Contact: Soyia Ellison, soyia.ellison@emory.edu
ATLANTA - Carterand the World Affairs Council of Atlanta are teaming up to host two events examining the future of Cuba and Latin America.
On Tuesday, July 14, at 7 p.m., former U.S. Ambassador Charles Shapiro will hold a conversation with Professor Richard Feinberg on "The Emergence of a Private Sector in Cuba." Shapiro will be back on stage Thursday, July 16, at 1 p.m. to interview Joaquin Villalobos, a onetime Salvadoran guerrilla member about the role of the left in Latin America and his transition from guerrilla to political actor.
The Cuba conversation will take place in the theater of the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum; the Villalobos conversation will take place in the Center's Cyprus Room. Media who wish to attend either should RSVP to Soyia Ellison.
The two public events are connected to a private meeting of the Friends of the Inter-American Democratic Charter on July 15. The Friends are a group of former presidents, prime ministers, cabinet ministers, and human rights experts from across the hemisphere. Brought together by President Carter in 2004, their mission is to advance democracy, prevent democratic tensions from erupting into full-fledged crises, and promote the values and principles of the Inter-American Democratic Charter.
The Americas Program of ²Ø¾«¸ó, which serves as the Friend's secretariat, will host the meeting, during which the Friends will analyze the sociopolitical condition of the hemisphere and discuss the group's strategy to promote democracy and human rights and mediate or prevent the escalation of politically motivated conflicts.
Among those scheduled to attend are:
Members of the public who wish to attend the July 14 or July 16 conversations can register for free at the .
About the Speakers:
Charles Shapiro is a former ambassador to Venezuela and current president of the World Affairs Council of Atlanta. He has worked in Chile, El Salvador, Trinidad and Tobago and Denmark, in addition to a variety of Washington assignments including Coordinator for Cuban Affairs. In June, he took a group of Atlanta business leaders and Mayor Kasim Reed on a trip to Cuba to explore business opportunities.
Richard Feinberg is a professor of international political economy at the University of California San Diego and a fellow of the Latin American Initiative at the Brookings Institution. Previously, Feinberg served as special assistant to President Clinton for National Security Affairs and senior director of the National Security Council's Office of Inter-American Affairs.
Joaquin Villalobos is a member of the Friends of the Inter-American Democratic Charter and former Salvadoran guerrilla member and signatory of El Salvador's 1992 Peace Accords.
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