Browse Items (17 total)
- Tags: Strategies
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)
34. Interview with Robert Rabin B 2004
Tags: Accidents (1990-1992), Activities, Activities (1983), Anthropocene, Anti-Navy activism (Protest against invasion of Granada 1983), Biopolitics, Bombings (For Money), Bombings (Perception that Puerto Rico's government received funds from Navy for bombing Vieques), Cancer, Carlos Zenon, Carmelo Félix Matta (limits of Carmelo's leadership), Colonialism, Community organizations (dissolution of Cruzada and Vieques Fishermen Association), Cultural Center, David Sanes (death), David Sanes (impact), Democratic Party, El Salvador, Evictions (1989), Fall of Berlin Wall, FBI (pressure and persecution), Federal funds (should go to Vieques), Federal funds (to Puerto Rico), Granada, Hegemony, Historical project Santa Cruz, History of Vieques, Howard Dean (visits Vieques), Hurricane Hugo (1989: Community could not organize due to hurricane), Hurricane Hugo (1989), Internal Conflicts, International context (End of Cold War), International context (Program to close military bases), Ismael Guadalupe, John Kerry, Land transfer, Life as teacher in Vieques, Mano Santos/Santos Ríos, Military training (Increased bombing after 1990s), Monte Carmelo (resistance 1989), Navy, Navy business (profiting from bombing Vieques), New challenges, New struggle, Nicaragua, Nilda Medina, Nomos of the earth, Nonviolence, Political repression (1980s), Pollution (Use of Napalm 1992), Protest and proposal, Proyecto Caribeño de Justicia y Paz, Racism, Radar, Red Boricua, Research in Vieques, Robert Rabin, Robert Rabin (arrival at Vieques), Robert Rabin (Distrust in Bob: infiltration allegations), Robert Rabin (July 1980), Screening of El Salvador Vencerá, Solidarity from US Universities, Solidarity Relations with USA, Strategies, Struggle (1980/1990s), Struggle (against US militarization), Struggle (changes), Struggle (crisis 1980s), Struggle (international context), Styles of resistance, sustainability, Sustainable development, US imperialism in Vieques, US solidarity with Vieques, Victor Emeric, Vieques (as human rights issue), Vieques cleaning process, Vieques Cultural Festival (1980s), Vieques development (Carmelo's vision of Vieques vs. Bob and Nilda vision of Vieques)
33. Interview with Robert Rabin A 2004
Tags: Activities, Arrests (May 1 2003), Arrests (May 4 2000), Arrests (strategies), Biopolitics, Camp Justicia y Paz (community camp for Viequenses), Camp Justicia y Paz (storage communication), Camp Monte David, Civil disobedience, Civil disobedience (pacific vs. combative), Civil disobedience camps (supplies and materials), Civil disobedience camps (support to), Comite Pro Rescate y Desarrollo de Vieques, Coordinadora Justicia y Paz, Digitization projects, Hegemony, Internal Conflicts, Martineau Bay Resort, May 1 2003, May 1 2003 (cases), May 1 2003 (legal strategy), May 1 2003 (outcomes), Megaprojects, Navy bombing site (camps by non Viequenses), Need to educate community about development, New challenges, New struggle, Nomos of the earth, Nonviolence, Prison experience, Protest and proposal, Radio Vieques, Resistance, Robert Rabin, Strategies, Struggle (after Navy exit May 1 2003), Struggle (changes), Struggle (unity), Styles of resistance, Sun Bay Resort, Sustainable development plan, Tito Kayak, Todo Puerto Rico con Vieques, Tourism, Unemployment, Vieques Development, Vieques Youth
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
35. Interview with Nilda Medina A 2004
Tags: Arrests, Camp Cayo Yayí, Camp Justicia y Paz, Camp Luisa Guadalupe, Camp Monte David, Camp Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño, Cancer, Carlos Zenon, Civil disobedience (as tourism), Civil disobedience (economic and legal consequences in case of arrest), Civil disobedience (education), Civil disobedience (fear), Civil disobedience (funds to cover legal costs), Civil disobedience (legal aspects), Civil disobedience (long vs short), Civil disobedience (pacific vs. combative), Civil disobedience (training), Civil disobedience camps, Civil disobedience camps (camps in Navy bombing site vs. camps in civilian area), Civil Disobedience camps (communication), Civil disobedience camps (coordination), Civil disobedience camps (fishermen transporting people to camps for a small fee), Civil disobedience camps (medical support), Civil disobedience camps (supplies and materials), Civil disobedience camps (visits from US delegations), Civil disobedience camps (working independently), Comite Pro Rescate y Desarrollo