Browse Items (2 total)
- Tags: Lawsuit (against the Navy)
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
74. Interview with Carmen Valencia and Luis González B 2004
Tags: Agriculture, Anthropocene, Anti-Navy activism (Caravan before referendum), Biopolitics, Bridge Ceiba-Vieques, Carmen Valencia, Conservation of polluted areas, Contaminated bodies, David Sanes (death), David Sanes (other non identified casualties), Death by pollution, Democracy, Discrimination against Viequenses, Education, English use, Environmental destruction, Failure of factories in Vieques, Ferry service, Fish and Wildlife, Food scarcity, Heavy Metals Pollution, High level jobs, Hotels, Job opportunities, Lack of economic development, Lack of transparency, Lawsuit (against the Navy), Luis González (arrival at Vieques), Luis González (role in Labor Department), Luis González (Wichin), Maritime transportation, Migration, Military training, Military training (monitoring effect of training in humans), Navy (Abuses), Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy (Discrimination against Latino workers), Navy (relations with Puerto Rico government), Navy aid for businesses (seeking support), Navy bombing site (risks for Latino workers cleaning area), Navy exit, Navy exit (impact on jobs), Navy opposition to short route, Navy workers, Navy's Health studies, Navy's Vieques Development Office, Navy's Vieques development office (Failure), Nomos of the earth, Nothing to be preserved, Pollution, Pork food, Preferential treatment, Pro-Navy movement, Racism, Rations (El hoyo), Rations (Navy Leftovers), Referendum, Rompeolas, San Juan vs. Vieques, short route, slow violence, Sugar Cane Plantations, Support to small businesses, Sustainable development, Tourism, Toxic waste, underdevelopment, Unemployment, US solidarity with Vieques, US Wars, Vieques (Improvement after navy exit), Vieques as prison, Vieques cleaning process, Vieques Development, Vieques development (before Navy), Vieques invisible as war theater, Vieques population control, Vieques workforce, Vieques Youth, War