
and Catherine T.MacArthur Foundation, Radcliffe Institute, American Council of LearnedSocieties, Social Science Research Council, Rockefeller Foundation,Institute for World Order, Ford Foundation, and the Tinker Foundation.She has served as President of the Latin American Studies Associationand of the New England Council on Latin America. She is most recentlythe author of Back from the Future: Cuba Under Castro, Struggles for Social Justice in Latin America (co-editor), as well as Spanish-language books, including El Estado y la Pobreza Urbana en Mexico.She has held grants and fellowships from the John D. Eisenhower, President of the United States of America, and expressed his pleasure at having had the opportunity to meet and converse with him personally during the Meeting of American Chiefs of State that has just been. Susan Eckstein,professor of sociology and international relations, is a specialist onurbanization, immigration, poverty, rights and injustices, and socialmovements in the context of Third World Countries. Major General Fulgencio Batista y Zaldivar, President of the Republic of Cuba, presented his compliments to General Dwight D. In2007, he received the Boston University Honorary Scarlet Key award, andcurrently works with the Dean of Students, where he’s worked for the past 30 years. She also looks at how the UnitedStates initially supported the revolution, until Castro announced hisallegiance to Communism.ĭaryl DeLuca, assistant dean of students, received his bachelor’sdegree in administration from Bentley College, and his master’s inhigher education administration from the University of Pittsburgh.

One is, ‘How did I first becomeinvolved in Cuba?’ Second, ‘What is it like being in Cuba?’ And third,and most important for many people, ‘How can I go?’”Įckstein takes the historical and policy context of the CubanRevolution, of Fidel Castro’s overthrow of Batista’s dictatorship, andweaves it into the current time frame. In 2003 and2004, he led groups of BU students on an eight-day Alternative Spring Break trip to the country, providing medical supplies and clothing. He has been pursuing his interests inhumanitarian, educational, and religious work in Cuba. First, it’s explored through the camera lens andhumanitarian work of Daryl DeLuca, assistant dean of students then Susan Eckstein,CAS professor of sociology and international relations, discusses wherethe tempestuous U.S.-Cuban relationship might be headed in the Obamaadministration.ĭeLuca gives a presentation showing photographs from his 16 trips toCuba over the past 10 years. Ninety miles from the United States, Cubahas at times preoccupied every American president since Eisenhower.“The Cuban Revolution at 50” is discussed from two differentperspectives. Pawley le lanza un caramelo: que puede irse a su casa de Daytona Beach.

Trata de convencerlo para que abandone el poder. Click here to watch Daryl DeLuca and Susan Eckstein on BUniverse. Cronica De Un Fracaso Imperial.la Politica De Eisenhower Contra Cuba.y El Derrocamiento De La Dictadura De Batista. El acaudalado empresario norteamericano William Pawley -allegado al presidente Dwight Eisenhower sostiene una entrevista de tres horas con Batista.
