
Exploring the Future of Latin America and US Relations
Six scholars from Latin America discuss the challenges and opportunities facing the Americas.
This symposium presents a perspective on United States-Latin America relations from scholars in the region, building on an earlier symposium by a mix of Latin American and American scholars in Civitas Outlook. For much of the last half-century, Latin America has experienced significant reform by adopting the principles of free societies, including democratic constitutionalism, free markets, property rights, and individual liberty. While the United States has brought a renewed focus on Latin America that may halt backsliding toward autocracy and counter the rise of Chinese influence, it has also reversed advances in free trade and more open migration. The authors examine the promises and perils of the Trump administration and the new governments in Latin America, and look forward to a renewed dialogue with U.S.-based scholars at this moment of opportunity.
Rodrigo Barcia Lehmann "The Union of the Americas and the Ideal of Freedom"
Javier Garay "Ulysses Revisited"
Gabriel Gasave and Martin Simonetta "US, China, and Latin American Relations: Challenges and Opportunities"
Wagner Menezes "Brazil and the United States: A Strategic Hemispheric Partnership"
Luis Orozco "Boosting Technological and Research Collaboration among Latin America, the Caribbean, and the United States"
Oscar Sumar "A New Consensus in Latin America"
Oscar Sumar is the Pro Vice-Chancellor for Academic Affairs, Universidad Científica del Sur, Peru. Non-resident fellow of the Public Law and Policy Program, Berkeley Law. Co-Chair of BeLatin. His most recent book, titled Regulatory Countertrend, explores the regulatory state and evaluates economic regulation.
John Yoo is a senior research fellow at the Civitas Institute, and a distinguished visiting professor at the School of Civic Leadership at the University of Texas at Austin. He is also the Emanuel Heller Professor of Law at the University of California at Berkeley where he supervises the Public Law and Policy Program among other programs at Berkeley Law. Concurrently, he is a nonresident senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

On Debt: Two Honest Measures, Two Different Questions
A response to Thomas Savidge's '“Full Faith and Credit” Means a Claim on America.'

Social Mobility Wins
When people live within an environment offering good jobs, good education, social networks, and a culture of self-improvement and hard work, they experience progress in a way that undercuts the philosophical rationale that socialists need to justify the policies they advocate.

Kevin Warsh and the Future of Fed Communication
Warsh is right that the Federal Reserve should not speak so loudly that it hears only its own echo.
Get the Civitas Outlook daily digest, plus new research and events.






.png)