Browse Items (8 total)
- Tags: Fish and Wildlife (restrictions)
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
16. Interview with Carlos Taso Zenón B 2004
Tags: Angel Rodríguez Cristobal, Arrests (Evasion), Arrests (May 1 2000), Arrests (strategies), Arrests of the 21 (1979), Biopolitics, Boxing, Camp Monte Carmelo, Camp Monte David, Carlos Zenon, Civil disobedience, Civil disobedience (strategy against Fish and Wildlife), Comparing struggle (Navy vs. Fish and Wildlife), Conflicts (with Fish and Wildlife), Conflicts (with Navy), Dámaso Serrano, Department of Natural Resources, Family (emotions), Family (separations), Fish and Wildlife (law enforcement), Fish and Wildlife (police/guns), Fish and Wildlife (restrictions), Fish and Wildlife (surveillance), Fishing (business in Puerto Rico), Friend/enemy, Friend/enemy (Navy is the enemy not us), Gentrification, Human suffering, Hurricane Hugo (1989), Internal Conflicts, Isabelita Rosado, Ismael Guadalupe, Land rescues, Land Speculation, Land speculation (people displaced), Land transfer, Leaving Vieques, Migration, Navy exit, New challenges, New land invasion, New struggle, Nomos of the earth, Pollution (sea), Posthegemony, Prison experience, Real Estate Agents (internet agencies), Reconciliation, Resistance, Return of Viequenses, Sharing Vieques with all PR, Skepticism, Strategies, Struggle (by sea), Struggle (changes), Struggle (sacrifices), Struggle (unity-working together), Styles of resistance, Sustainable development, Theater, Toñin Medina, University for Vieques, Vieques Development
28. Interview with Jorge Colón A 2004
Tags: Access to Land and Beaches (Navy vs. Fish and Wildlife), Anthropocene, Biopolitics, Conflicts (with Fish and Wildlife), Fish and Wildlife, Fish and Wildlife (restrictions), Housing, Jorge Colón, Jorge Colón (business trajectory in Vieques), Land transfer, Pollution, Port Authority, Sustainable development, Tourism, Vieques (agriculture), Vieques (fishing), Vieques (local businesses), Vieques Development
54. Interview with Oscar Díaz B 2004
Tags: Agriculture, Anthropocene, Autoridad de Terrenos, Biology, Biopolitics, CERCLA, Cleaning process and land use, Community engagement (Technical Review Committee), Community outreach (Casa Abierta Open house event), Community outreach (Need of trust in the institutional mechanisms), Conflicts (Fish and Wildlife vs community), Conservation of polluted areas, Contamination (Not all Vieques is contaminated), Cotorras project, Culebra, Department of Natural Resources, Distrust (in federal agencies), El Yunque Forest, endangered species, English use, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Fish and Wildlife, Fish and Wildlife (as new conquerors), Fish and Wildlife (case against guard), Fish and Wildlife (in local context), Fish and Wildlife (law enforcement), Fish and Wildlife (police/guns), Fish and Wildlife (restrictions), Fish and Wildlife (surveillance), Junta de Calidad Ambiental, Land rescues, Land transfer, Land transfer (Fish and Wildlife to Viequenses), Maritime transportation, Navy and community, Navy and environment, Navy and Fish and Wildlife (differences), Nomos of the earth, Oscar Diaz, Oscar Díaz (professional trajectory), Oscar Díaz (view of public services), Pollution, Professional ethics, Refuge (in military area), Restoration Advisory Board (RAB), Sciences, Security and surveillance, Superfund, Technical Review Committee (TRC), Times of maritime transportation and times of Fish and Wildlife operation, Vieques as prison, Vieques cleaning process, Vieques cleaning process (Community participation), Vieques cleaning process (Navy conflict of interest), Vieques community, Vieques future, Vieques municipal government, Vieques Youth
55. Interview with Zenón Family A 2004
