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List of contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface: Michael Kelly, Erika Moreno, and Richard C. Witmer, II
- Foreword: Former Ambassador, Jeffrey F. DeLaurentis
- Contributor List
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Chapter 1: Introduction Michael Kelly, Erika Moreno, and Richard C. Witmer, II
- Part I. The Political Dimension
- Chapter 2: Opening Cuba: Negotiating History William LeoGrande
- Chapter 3: Succession versus Transition Michael Kelly, Erika Moreno, and Richard C. Witmer, II
- Chapter 4: The China Connection Gregg B. Johnson and Zhimin Lin
- Part 2: The Economic Dimension
- Chapter 5: The Future of Cuba's Non-Sugar Agricultural Sector Mario Gonzalez-Corso and Armando Nova-Gonzalez
- Chapter 6: Between the "Party Line and the "Bottom Line": El Proyecto Artecorte and the Virtuous Circle of Entrepreneurial Solidarity in One Old Havana Neighborhood Ted A. Henken
- Chapter 7: Success Characteristics of Market Entry in Cuban Tourism Janet Walsh
- Chapter 8: A Political Economy Approach to U.S. Normalization Policy Towards Cuba: Obama and Trump Roger R. Betancourt
- Part 3: The Legal Dimension
- Chapter 9: The Ghost of Helms-Burton: Necessary Course Corrections on the Path to Normalized US-Cuban Relations Jonathan Benjamin-Alvarado
- Chapter 10: Unresolved Property Claims Michael Kelly, Erika Moreno, and Richard C. Witmer, II
- Chapter 11: Reintegrating Cuba into the Global Economy: Stasis and the European Alternative Larry Catá Backer
- Chapter 12: Big Chills: How U.S. Choices will Affect Cuba's Environmental Future Robert R.M. Verchick and Karen C. Sokol
- Chapter 13: Conclusion Michael Kelly, Erika Moreno, and Richard C. Witmer, II
- Afterword Gary Maybarduk
- References
- Index
About the author
Michael J. Kelly is Interim Dean and Professor of Law at Creighton University
Erika Moreno is Associate Professor of Political Science at Creighton University.
Richard C. Witmer is Professor of Political Science at Creighton University.
Summary
This book brings together experts from across three disciplines--politics, economics, and law--to address the key issues that affect Cuba-U.S. bilateral relations today. The chapters identify the opportunities and challenges presented to both nations in each of their respective disciplines while staking out what the future may hold.