By Sho Chandra and Steve Matthews | June 16, 2017
This U.S. expansion may be moving like a tortoise, but it's on its way to win the race.
By Ezequiel Abiu Lopez | June 16, 2017
In the opening scenes of the latest Vin Diesel action movie, troops in the Dominican Republic chase the hero through a rain forest and down a twisty mountain road. But in real life, the government is doing all it can to welcome the Hollywood star — or anyone else who wants to produce a film in this Caribbean country.
By Michael Weissenstein and Matthew Lee | June 13, 2017
Five months into the Trump administration, Cuba has a new set of American defenders: a coalition of high-tech firms, farming interests, travel companies and young Cuban-Americans thrown into action by the looming announcement of a new Cuba policy.
By Cogan Schneier | June 7, 2017
Sessions said DOJ attorneys may no longer enter settlement agreements on behalf of the nation that direct or provide “for a payment or loan to any non-governmental person or entity that is not a party to the dispute.”
By Celia Ampel | June 6, 2017
U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard was appointed in 1995.
By Michael Weissenstein and Vivian Salama | June 5, 2017
The Trump administration is close to announcing a new policy that would prohibit business with the Cuban military while maintaining the full diplomatic relations restored by former President Barack Obama, according to a administration official and a person involved in the ongoing policy review.
By David Biller | June 2, 2017
Brazil emerged from its deepest recession on record in the first quarter, but a fresh political scandal could slam the beleaguered economy right back into its hole.
By Jonathan Levin and Rebecca Spalding | June 2, 2017
The choice is heartbreaking: stay to help other families, or leave to help your own. That's the calculation thousands in Puerto Rico are making. The bankruptcy of the U.S. commonwealth, the culmination of years of decline, has accelerated an exodus that's adding to the island's economic misery.
By C. Ryan Barber | June 1, 2017
A year after competing for coveted approvals to fly to Cuba's capital, major U.S. airlines are again squaring off to secure flights to Havana as the Trump administration weighs rolling back the Obama-era opening with the island nation. Still, despite the political uncertainty and business risks, U.S. carriers are not standing silent. Here's a snapshot at how airline in-house legal departments and outside counsel are putting pressure on regulators to act now.
By Andrea Rodriguez | June 1, 2017
A handful of entrepreneurs have quietly formed communist Cuba's first private small business association, testing the government's willingness to allow Cubans to organize outside the strict bounds of state control.
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