Nicaragua Essays

  • My Experience In Nicaragua

    1156 Words  | 5 Pages

    My three week experience in Nicaragua greatly changed my perspectives, introduced new concepts, and taught me things I could never learn through a textbook. A few themes that either I was either not aware of or was misinformed about were the main different types of trades and markets, and the approaches and impacts of foreign involvement in Nicaragua. Through my experiences in Nicaragua, I learned about free trade, fair trade, direct trade, and whole trade, how cooperatives operate and the requirements

  • Nicaragua Research Paper

    779 Words  | 4 Pages

    Music is an integral part of the culture and history of Nicaragua, and Nicaraguan folk music, like the people of the country itself, is both varied and vibrant. A long history of colonization and occupation has led Nicaragua to be a country filled with both strong indigenous and outside influences, and nowhere is this more apparent than in the country's folk music. The roots of this music are pulled from the many groups of different native indigenous Nicaraguan tribes and are injected with the Europeans

  • The Role Of The Sandista Government In Nicaragua

    300 Words  | 2 Pages

    Samoza government and as well live with the destruction of an earthquake that occurred. The country was lacking health supplies, while having increasing diseases like polio and measles. Nicaragua owed “$1.6 billion to the United States and the World Bank (Utting, 1992)”. The earthquake occurred the capital of Nicaragua named Managua. During the 1980’s many people lived in extreme poverty due to the government. Many people were forced to steal from pharmacies, the poor had to steal medicine in order

  • The Contra War In Nicaragua

    767 Words  | 4 Pages

    From 1981 to 1988 the Contra war took place in Nicaragua. The outbreak of the war began with several rebellions that were against the Sandinistas who had previously overthrown the Samoza regime. The Contra rebel group were not a homogenous one-sided group of people, instead they were a cumulation of three distinct elements of Nicaraguan society: a group of republican former guard members from the old Somoza regime, individuals who were anti-Somozistas who felt deluded and betrayed by their government

  • The Contra War: The Civil War In Nicaragua

    1822 Words  | 8 Pages

    The Civil War in Nicaragua, more commonly referred to as the Contra War, was a contentious interval of violence provoked by differing ideological perspectives. The Contra War consisted of many parties, although primarily included the Contras, the Sandinistas or FSLN, and the United States Government. The Nicaraguan Revolution, where the Sandinistas came to power, spanned from 1961 to 1979, while the Contra War in which the Contras rebelled against the Sandinistas occurred from 1981 to 1990. The

  • Personal Narrative: Myrna In Nicaragua

    810 Words  | 4 Pages

    the interview to begin. With a passion in her eyes, a thick Nicaraguan accent, and a heartfelt tone she begins to tell me about her childhood in Nicaragua. “It was awesome,” she exclaims “I loved it, I loved my childhood, I think I have great memories of my childhood,” she was smiling, and recalling her days in Nicaragua. She enjoyed many things in Nicaragua, her friends, her all girls Catholic school, “and everything about it,” she was expressing. In 1979 when the Nicaraguan Civil War broke out

  • How Did The Ronald Reagan Administration Fund The Contra War In Nicaragua

    519 Words  | 3 Pages

    trafficking drugs in Nicaragua was to simply fund the Contra war in Nicaragua during the Ronald Reagan administration. The Ronald Reagan administration was formulated under the theory of saying no to drugs and they were against it entirely. Although there was much denial about the involvement of illegally smuggling drugs into the United States, in 1986 the administration acknowledged that the profits made from smuggling drugs was used to support the Contra rebels of Nicaragua. The Reagan administration

  • The Zapata Movement

    1686 Words  | 7 Pages

    The Zapata movement was caused due to people in Cuba being unhappy. They wanted change to occur. They demanded that there be free and democratic elections. The Zapatistas were a group who supported improving rights and living conditions for Mexico’s indigenous people. Even though their region, Chiapas, provided a lot of resources globally very little was provided to the indigenous people. They were so many poor people. The Zapatistas name themselves after Emiliano Zapata. Emiliano was a Mexican

  • The Sandinista Front Summary

    1198 Words  | 5 Pages

    would have become a footnote to history had a moderate regime been able to assume power in Nicaragua before the end of 1978.”(373) Christian’s convictions on this topic clash with the views of most historians. Nonetheless, she exposes another side to the FSLN that is not well documented in Nicaraguan historiography. Soon after the publication of Christian’s work, Jose L. Coraggio published Nicaragua Revolution and Democracy, which addressed the social repercussions the FLSN and democracy

  • Roberto Clemente Impact On Society

    1701 Words  | 7 Pages

    cameramen, nor did he tell anyone. He enjoyed it alone” (Berrios). His humbleness was so great that the media did not know of a Nicaraguan boy who was without legs and had parents who could not provide prosthetics for him due to the dictator of Nicaragua during that time, Anastasio Somoza. Clemente personally cared to him and his needs, but the boy tragically died later in the devastating earthquake. Such humbleness is a trait of a wonderful humanitarian who did not care about being glorified for