de Vieques, Congreso Nacional Hostosiano, Consensus, Consensus (as challenge), Criticism as obstacle, Cruzada Pro Rescate de Vieques, Cultural Center, David Sanes (death), David Sanes (impact), Ecological damage, Education, Environmental destruction, Environmental education, Federación de Maestros, Health problems (and military practices), Hegemony, Hostosianos Camp, Infiltration, Internal conflicts (among camps), Interrupting Navy training/maneuvers (1999-2003), Ismael Guadalupe, Law enforcement (violence), Life as teacher in Vieques, Media coverage, Media protagonism, Media strategy (documenting abuses), Media strategy (promoting struggle), Media strategy (role in protest), Media strategy (Vieques campaign in USA and the world), Monte Carmelo, Navy bombing site, New challenges, New struggle, Nilda Medina, Nilda Medina (arrival at Vieques 1981), Nomos of the earth, Nonviolence, Patriot Act, Police, Political repression, Protest and proposal, Puerto Rico's solidarity with Vieques, Radar, Reflection, Rehabilitation of El Fortín, Resistance, Sept 11 2001 (attacks), Sept 11 2001 (moratorium on struggle after attacks), Strategies, Strategies (blame and shame), Strategies (diverse), Strategies (internal vs. public strategies), Struggle (changes), Struggle (different views of), Struggle (in 1990s), Struggle (local vs. international level), Struggle (pacific), Struggle (relaxed and open vs. close struggle), Struggle (use of violence), Struggle (welcoming struggle for everyone), Styles of resistance, Tactics (Cutting cyclone fence), Tactics (Throwing stones), Tato Guadalupe, Todo Puerto Rico con Vieques, US solidarity with Vieques, US terrorism, Wilda Rodríguez
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
7. Interview with Ismael Guadalupe 1998
Tags: Angel Rodríguez Cristobal, Anthropocene, Anti-Navy activism, Arrests, Arrests of the 21 (1979), Baltasar Corrada del Río, Bill Clinton, Biopolitics, Births (Giving birth in Vieques vs. Fajardo), Bombings, Cancer, Cancer and Navy, Cancer and pollution, Cancer studies, Carlos Romero Barcelo, Comando del Atlantico, Comando Sur, Comite de Viequenses Unidos, Comite Pro Defensa de Vieques, Comite Pro Rescate y Desarrollo de Vieques, Community organizations, Conflicts with Navy (1950s-1970s), Cruzada Pro Rescate de Vieques, Cuban Revolution, Culebra, Department of Natural Resources, Dialogues (Puerto Rico Government), Environmental destruction, Expropriations (1940s), Expropriations (1964), Expropriations (fight against new Expropriations), Fall of Berlin Wall vs. Vieques divided territory, Family (in social movement), Fiestas Patronales (Defending), Fights with Navy (1950s-1970s), Fishermen struggle (1978-1983), Fishing (Vieques), Foundation of Vieques (LeGuillou 1823), French Families in Vieques, Friend/enemy, Granada Invasion (1983), Health problems (Vieques), Health services (Vieques), Heavy Metals Pollution (Arsenic and nitrites), Hegemony, Higher education (Vieques), Hijos Ausentes de Vieques, History of Vieques (Resistance), Impact of Militarization, Independence of Puerto Rico, Ismael Guadalupe, Junta de Calidad Ambiental, Lack of economic development, Lack of job opportunities (for fighters), Lack of job opportunities (political profiling), Land and sea, Land transfer, Mayor Antonio Rivera Rodríguez, Melba Miranda, Military facilities (in Puerto Rico), Military facilities (lack of economic development), Military facilities (Vieques), Military training (NATO in Vieques), Movimiento Pro Independencia, Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy land (controlling access to the base), Negotiations (Navy-Puerto Rico government), Nomos of the earth, Panama, Pedro Albizu Campos, Pedro Rossello Gonzalez, Pedro Zenon, Plan Dracula, Political performance, Political repression (against demilitarization), Pollution, Privatization (Telefónica), Radar, Recreation in the base for Youth, Resistance, Ron Dellums, Ruben Berrios, Saint Thomas, Santa Cruz, slow violence, Statehood, Strategic use of Vieques in the Caribbean, Strategies, Struggle (against US militarization), Struggle (for demilitarization in USA), Struggle (Leftist organizations need to prioritize Vieques), Styles of resistance, Toxic waste, Tydings Project (1936: independence of Puerto Rico in exchange for Vieques and Culebra), UN and Vieques, Unemployment, Vieques (after Culebra's demilitarization 1975), Vieques (part of Puerto Rican archipelago), Vieques and Congress, Vieques cleaning process, Vieques Development, Vieques development (before Navy), Vieques es el Guanica de 1998, Vieques population control, Vieques Youth, Vieques Youth (Lack of recreation), Vito Marcantonio, War, WWII
