Browse Items (3 total)
- Tags: Distrust
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
26. Interview with Radames Tirado B 2004
Tags: Agriculture, Anthropocene, Baltasar Corrada del Río, Biopolitics, Clean Water Act, Dialogues (Vieques-Puerto Rico Government), Distrust, Environmental destruction, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Experience as Mayor (Challenges), Fish and Wildlife, funding assignation, Hegemony, Internal Conflicts, Irreparable damage, Land Speculation, Navy (Abuses), Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy bombing site, Navy fears, Negotiations (Vieques-Puerto Rico Government), New challenges, Nomos of the earth, Police in Vieques, Pollution, Radames Tirado, Radamés Tirado (land negotiations with Navy), Ron Dellums, Saint Thomas, Strategies, Struggle (changes), Struggle (commitment), Sustainable development, Tourism, Vieques (agriculture), Vieques (fishing), Vieques Development, Vieques development plan, Vieques future, Vieques municipal government
75. Interview with Stacey Notine A 2004
Tags: Anthropocene, Barrio Pilón (community), Biopolitics, Carlos Zenon, Civil Rights movement in US, Differences Puerto Ricans and Americans, Difficult conversations with Viequenses, Distrust, Drugs, El Yunque, English use, Family businesses, Family values, Fear (of military violence), Fishermen struggle, Fishing, Friend/enemy, Friendship and sharing, Gender, Impact of Militarization, Ismael Guadalupe, Lack of dialogue, Land and generational attitudes, Land Speculation, Law enforcement, Leaving Vieques, Machismo, Military personnel in Camp García (70s-80s), Military recruited criminal offenders, Military services, Money, Motherhood, National identity vs. citizen of the planet, Nature, Navy (Abuses), Navy exit, Navy workers, Political repression, Silence, Stacey Notine, Stacey Notine (arrival at Vieques in the 70s), Stacey Notine (Conversations with people), Stacey Notine (feeling part of the community), Stacey Notine (mother), Stacey Notine (People making claims to her about US abuses in Vieques), Stacey Notine (personal challenges), Stacey Notine (relationship with Viequenses), Stacey Notine (son), Stacey Notine (Viequenses perceptions of Stacey as American), Struggle (1970s/1980s), Struggle (gender), Tensions with community, Tourism, US South, Vieques (local businesses), Vieques climate, Vieques Development, Vieques Youth, Wealth, Well-being, Women (only three American blonde women in Vieques in the 70s)