It has been a great year so far for independent reporting on Latin America here at Upside Down World. Over the recent months we have provided exclusive reports and analysis on the new wave of violence in Oaxaca, conflicts over resources in Ecuador, ongoing struggles in post-earthquake Haiti and more. In order to keep publishing on these and other important issues, we need your help! Seven years after we started publishing, we remain 100% reader-funded, and Upside Down World won’t be able to continue without your financial support.
Dear Readers,
It has been a great year so far for independent reporting on Latin America here at Upside Down World. Over the recent months we have provided exclusive reports and analysis on the new wave of violence in Oaxaca, cross-border cooperative integration in South America, Venezuelan solidarity in the Bronx, conflicts over resources in Ecuador, ongoing struggles in post-earthquake Haiti and more. In order to keep publishing on these and other important issues, we need your help!
Seven years after we started publishing, we remain 100% reader-funded, and Upside Down World won’t be able to continue without your financial support. We also continue to operate horizontally as an editorial collective, making decisions together and sharing the workload and responsibilities equally. In addition, with your help, we would like to expand our Spanish language coverage. If you consider Upside Down World an important source for information on Latin American politics and social movements, please make a donation today!
“Upside Down World regularly provides a rich store of information and insight into the popular struggles that are changing the face of the subcontinent… It’s an invaluable resource.” – Noam Chomsky “As regular readers of the site, we wanted you to know it has been a great help to us, fueling both our journalism and activism.” – Avi Lewis & Naomi Klein |
If you donate $60 or more, we’ll send you a free gift of the brand new English translation of Uruguayan writer Raul Zibechi’s book Dispersing Power: Social Movements as Anti-State Forces (AK Press). The book is translated by UDW contributor Ramor Ryan and with a foreward by UDW editor Ben Dangl. Dispersing Power, Zibechi’s first book translated into English, reports on and analyzes social struggles and indigenous community organizing in and around El Alto, Bolivia.
If you want to spread out your contribution, consider becoming a sustainer, and see the links below to make an automatic online donation each month for a year. As little as $5 every month from you will help us keep going in 2010!
Thank you for making Upside Down World possible!
Upside Down World Editorial Collective -Benjamin Dangl, Cyril Mychalejko & April Howard
Questions? Comments? Email us at grupo(at)UpsideDownWorld.org
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