Fidel Castro has passed the baton, and now Cubans wait to see what is going to happen.
Jordana Timerman, a former Nation intern, and an analyst at the Center for the Implementationof Public Policies Promoting Equity and Growth (CIPPEC) in Buenos Aires, has returned to Cuba to evaluate what things look like now - and reports in "Waiting for the Next Revolution" in Nation:
"After fifty years of revolution, the nature of that change is not clear, nor is there consensus on the structure future government might have. Many Cubans shudder at the thought of the end of the Revolution, even as they curse their current reality. They vacillate between quotidian complaints about food and transport and loftier desires for freedom. With little experience in democratic problem-solving, the average citizen seems to have no idea how to proceed."
Jordana Timerman, a former Nation intern, and an analyst at the Center for the Implementationof Public Policies Promoting Equity and Growth (CIPPEC) in Buenos Aires, has returned to Cuba to evaluate what things look like now - and reports in "Waiting for the Next Revolution" in Nation:
"After fifty years of revolution, the nature of that change is not clear, nor is there consensus on the structure future government might have. Many Cubans shudder at the thought of the end of the Revolution, even as they curse their current reality. They vacillate between quotidian complaints about food and transport and loftier desires for freedom. With little experience in democratic problem-solving, the average citizen seems to have no idea how to proceed."
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