Great Deals on Used Textbooks & New Textbooks!               
My Account | Help Desk | Market Place Shopping Cart
Free shipping. Click here for details.
No items in cart.
Total: $0.00
Textbooks Sell Textbooks Books Supplies Medical Books College Apparel Movies Clearance
Search  Advanced >>
Cover Art for Bearing Witness, Building Bridges: Interviews With North Americans Living and Working in Nicaragua
Other versions by this Author

Bearing Witness, Building Bridges: Interviews With North Americans Living and Working in Nicaragua


Author(s): Everett, Melissa
ISBN10:  0865710651
ISBN13:  9780865710658
Format:  Paperback
Pub. Date:  10/1/1985
Publisher(s): Consortium Book Sales & Dist

Buy in Bulk
Send to a friend
New Price  $7.76
List Price $9.95
eVIP Price  $7.38
New Copy:  Usually Ships in 5-7 Business Days
add remove
Marketplace Price $0.01
List Price $9.95 Available in the eCampus Marketplace
Take 90 Days to Pay on $250 or more
with Quick, Easy, Secure
Subject to credit approval.
SummaryEditorial Reviews
Shares the experiences of seventeen Americans, including educators, teachers, and agricultural experts, living and working in Nicaragua
The raging controversy over U.S. policy in Nicaragua is complicated by a dearth of firsthand information. Here we have the testimony of 17 long-term American residents who have given up comfortable lives in the United States in order to help the campesinos. Though not entirely happy with the Sandinistas, these engineers, teachers, and religious workers all decry as unconscionable the U.S. support of the Contras, whose main objective they see as the destabilization of the country through terrorism. There is also information for those wishing to do more to help or even visit. A remarkable book about a remarkable group of people, highly recommended for general collections. Louise Leonard, Univ. of Florida Lib., Gainesville Copyright 1986 Cahners Business Information.

Here 17 people from the United States discuss their experiences living and workingmost as teachers or engineersin Nicaragua under the Sandinistas. Many are either former or current ministers, priests, nuns; others were previously involved in the civil rights and antiVietnam War movements. Together they portray a society very different from the totalitarian one regularly criticized by the Reagan administration. The Americans' focus is on the meager hopes and fears of the campesinos, the beneficiaries of the revolution. They talk of Nicaraguans who can grumble in public for the first time, who don't fear the police, who are proud of their independence, and who wish our government would leave them in peace so that their country can develop. This book makes a significant contribution to the debate about Central American policy. January Copyright 1985 Cahners Business Information.

Check Out These Items!
eCampus.com Pink Backpack eCampus.com Pink Backpack
Retail Price $28.95
Our Price $10.00
eCampus.com T-Shirt eCampus.com T-Shirt
Retail Price $14.99
Our Price $2.00
eCampus.com 4GB USB Drive eCampus.com 4GB USB Drive
Retail Price $32.95
Our Price $25.00
  Buy Textbooks
  Sell Textbooks
  College Apparel
  Shop by School
  Virtual Bookstores
  Order Status
  Shipping Rates
  Return Policy
  Marketplace Info
  F.A.S.T.
  Contact Us
  Privacy Policy
  Legal Notices
  Site Security
  Employment
  Help Desk
  eCampus Blog
  Affiliate Program
  Bulk Orders
  College Marketing
HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
eCampus.com blog follow eCampus.com on twitter find eCampus.com on facebook RSS Need Help? eService@ecampus.com   Copyright© 1999-2008     
.