Browse Items (5 total)
- Tags: Puerto Rico government
1. Interview with Carlos Ventura 1998
Tags: Anthropocene, Biopolitics, Births (Giving birth in Vieques vs. Fajardo), Bombings (Danger), Bombings (Fishing), Bombings (Impact on fishing and sea life), Bombings (Impact), Cancer, Cancer and Navy, Cancer and pollution, Carlos Ventura, Carmelo Felix Matta, Civil disobedience, Conflicts (with Navy), Democracy, Education, Environmental destruction, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Explosives, Expropriations, Fishing restrictions (civilian areas), Government, Housing, Impact of Militarization, Junta de Calidad Ambiental, Land and sea, Land rescues, Land Return, Land Speculation, Land transfer, Maritime transportation, Monte Carmelo, Municipality vs. People of Vieques, NATO, Navy, Navy (Abuses), Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy bombing site, Navy land, Nomos of the earth, Police, Politics, Pollution, Protest, Puerto Rico government, Radar, Resistance, slow violence, Struggle (by sea), Tourism, Toxic waste, Unemployment, Vieques cleaning process, Vieques Development, Vieques workforce, Villa Borinquen
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
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
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
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