... havoc with the peace process and governance, little to none of the news surrounding Brazil's most powerful company- which has maintained close relations with the Pentagon... ... Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay and St. Lucia may break off relations with Venezuela due to its authoritarian government, disrespect for democratic values, and... ... apologists for historically corrupt mainstream parties are alienating prospective voters in Latin America.This is happening at the very moment that their right to popular sovereignty...
... global markets.
[2]
Translatinas
have emerged in the oil and gas, mining, telecommunications, food processing and aerospace industries, as well as in metallurgy and in civil aviation. According to 2014 UNECLAC (United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean) data, 16 of the 50 largest
translatinas
are Mexican; 14 are Brazilian; 11 are Chilean; 6 are Colombian; 2 are Argentinean; and 1 is Venezuelan.
[3]
Data on sales volumes and areas of specialization economic sector of the five largest
translatinas
are given in the table below.
Table 1. The Largest
Translatinas
, 2014.
Name
Country
Sector
Sales volume, millions of dollars
Petrobras
...
...
Is there interest on behalf of Latin American countries to strengthen bilateral ties with Russia?
Russia’s main clients in Latin America are the biggest economies of the region: Brazil, Mexico, and Argentina. The bilateral relations are much more important than regional cooperation as it is. It’s interesting that we cannot consider ideological realities here. From this perspective, Venezuela should have been the main partner, but it’s far from that.
The expectations for cooperation are much greater than ...