  • The Iran-Contra Affair

    1720 Words  | 7 Pages

    the world. America has been submerged in operations from Latin America to the Middle East. Being this Global Force has created many complicated and messy situations, one of them being the Iran-Contra Affair. In no other reality would the countries Nicaragua and Iran ever come into the same sentence, but these two countries played a critical role in American History. It also brings about the simple question of why? Why are these countries so important? Why was the Reagan Administration involved in this

  • The Somoza Dynasty Analysis

    1057 Words  | 5 Pages

    author of Triumph of the People: The Sandinista Revolution in Nicaragua states “The Somoza dictatorship came to power in two stages, with Anastasio Somoza Garcia assuming control of the US-created National Guard in 1933 and then taking over the presidency of Nicaragua three years later”p.4. When Somoza rose to power the country was weakened and at a very low. When Anastasio Somoza rose to power there much subsequent class struggle in Nicaragua which dated back to the country’s independence from the Spanish

  • Costa Rica Essay

    768 Words  | 4 Pages

    biodiversity make it a popular destination for tourists from around the world. In this essay, I will explore the geography of Costa Rica and its significance to the country's thriving tourism industry. Geography of Costa Rica Costa Rica is bordered by Nicaragua to the north, Panama to the south, the Pacific Ocean to the West, and the Caribbean Sea to the ast. The country is divided into seven provinces: San José, Heredia, Alajuela, Cartago, Puntarenas, Guanacaste, and Limón. The capital of Costa Rica is

  • Roberto Clemente Characteristics

    944 Words  | 4 Pages

    felt uncomfortable using the Puerto Rican name. One fact they always had right was that he never let his home leave his mind. In his off time he ran baseball lessons and clinics all throughout Puerto Rico. He died on the way to bring supplies to Nicaragua, Puerto Rico after a tragic earthquake(Chandler, People Magazine). Roberto Clemente cared so much about back home when the earthquake occurred, he felt as if he lost his family. The legacy of Roberto Clemente still lives today. Dedicated and bold

  • Essay On Honduras

    716 Words  | 3 Pages

    Park, Cayos Cochinos, Tabyana Beach and the list goes on. The flag of Honduras is five-pointed stars arranged in an “X” pattern. They represent the five former nations of the Federal Republic of Central America (Costa Rica, Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, El Salvador). Honduras means “great depths”. Honduras is covered with 80% mountains. On July 30th, 1502, Christopher Columbus discovered Honduras. Tegucigalpa, Honduras’ capital, is one of the only places worldwide with no railroads. As a result

  • Benefits Of Latin American Imperialism

    1519 Words  | 7 Pages

    According to the dictionary, “imperialism is a policy of extending a country's power and influence through diplomacy or military force.” The United States decided that expanding their power, land, and money was the best way to resolve their problems because they thought that the theory of Manifest Destiny was the only way they could go any farther into the future. Latin America was affected badly with all their schemes and experiments they tried, including the Panama Canal project. Throughout the

  • Nicaraguan Culture Research Paper

    700 Words  | 3 Pages

    I am born and raised in Nicaragua. The Nicaraguan culture reflects the predominant mixture of cultural heritage originated in the Indian idiosyncrasy (mostly Chorotega and Nahual), Spanish and African. The most outstanding feature of the Nicaraguan people is their kindness, which you can notice right away, as is always willing to help and give you their friendship. Arriving in Nicaragua quickly it will observe the custom of asking many questions, it is one of the ways in which the opening to meet

  • Diversity Socializing

    1936 Words  | 8 Pages

    was the only thing I could think of. When I arrived, on my first day of orientation, I saw people from all over the world talking to each other and exchanging numbers. And by the end, I just had two friends from my neighbor countries, Panama and Nicaragua. American University (AU) is currently home to 1600 students from 140 foreign countries. International students make up a 13% of the student body population and the numbers keep further increasing. The diversity

  • Guerrillas Louis Kruijt Summary

    1105 Words  | 5 Pages

    The book Guerrillas by Dirk Kruijt documents the history in Guatemala, El Salvador and Nicaragua guerrilla movements that developed between the 1950s and the 1970s, providing information that allows the reader to encounter the similarities of these movements, but also the differential factors that altered the development of each movements in the mentioned countries. The book, then, illustrates the trajectories of El Salvador’s Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional (FMLN); the Guatemala’s

  • Costa Rica Persuasive Essay

    895 Words  | 4 Pages

    trouble with the native people, the extreme heat, and many more things. In the year 1821 Costa Rica broke away from Spain and became its own nation. Costa Rica is located in Central America and is between Panama which is to the south. Then you have Nicaragua which is to the north of Costa Rica. The country also has water surrounding it from two sides also, the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean