Cuba: The Contours of ChangeSusan Kaufman Purcell, David Jochanan Rothkopf Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2000 - 157 pages The contributors to this collection offer a range of views on the growing political and economic challenges facing the Castro regime, how these challenges will be met, and Cuba's prospects for a peaceful transition to democracy. |
Table des matières
Whither the Cuban Economy? | 13 |
After the Deluge? Cubas Potential as a Market Economy | 31 |
Continuity Instead of Change | 57 |
Why the Cuban Embargo Makes Sense in | 81 |
A Call for a PostCold War Cuba Policy | 105 |
Cubas Dilemma and Ours | 127 |
Chronology of the U S Embargo Against Cuba | 133 |
Study Group Sessions and Participants | 139 |
The Contributors | 147 |
About the Book 157 | |
Expressions et termes fréquents
agricultural allowed Andrew Zimbalist bargo capital Caribbean Castro government Castro regime CEPAL Cold Cold War communist costs Council on Foreign countries crisis Cuba's Cuban American Cuban Democracy Act Cuban economy Cuban embargo Cuban government Cuban workers dollars Eastern Europe economic reforms eign Elián González enterprises exports Fidel Castro firms Florida forces foreign companies foreign investment Foreign Relations FTZs groups growth hard currency hard-currency hard-line Havana Helms-Burton bill human-rights important increase industry invest in Cuba investors island Jaime Suchlicki labor Latin America ment military million nomic official organizations party percent pesos policy of engagement policy toward Cuba political population post-Cold President Clinton pressure private sector production promote Raúl Raúl Castro recent remittances revolution Rothkopf sanctions significant social socialist Soviet Union Susan Kaufman Purcell threat tion tourism U.S. citizens U.S. embargo U.S. interests U.S. national U.S. policy U.S.-Cuban relations United vote Washington