Nikolas Kozloff
In Conversation
THE LEADERLESS REVOLUTION
CARNE ROSS with Nikolas Kozloff
Once a consummate insider, the former diplomat is now a trenchant critic of the establishment.
Hurricane Hugo Takes New York By Storm
By Nikolas KozloffA pregnant silence permeated the Great Hall of Cooper Union as the audience anxiously awaited the guest of honor. The auditorium was packed to capacity, filled with people from all walks of life. They had come together for one purpose: to spend an entertaining night with one of the most brash, fiery, charismatic and colorful leaders in recent times.
In Conversation
TELESURS PROGRAM
Aram Aharonian with Nikolas Kozloff
Nikolas Kozloff, author of Hugo Chavez: Oil, Politics, and the Challenge to the U.S. (Palgrave, 2006), recently sat down with Aram Aharonian, the Director of Telesur, a satellite news station run by the governments of Venezuela, Uruguay, Argentina and Cuba.
South America's China Syndrome
By Nikolas Kozloff"Right now South America is trying to recover from the social catastrophe of the past twenty years and sees China as a convenient market for its raw resources."
In Conversation
Hugo Chavez and Latin American Populism: STEVE STEIN with NIKOLAS KOZLOFF
Nikolas Kozloff, author of Hugo Chavez: Oil, Politics, and the Challenge to the U.S. (St. Martin's Press, 2006), recently sat down with Steve Stein, a leading expert on Peruvian history and author of Populism in Peru (1982), a classic in the field.
In Conversation
As South America Drifts Left, Wither Brazil?: Paulo Fontes with Nikolas Kozloff
Recently, Nikolas Kozloff, author of Hugo Chavez: Oil, Politics, and the Challenge to the U.S. (St. Martins Press, 2006), sat down with Paulo Fontes, a Brazilian and visiting professor at the Program in Latin American Studies at Princeton University. Kozloff is currently working on another book, South Americas New Direction (also with St. Martins Press), about the geopolitical realignment in South America and its implications for the U.S. Fontes, a native of Sao Paulo, is a labor historian who worked as a history teacher and researcher at the Cajamar Institute, a labor center in Sao Paulo during the late 80s and 90s. During the interview, Fontes touched on the current state of organized labor in Brazil, the role of social movements, race relations in Brazilian society, the relationship between President Lula and civil society, and U.S.-Brazilian relations.