3. Interview with Carlos Zenon B 1998
Tags: Acuerdo Histórico (1983), Angel Rodríguez Cristobal, Anti-Navy activism, Arrests of the 21 (1979), Arthur K. Knoizen, Biopolitics, Cancer, Cancer (Vieques), Cancer and Navy, Cancer and pollution, Cancer deaths (Vieques), Carlos Romero Barcelo, Carlos Zenon, Challenges, Civil disobedience, Civil disobedience (1978-1983), Dialogues (Puerto Rico Government), Environmental destruction, Environmental impact study 1980 (no effects of Navy training), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Federal funds (we take the Bombs and Puerto Rico the benefits), French boat in Vieques, Friend/enemy, Health problems (Vieques), Health services (Vieques), Heavy Metals Pollution (Arsenic and nitrites), Higher education (Vieques), Internal Conflicts, Internal conflicts (funds for movie about Vieques), Internal conflicts (Partido Socialista Puertorriqueño-PSP vs. Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño-PIP), Joseph Carroll, Junta de Calidad Ambiental, Land and sea, Manuela Santiago (Corruption allegations), Melba Miranda, Memorandum of understanding (1983), Military training (foreign countries in Vieques), Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy (relation with municipality), Navy (relations with Puerto Rico government), Navy bombing site, Navy Plan A (persuasion and funds) vs. Plan B (political repression), Negotiations (document about agreement to keep Vieques and Roosevelt Roads in exchange of federal funds/statehood), Negotiations (Navy-Puerto Rico government), New York solidarity with Vieques, Nomos of the earth, Political corruption, Political performance, Pollution, Posthegemony, Pro-Navy movement, Puerto Rico and Federal Funds, Puerto Rico es Vieques y Vieques es Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico's politicians, Puerto Rico's solidarity with Vieques, Radar, Resistance, Ron Dellums, Ruben Berrios, Siembra simbólica, slow violence, Staying in Vieques vs Leaving Vieques, Strategies, Struggle (Need of unity), Styles of resistance, Toxic waste, Unemployment, University for Vieques, Vieques (independence of Puerto Rico), Vieques Development, Vieques municipal government, Vieques Youth, War, Zenón's refusal to ask for funds for the struggle
2. Interview with Carlos Zenon A 1998
Tags: Acuerdo Histórico (1983), Amphibious landing, Anti-Navy activism, Antonio Medina, Arrests, Benjamín Enrique Ventura (fisherman), Biopolitics, Births (Giving birth in Vieques vs. Fajardo), Bombings, Carlos Romero Barcelo, Carlos Zenon, Carlos Zenón (political trajectory), Carlos Zenón (relationship with his mother), Change of command in Vieques protest, Civil disobedience (1978-1983), Conflicts (with Navy: 1950s), El Nuevo Día (newspaper), Environmental destruction, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Evictions (1940s), Explosions (Civilian casualties), Explosives, Expropriations (1940s), Fights (1960s), Fights with Navy (1950s), Fishermen protest (Feb. 6 1978), Fishermen struggle (1978-1983), Fishing, Food Stamps (Cupones de alimento), Friend/enemy, Gazir Sued, Housing, Impact of Militarization, Internal Conflicts, Interrupting Navy training/maneuvers (1978-1983), José López (police), Killing of Mapepe (1954), Land and sea, Land Speculation, Land transfer, Leaving Vieques, Lino Lanzó (fisherman), Lula Tirado, Media coverage (press in Vieques), Media strategy, Melba Miranda, Memorandum of understanding (1983), Migration (to Santa Cruz), Military training (impact in fishing and sea life), Military training (NATO in Vieques), Navy, Navy (Abuses: 1960s), Navy (Abuses), Navy (blocked Vieques development), Navy bombing site, New struggle, Nomos of the earth, Playa Caracas protest, Political repression, Posthegemony, Preparation for prison, Prison experience, Protest, Puerto Rico government vs Navy (case about environmental destruction), Question of Violence, Radames Tirado, Radar, Ralph Hedges, Rape, Red zones, Resistance, Resistance (1960s), Return of Viequenses, Robert Flanagan, Roosevelt Roads, slow violence, Solidarity with Vieques, Strategies, Struggle (by sea), Styles of resistance, Torres Gonzalez, Use of Slings and stones (ondas y piedras), Use of violence, Vieques (especies en peligro de extinción), Vieques and Puerto Rico, Vieques as Concentration Camp, Vieques Development, Vieques Fishermen Association, Vieques population, Vieques youth (role in struggle), Wilda Rodríguez
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