<?xml version="1.0" encoding="Windows-1252" ?>
<?xml-stylesheet title="XSL_formatting" type="text/xsl" href="/sitedesign/oneworld/rss.xslt"?>
<!DOCTYPE rss PUBLIC "-//Netscape Communications//DTD RSS 0.91//EN" "http://my.netscape.com/publish/formats/rss-0.91.dtd">

<rss version="0.91">
<channel>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/article/archive/4912</link>
<language>es_CR</language>
<title>UnMundo América Latina - OneWorld Latin America/Español/UnMundo América Latina /Actualidad/Economía - Economia - Economy/Fair Trade (English)</title>
<description>
</description>
<item>
<title>Guatemala: Two Months of CAFTA</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/75551</link>
<description>Guatemala's Congress did recognize that CAFTA would have negative social effects, but did not specify how. The promise to legislate compensatory measures was an empty gesture to get the measure passed. To date, no studies have been carried out or legislation passed, but Congress continues to comply with Washington's demands.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Agri-food Industry’s Deadly Cycle Feeds Immigration</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/75409</link>
<description>Just weeks before the elections, Congress is unable to agree on legislation regarding the nation's 12 million undocumented immigrants. Legislators are at loggerheads over such disparate proposals as conditional legalization, guest-worker programs and massive deportations.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Uruguay Stuck Between Mercosur and Free Trade Agreement</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/74897</link>
<description>Despite the difficulties of the U.S. Congress to pass Free Trade Agreements (FTA) due to the November congressional elections, the Bush administration remains firm in its strategy to push them in Latin America.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Spreading transgenic seeds</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/74410</link>
<description>Latin American authorities’ failure to label genetically-modified products does not only violate consumers’ rights, but also their freedom to choose.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>U.S. Trade Sanctions Seek to Pressure Latin America</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/74143</link>
<description>The U.S. government's announcement that it will review the possibility of limiting, suspending, or withdrawing trade preferences under the General System of Preferences (GSP) to three Latin American countries—Argentina, Brazil, and Venezuela—is political pressure...</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>WTO: Reactions to the collapse of the Round</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/73801</link>
<description>According to various reports, the 14-hour meeting on Sunday 23 July amongst the G6 -- US, EU, Japan, Brazil, India, Australia -- ministers ended in the early hours of the Monday morning. Ministers did not even get around to discussing NAMA.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Back to the Scene of the Crime: The WTO after Hong Kong</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/73221</link>
<description>This particular criminal organization has already escaped justice for more than a decade. Truth was an early victim and hope is missing, presumed dead. So where does that leave us? We're all witnesses to these crimes.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Why is the Doha Round Failing?</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/72903</link>
<description>In the past few weeks global trade talks have been dealt a series of stunning blows. President Bush appointed his chief trade negotiator, Rob Portman, Budget Director. The move was widely viewed as a shift in the administration’s priorities to focus on internal matters rather than the conclusion of the Doha Round.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Are the WTO talks in trouble? Don't bet on it</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/67629</link>
<description>What is the actual &quot;state of play&quot; in Geneva?  Civil society groups that regard the coming WTO Ministerial in Hong Kong as condemned to producing a deal that can only be detrimental to the interests of developing countries were cheered by the failure of the recent World Trade Organization (WTO) General Council meeting in late July to arrive at substantive agreements in any of the critical areas of negotiations: agriculture, non-agricultural products, and services.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Democracy Sold Out - CAFTA</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/67284</link>
<description>At 12:03 am on July 28th, the House of Representatives approved the Central America-Dominican Republic-United States Free Trade Agreement, CAFTA. CAFTA, which would expand NAFTA to Central America and the Dominican Republic, would devastate farmers, privatize essential public services, and accelerate the race to the bottom on wages in the US and all over Central America.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>CAFTA: Oxfam Urges House To Reject Trade Agreement</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/67117</link>
<description>International agency Oxfam called on US Members of Congress today to reject the Free Trade Agreement between the United States and Central American countries and the Dominican Republic (DR-CAFTA.) Oxfam believes that the agreement, in its current form, will do more harm than good and will endanger the livelihood of many thousands of small farmers who already live in poverty.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Mexico-USA: Stories from the Borderlands</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/66946</link>
<description>The world of the border turns labor law on its head-old, established legal rights are just so much ink on paper, and even the decision of federal judges to enforce the law are simply ignored. NAFTA's labor and environmental &quot;side-agreements&quot; have provided no help to either labor or the environment.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>CAFTA: Losing Proposition for the Hemisphere</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/66773</link>
<description>More than a year after signing, President Bush finally sent the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) to the U.S. Congress for vote. On June 30, the Senate approved the agreement by a 54-45 vote.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title> Road show of Central American presidents can't prevent growing opposition to DR-CAFTA</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/65980</link>
<description>The Dominican Republic - Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) is a threat to poor people in developing countries, said international agency Oxfam today, as the presidents of five Central American countries and the Dominican Republic are meeting with President Bush. The six presidents have just completed an unprecedented road show to convince US citizens and their lawmakers to support the Free Trade Agreement between their countries and the US, but opposition to the agreement is mount</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Free Trade and Water Privatization: The Wet Side of the FTAA</title>
<link>http://amlat.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/61651</link>
<description>Control over water is one of the main incentives of the proposal for the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). The United States and transnational corporations want to use the neoliberal integration of the hemisphere to privatize water resources. They also want to use it to alter the course of water flows with megaprojects that environmentalists deem demented.</description>
</item>
</channel></rss>