Paul Caron, Pedro Rossello Gonzalez, Perception of Americans, Personal agendas, Political agendas, Political repression, Political violence against Struggle, Pollution, Protest vs. Alternatives, Puerto Mosquito Sport complex, Puerto Ricans as poor people, Puerto Ricans as resourceful people, Puerto Rico government, Questioning the military, Resistance, Robert Rabin, Scientific community, Sila María Calderón, Sixties, Solidarity, Spanish Language, Stacey Notine, Stacey Notine (Feeling part of the struggle), Stacey Notine (Viequenses perceptions of Stacey as American), Strategies, Struggle (1970s/1980s), Struggle (after Navy exit May 1 2003), Struggle (changes), Struggle (Fear of Violence), Struggle (Politics vs. everyday), sustainability, Technical advisor, Technical Review Committee (frustrations with), Technical Review Committee (Inefficiency: Not Functioning Well), Technical Review Committee (lack of community groups), Technical Review Committee (Lack of support from lawyers and scientist), Technical Review Committee (methods), Technical Review Committee (Personnel vs. Political engagement), Technical Review Committee (TRC), Technical Review Committee and Scientific/Legal Knowledge, Tourism, Tourists (Denial of Vieques problems), Toxic waste, University for Vieques, Vieques cleaning process, Vieques Cleaning Process (Responsible agencies), Vieques Cleaning Process (Who Pays For It), Vieques conservation, Vieques Conservation and Historical Trust, Vieques Development, Vieques in US-PR relationship (Achilles heel), Vieques municipal government