Join Alliance for Global Justice for a 75-minute comparison of economic policies and public health systems in Honduras and Nicaragua, as both countries confront the challenges of global capitalism. How do these nations manage to resist a foreign-controlled extractive economic model – or aggressive attempts to force them “open for business”? How have they confronted the Covid pandemic, with what results?
Speakers:
Jennifer Atlee coordinates the Friendship Office of the Americas, which fosters solidarity among the peoples of Nicaragua, Honduras, and the United States. Its Honduras Accompaniment Project works alongside the Honduran nonviolent social movement. She lived in Central America for several decades and wrote a book, Red Thread; A Spiritual Journal of Accompaniment, Trauma and Healing, chronicling her experiences in the contra war zones of Nicaragua.
Dr. James J. Phillips is the author of Honduras in Dangerous Times: Resistance and Resilience (2015) and the recently published Extracting Honduras: Resource Exploitation, Displacement, and Forced Migration, a book that details the frenzied US extraction of Honduran natural resources – leading to massive community displacement, dependency, and poverty – in turn encouraging corruption, violence, gang recruitment, drug trafficking, and systematic repression of popular protest and resistance. He has also written about Nicaragua where he lived for several years during the contra war and has visited many times since.
John Perry has lived and worked in Masaya, Nicaragua, for the past 19 years. He has been writing about Honduras since the 2009 coup and currently focuses on the contradictions in US policy toward Central America, especially Nicaragua. He has been published in a number of journals including The Nation, London Review of Books, Counterpunch, Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA), and Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR). His webinar presentation will compare public health investments and responses to Covid by Honduras and Nicaragua, and the resulting health outcomes.
This event is part of a monthly webinar series on Nicaragua. Contact madeline@afgj.org for more information.