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IDB America June 2005 Alexandra Russell-Bitting |
Filmmaker Explores the Japan-Brazil Connection Brazilian filmmaker Tizuka Yamasaki, a granddaughter of Japanese immigrants to Brazil, recently gave a talk on the interconnections between her two cultures as evidenced in her two films, Gaijin - A Brazilian Odyssey and Gaijin 2. |
IDB America June 2005 Shirley Emerick |
New Waves of Tourism Hit the Beach A program in northeastern Brazil stimulates private investment and creates jobs in a region that was once ignored. |
BusinessWeek June 20, 2005 Jonathan Wheatley |
Lula Is Under The Gun -- Again The Brazilian President's party is accused of payoffs, which could derail economic reforms |
Finance & Development June 1, 2005 dos Santos |
Brazil's Remarkable Journey Latin America's largest economy is finally reaping the benefits of reforms. |
IDB America April 2005 Roger Hamilton |
Pathways to survival The tiny world of a little Brazilian monkey gets bigger---and just in time. |
IDB America April 2005 Roger Hamilton |
Winning Hearts and Minds Conservationists and small farmers in Brazil had to get to know each other before they could work together to help save the fate of a little indigenous monkey. |
IDB America April 2005 Roger Hamilton |
`Mico' Mystique Why some of Brazil's big landowners are helping to protect a tiny primate. |
IDB America April 2005 Roger Hamilton |
Monkeys vs. People? Brazil's Golden Lion Tamarin Association shows that conservation can be a win-win proposition where both nature and people benefit. |
IDB America April 2005 Roger Hamilton |
The Message of a Little Monkey In Rio de Janeiro and across the globe, natural ecosystems are being altered and simplified to serve burgeoning human demands. If the golden lion tamarin escapes extinction, the world will be a little more habitable for the rest of us. |
BusinessWeek May 2, 2005 Jonathan Wheatley |
Why Condi's Meeting With Lula Matters Both Brazil and the U.S. share an interest in promoting stability and democracy in Latin America. Above all, the Bush Administration hopes it can persuade Lula to help rein in what it sees as the region's most dangerous leader -- Venezuela's authoritarian President, Hugo Chavez. |
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