T
RANSNATIONAL LAW & CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMSA Journal of The University of Iowa College of Law
SYMPOSIUM:
WHITHER GOES CUBA?PROSPECTS FOR ECONOMIC & SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT PART I OF IIGuest Editor: Enrique R. Carrasco
, THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA COLLEGE OF LAWI
NTRODUCTION TO THE SYMPOSIUMCuba’s Development and Trade with U.S. Midwestern States:Opening Observations
Enrique R. Carrasco 1O
PENING SPEAKERU.S.-Cuban Trade: How We Got to this Point and Prospects for the Future
Wayne S. Smith 13C
UBA TODAYAgricultural Production Cooperatives: The Future of Cuban Agriculture?
Frederick S. Royce 19Environmental Justice in Cuba: Capital Needs, Developing a Tourist
Infrastructure, and Liberty of Access to National Resources
Colin Crawford 55U.S. Financial Flows in the Cuban Economy
Paolo Spadoni 81Tourism, Gender, and Globalization:Tourism in Cuba During Special Period
Elisa Facio, Maura Toro-Morn, & Anne R. Roschelle 119C
UBA & DEMOCRATIZATION: SHOULD SANCTIONS BE LIFTED?Cuba is no Longer a “State Sponsor of Terrorism”: Why the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act Sanction Failed
Keith Sealing 143Who Could End the Embargo? A Game-Theoretical Perspective
Josep M. Colomer 163Helms Burton: The Dilemma of Hard Wiring Policy
Pedro A. Freyre 187L
IVING HISTORY INTERVIEWThe Ethical Globalization Initiative
Mary Robinson 193D
OROTHY SCHRAMM WINNERThe Permissibility of Incitement to Religious Hatred Offenses Under European Convention Principles
Susannah C. Vance 201S
TUDENT NOTESEnvironmental Justice and Indigenous Peoples in the United States: An InternationalHuman Rights Analysis
Kristen Marttila Gast 253Defeating an Invisible Enemy: The Western Superpowers’ Efforts to Combat Terrorism by Fighting Illegal Immigration
Chadwick M. Graham 281Brazilian Auto Industry and the Role of Government Intervention and International Agreements in its Progress Through the 1990s
Beth Knight 311Volume 14 Spring 2004 Number 1