Programs
Transitions
and Reform Processes in a Global Context
The dynamics of economic reforms in Latin America, and the western hemisphere
at large, have changed considerably since the impetus for structural reforms
in the 1980’s, as many countries faced the parallel challenges of democratization
from authoritarian regimes and the restructuring of their national economies.
At present, countries face increasing pressure to liberalize their economies
amidst more turbulent capital markets and more transient financial investments.
As the democratic transition advances towards a secondary stage, reform efforts
continue in the macroeconomic sphere, but have also moved towards issues of
judicial reform, tax and local governance, as well as a struggle to define
the role and purview of the welfare state in developing countries.
Developing
Human and Social Capital
Moving from a substantive investigation of reform processes, the Bildner center
fosters dialogue on specific issues of social equity and poverty reduction.
Recent work on human and social capital focuses on the importance of networks,
informal institutions, and the role of the family in fomenting economic growth
and social opportunity. There are a number of policy issues and factors shaping
social development: labor markets and migration, urban and demographic dynamics,
civil society and the non-profit sector, democratic institution-building,
ideas, religious practice, and social responsibility.
Democratic
Governance and Human Security
Human security is the intersection of economic needs, environmental standards,
access to basic health care, and living in a state that secures basic civil
freedoms
and protection from organized violence. How to build democracies is a subject
of heated debate in policy arenas and academic discourse. The ever-evolving
process of good, accountable governance is central to both establishing democracy
and providing human security. This program area focuses on recent developments
in the study of the factors contributing to the deepening of democracy, as
well as its weakening. There is increasing concern for those states unable
to meet basic needs of their citizens, in short to provide human security.
Transnational
Communities
A number of scholars and civil society activists are devoting attention to
the role of transnational and transcultural communities, those individuals
who live and travel between national boundaries and cultural spheres. The
Bildner Center has developed a number of programs on the dissemination of
ideas, knowledge and cultural processes. This program area examines these
discursive and dynamic exchanges through the agency of individuals and communities
in transition. Transnational community political participation, in new country
and old, is increasingly important. Apart from political organizations and
affiliations, the financial impact of transnational communities is growing.
Remittances to family members across Latin America and the Caribbean have
become a major, and largely undocumented, component of national economies.
There is an increasing demand for scholarly and policy attention to this issue.
Global
Cooperation and Regional Integration
The Bildner Center has long recognized the importance of the increased level
of regional integration through the western hemisphere. Most recent movements
have been in the area of trade agreements and monetary policy. Such accords
reflect increased levels of cooperation and interdependence, which extend
from financial areas to military operations. The United States military has
long been influential, and interventionist, in Latin American and Caribbean
politics. Now Latin American militaries are sharing this interventionist role
through international organizations, as Chile has recently begun humanitarian
missions in Haiti. Non-state actors and non-governmental organizations have
played an increasingly important role in developing normative standards for
the rights of women, indigenous populations and minority groups of the Americas.
The emergence of these organizations is a major development in inter-American
relations.