Tags: Aleida Encarnación, Arrests (May 4 2000), Cacimar Zenon, Camp Mapepe, Camp Monte David, Carlos Ventura, Carlos Zenon, Civil disobedience, Civil disobedience (Dámaso Serrano), Class divisions, Cooperation with FBI, Dámaso Serrano, David Sanes (death), Federal control, Fish and Wildlife, Fish and Wildlife (law enforcement), Fish and Wildlife (police/guns), Fish and Wildlife (restrictions), Fish and Wildlife (surveillance), Internal Conflicts, Jose Perez, Lack of consensus, May 1 2003, Media protagonism, Navy exit, Negotiations (with Fish and Wildlife), New challenges, New struggle, Nomos of the earth, Pedro Zenon, Political opportunism, Political prisoners, Posthegemony, Puerto Rico government, Resistance, Ruben Berrios, Sept 11 2001 (break of moratorium), Skepticism, Struggle (changes), Styles of resistance, Tito Kayak, Vieques Youth, Yabureibo Zenón
56. Interview with Zenon Family B 2004
Tags: Activities, Aleida Encarnación, Arrests (May 1 2000), Arrests (strategies), Biopolitics, Cacimar Zenon, Camp Monte David, Carlos Zenon, Civil disobedience, Crab fishing traps, Donations, Family, Fish and Wildlife, Fish and Wildlife (law enforcement), Fish and Wildlife (police/guns), Fish and Wildlife (restrictions), Fish and Wildlife (surveillance), Health issues (camps), Internal Conflicts, José Che Paralitichi, Land and sea, Land transfer, Media protagonism, Navy, Negotiations (with Fish and Wildlife), New challenges, New struggle, Nomos of the earth, Participation (Women), Pedro Zenon, Pollution, Posthegemony, Radar, Resistance, Ruben Berrios, Self-sufficiency, Sept 11 2001 (Moratorium), Skepticism, Strategies, Struggle (by sea), Struggle (changes), Styles of resistance, Tito Kayak, Vieques Development, Vieques Youth
60. Interview with Charlie Connelly B 2004
Tags: Anthropocene, Biopolitics, Cancer, Cancer and Navy, Charlie Connelly, Conservation of polluted areas, Dangers, Environmental destruction, Expropriations, Fish and Wildlife, Fish and Wildlife (biology vs. police), Fish and Wildlife (law enforcement), Fish and Wildlife (needs Navy permit), Fish and Wildlife (police/guns), Fish and Wildlife (restrictions), Fish and Wildlife (surveillance), Hawaii, Health and Pollution, Health problems (causes), Heavy Metals Pollution, Hotel owners, Industrial vs. Navy pollution, Land use, Lawsuit (against the Navy), Media coverage (local press), Myrna Pagán, Navy (Reports), Navy exit, Navy Land (managed by Fish and Wildlife), New challenges, No health treatment (pollution), Nomos of the earth, Oscar Diaz, Paternalism (San Juan-Vieques), Planning (in Vieques vs. San Juan), Pollution, Pollution denial, Pollution studies, Risk of agriculture (pollution), Risks of fishing (pollution), slow violence, Stacey Notine, Sustainable development, Tourism, Toxic waste, USS Killen, Vieques as new Provincetown Key West (monstrous tourism), Vieques cleaning process, Vieques Development
71. Interview with Ernesto Peña B 2004
Tags: Anthropocene, Biopolitics, Bombings (Testing), Bridge Ceiba-Vieques, Bridge Ceiba-Vieques (Advantages), Bridge Ceiba-Vieques (Consequences: Crime), Bridge Ceiba-Vieques (Consequences: Traffic), Bridge Ceiba-Vieques (Construction: Current Plans), Bridge Ceiba-Vieques (Costs), Bridge Ceiba-Vieques (Referendum), Bridge Vieques-Culebra, Dámaso Serrano, Ernesto Peña, Fish and Wildlife, Fish and Wildlife (Fines to Viequenses), Fish and Wildlife (law enforcement), Fish and Wildlife (police/guns), Fish and Wildlife (Restricted Beach Access), Fish and Wildlife (restrictions), Fish and Wildlife (surveillance), Kenneth McClintock, Maritime transportation, Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy (Internet page), Navy (never fined), Navy and Fish and Wildlife, Navy business (profiting from bombing Vieques), Navy exit, Nomos of the earth, Oscar Diaz, Pollution, Puerto Rico government, Rompeolas, short route, Sila María Calderón, Sustainable development, Sustainable development plan, Tourism, Tourism (Cruises), Vieques as One Stop Shop, Vieques Development, Vieques future, Vieques ideal for war games, Vieques with Navy vs. Vieques with Fish and Wildlife, Weapons sales