Browse Items (13 total)
- Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses
166. Student Interview with Judith Conde 2021
Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses, Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses (origins), Alianza Juvenil, American Cancer Society, Amy Pollmann, Anti-Navy activism, Aurora Pérez, Births (in Vieques after 2002), Body image, Bombings, Cancer, Cancer among women, Challenging the patriarchy, Civil disobedience (women), Colectivo Ilé (confronting racism), Community organizations, Contamination, Culebra, David Sanes (death), David Sanes (impact), Domestic violence in Vieques, Education in Vieques, Feminism, Gender, Gender discrimination, Gender inequality, Gender roles, Generational attitudes, Generations of Activism, Gladys Rivera, Health, Health disparities, Health problems (Vieques), Health services (limited), Health services (Vieques), Healthcare (in Vieques after Hurricane María), Hurricane Irma, Hurricane María, Isla nena (meaning), Juan Carlos Rodríguez (life as professor/researcher), Judith Conde, LGBTQIA, Loss of facilities (after Hurricane María), Machismo, Motherhood, Need of education, New generations, Participation (Women), Patriarchy, Protest, Puerto Rico (lack of awareness / understanding), Racism, Reproductive education, Resistance, Ser madre o ser activista, Services to communities, Single mothers, Struggle (gender roles), Struggle (Women perspective), Teen pregnancy, Trauma, Vagina monologues in Vieques, Viequense women (Challenges), Vieques hospital, Vieques hospital (birth services), Vieques youth (role in struggle), Women (contributions to struggle), Women in Struggle, Women with Cancer, Workshops, Zaida Torres
73. Interview with Carmen Valencia A 2004
Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses, Biopolitics, Births (Giving birth in Vieques vs. Fajardo), Cancer, Cancer among women, Carmen Valencia, Carmen Valencia (childhood), Carmen Valencia (education journey as single mother), Carmen Valencia (family structure after Navy's arrival in Vieques), Carmen Valencia (father life story), Carmen Valencia (migration journey), Carmen Valencia (relation with Guadalupe family), Community organizations, Construction jobs, Dancing in Vieques, Education in Vieques, Family (laundry work for Navy), Family (separations), Fear, Fiestas Patronales, Fish and Wildlife, Food scarcity, Friend/enemy, Gender, Gladys Rivera, Health services (Vieques), Health studies, Healthcare (Vieques), Impact of Militarization, Internal Conflicts, Job opportunities during Navy times, Judith Conde, Lack of economic development, Media coverage, Mental health, Migration, Music and Culture in Vieques, Myriam Sobá, Navy (1950s), Navy (Abuses: Against Women), Navy (Abuses: US Pastor confession of), Navy (Abuses), Navy (arrival in 1940s), Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy exit (reaction), Norma Burgos, Pedro Rosselló González (Meeting with Governor), Pollution, Pork food, Pro-Navy movement, Prostitution, Rations (El hoyo), Rations (Navy Leftovers), Relations with Navy, Remolcadores, Resisting sexual harassment, Rompeolas, Sexual abuse, slow violence, Staying at home, Steel band music, Testimony for Vieques Commission, Tourism, underdevelopment, Unemployment, University for Vieques, Vieques Development, Vieques future, Vieques population control, Vieques was never silent, Vieques Youth
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
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)
36. Interview with Nilda Medina B 2004
Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses, Arrests (May 1 2003), Brambilla, Community organizations (life cycle), Community organizations (Peoples assembly), Community organizations (Working together vs separate), Distrust, Environment, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Family (emotions), Family (separations), FBI investigation, Fishermen struggle (1978-1983), Foreigners (role in Vieques), Gender inequality, Health, Hector Olivieri, Human suffering, Infiltration, Internal Conflicts, Internal conflicts (Respecting differences), Internal dialogue (to overcome divisions), Ismael Guadalupe, Land transfer, Leadership styles, Machismo, Media coverage, Myrna Pagán, Navy exit (meaning), New challenges, New struggle, Nilda Medina, Nonviolence, Participatory development, Protest and proposal, Reconciliation, Robert Rabin, Strategies, Struggle (after Navy exit May 1 2003), Struggle (by land), Struggle (by sea), Struggle (changes), Struggle (gender roles), Struggle (sacrifices), Struggle (small vs. large), Styles of resistance, Sustainable development, Unity, Unity (Working together), US solidarity with Vieques, Vieques cleaning process, Vieques Development, Vieques future, Vieques Youth, Women (in Comite Pro Rescate y Desarrollo de Vieques), Women in Struggle, Women liberation
21. Interview Carlos Taso Zenon and Miguel Angel Reyes D 2004
Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses, Arrests (of politicians for the cameras), Arrests (strategies), Bombings, Camp Justicia y Paz, Camp Monte Carmelo, Camp Monte David (boycotting Monte David), Carlos Zenon, Civil disobedience, Class divisions (inside the movement), Commodifying dissent, Comparing struggle (against Navy 1978-83 vs. 1999), Comparing struggle (Navy vs. Fish and Wildlife), Conflicts (with Fish and Wildlife) (collaboration with), Dámaso Serrano, Friend/enemy, Hegemony, Internal Conflicts, Interrupting Navy training/maneuvers (by sea), Land and sea, Media protagonism, Miguel Angel Reyes, Monte David (recent visit), Navy funds to Vieques ($40 million), New challenges, New struggle, Nomos of the earth, Political repression, Posthegemony, Protest and proposal, Resistance, Robert Rabin, Second Referendum (never celebrated), Sila María Calderón, Strategies, Struggle (changes), Struggle (economic profit), Struggle (no longer Fishermen struggle), Struggle (people took advantage), Struggle (political opportunism), Struggle (sea vs. land), Struggle (use of funds), Styles of resistance, Todo Puerto Rico con Vieques
77. Interview with Stacey Notine C 2004
Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses, Anthropocene, Biopolitics, Bridge Ceiba-Vieques, Bridge Ceiba-Vieques (Negative effects), Carlos Romero Barcelo, CERCLA, Colonialism, Comite Pro Rescate y Desarrollo de Vieques, Community engagement, Community organizations, Community organizations (Taking care of the place vs. taking care of slogans), Comparing Navy in Mass and in Vieques, Conservation of polluted areas, Contamination, Defining problems, Department of Defense, Department of Health, Depleted uranium, Dialogues (Environmental Protection Agency and Navy), Dialogues (Military), Dick Cheney energy program, Dishonesty, Documents, Edwin Hernández, Environmental costs, Environmental destruction, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Environmental Protection Agency vs. Navy, Environmental Quality Board (EQB)/Junta de Calidad Ambiental, Environmental studies (Permits to collect samples), Environmental studies (Wrong methods of study), EQB, Explosive ordinance disposal, Explosives (No inventory), Explosives (No tech to identify explosives), Failure of investigations, Fish and Wildlife, George W. Bush, Health, Health and environmental problems, Health Costs, Homeland security, Human life vs politics, Improved Science-Based Environmental Stakeholder Processes, Internal Conflicts, Jorge Colón, Juan Cruz Pérez, Junta de Calidad Ambiental, Lack of dialogue, Land transfer, Lawsuit, Mariana Islands Trench, Massachusetts case, Media strategy (Talking to the Press about TRC), Military toxics, Navy (disrespect), Navy (manipulation of studies), Navy (pays for studies), Navy funds to Vieques ($40 million), New challenges, No continuity, Office of Management and Budget, Pedro Rossello Gonzalez, Pollution, Puerto Rican scientists, Puerto Rican Trench, Puerto Rico government, RCRA, Rights of Puerto Rico as jurisdiction, Roosevelt Roads, Rubén Reyes, Safe Drinking Water Act, Sampling, Sila María Calderón, Stacey Notine, Technical Review Committee (Inefficiency), Technical Review Committee (meetings), Technical Review Committee (TRC), Toxic waste, US poor environmental record in Puerto Rico, Use of information for legal action, Use of Puerto Rico by the US in the future, Useless information, Victimization, Viequenses sacrificed as Guinea pigs to an ideology, Vieques cleaning process, Vieques Youth
105. Interview with Zaidy Hospital 4 2018
Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses, American Cancer Society, Biopolitics, Casa Alianza, Civil disobedience, Fear, Fish and Wildlife, Incubator, Mammography, Navy employees (story of Miguel), Navy employees (Zaidy's husband), Navy manipulations (employees), Nomos of the earth, Relevo por la vida, Struggle (after Navy exit May 1 2003), Struggle (Lack of partiicpation), Vieques hospital (health services), Zaida Torres
15. Interview with Carlos Taso Zenon A 2004
Tags: Alianza de Mujeres Viequenses, Arrests (Evasion), Arrests (May 1 2000), Arrests (strategies), Biopolitics, Bombings, Brambilla, Cacimar Zenon, Camp Cayo Yayí, Camp Justicia y Paz, Camp Monte David, Camp Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño, Carlos Ventura, Carlos Zenon, Casa del Frances, Civil disobedience, Civil disobedience (interrupting Navy training/maneuvers), Civil disobedience camps (transportations), Comparing struggle (Navy vs. Fish and Wildlife), Conflicts (Vieques vs. San Juan), Conflicts (with educated people), Conflicts (with Fish and Wildlife), Dámaso Serrano, David Sanes (death), Expropriations, Fish and Wildlife (law enforcement), Fish and Wildlife (police/guns), Fish and Wildlife (restrictions), Fish and Wildlife (surveillance), Friend/enemy, Internal Conflicts, José Che Paralitichi, Land and sea, Media protagonism, Money (aspects of sabotage), Navy (loss), Navy exit, Navy land (restricted area), Negotiations (with Fish and Wildlife), New challenges, New Fishermen Association, New struggle, Nomos of the earth, Posthegemony, Resistance, Robert Rabin, Rubén Berrios (boycotts Camp Monte David), Sharing leadership, Strategies (local knowledge), Struggle (changes), Struggle (sea vs. land), Styles of resistance, Sustainable development, Tito Kayak, Unity with honesty, Vieques Fishermen Association (land property), War