The US-Cuba rapprochement has the potential to transform Cuba's political and economic environment, but it also creates new pressures on Cuba's political and economic structures. The LSE is the perfect place to provide detached, authoritative study of the US-Cuba rapprochement, in what is a really exciting collaboration between two leading research centres.
- Helen Yaffe, Project Lead
The Latin America and Caribbean Centre in collaboration with the United States Centre at LSE have been awarded IGA-Rockefeller Resilience Research seed funding for a project to analyse the sources of the US-Cuba rapprochement, and how the process will impact Cuba’s indigenous economic reform programme. The aim is to understand the new US-Cuba diplomacy in regional and global context. Drawing on interviews with Cuban and American policymakers, it investigates the sources and prospects of the United States’ strategic shift, and the implications of Cuba’s economic reform programme for wider processes of bilateral rapprochement and regional engagement.
PI: Dr Helen Yaffe (LACC); Dr Nick Kitchen (US Centre)
Inside US-Cuba Relations is a joint venture between the LSE’s United States and Latin America and Caribbean Centres.
Header image, by Chuck Kennedy [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.