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With a focus on Honduras, James J. Phillips explores the deeper
causes of the massive emigration of Central Americans to the United
States. Going beyond the frequently given reasons for migration,
Phillips provides a detailed account of how the frenzied extraction
of natural resources has created massive community displacement,
dependency, poverty, and vulnerability, while encouraging
corruption, violence, gang recruitment, drug trafficking,
militarization of Honduran society, and systematic repression of
popular protest and resistance. Highlighting how this situation is
tied to the colonial (or imperial) extractive relationship of
Honduras to the United States, Phillips contends that the usual
policy of development aid and investment to stem migration will
only worsen the conditions that create migration. With this book,
Phillips depicts how the Central American immigration "crisis"
shapes life in the United States and Honduras, while making clear
that the effects are not what populist politics imagine.
Honduras in Dangerous Times: Resistance and Resilience explores how
the people of Honduras use cultural resources to resist and to
change the conditions of their society, to critique those
conditions, and to create the pieces of a better future in the
midst of a dangerous present. The book explores ideas and practices
which support systems of dominance and submission in Honduras and
the ways in which people have slowly developed a broad culture of
resistance and resilience. This culture includes struggling for
land and environmental preservation against extractive industries,
promoting natural local food and sustainable technology to replace
foreign agribusiness, bringing a corrupt legal and political system
to account by invoking concepts of human rights and laws routinely
ignored, bending institutional religion to issues of social
justice, and expressing protest and visions of a better society
through popular culture. The book highlights the special
contribution of the country's indigenous peoples in resistance; it
also discusses the powerful role of the United States in shaping
Honduran economic, political, and military life, and what
people-to-people solidarity with Hondurans means for citizens of
the United States. The book concludes by presenting Honduran
popular resistance in a context of late neoliberalism in Honduras
and in relation to other Latin American social movements. Honduras
in Dangerous Times shows that Hondurans resist in the face of
violence and oppression not only because they are resilient, but
also that they are resilient because they resist. Resistance keeps
hope alive and change possible.
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