Comunidad de Estados Latinoamericanos y Caribeños

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Revisión del 10:51 21 may 2014 de Csoliverez (discusión | contribuciones) (países miembros)

The Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (Spanish: Comunidad de Estados Latinoamericanos y Caribeños, CELAC; Portuguese: Comunidade de Estados Latino-Americanos e Caribenhos; French: Communauté des États Latino-Américains et Caribéens) is a regional bloc of Latin American and Caribbean states thought out on February 23, 2010, at the Rio Group–Caribbean Community Unity Summit,[2][3][4] and created on December 3, 2011, in Caracas, Venezuela, with the signature of The Declaration of Caracas.[5] It consists of 32 sovereign countries in the Americas representing roughly 600 million people. Absent from the bloc are Canada and the United States, as well as the territories of France, the Netherlands, Denmark and the United Kingdom in the Americas.[6]

CELAC is an example of a decade-long push for deeper integration within the Americas.[7] CELAC is being created to deepen Latin American integration and to reduce the once overwhelming influence of the United States on the politics and economics of Latin America. It is seen as an alternative to the Organization of American States (OAS), the regional body organised largely by Washington in 1948, ostensibly as a countermeasure to potential Soviet influence in the region.[7][8][9]

CELAC is the successor of the Rio Group and the Latin American and Caribbean Summit on Integration and Development (CALC).[10] In July 2010, CELAC selected President of Venezuela Hugo Chávez and President of Chile Sebastián Piñera, as co-chairs of the forum to draft statutes for the organization.[11]

Países integrantes de la CELAC

Integran el organismo los siguientes 32 estados independientes de América Latina y el Caribe:

  1. Antigua y Barbuda
    '
  2. Argentina
  3. Bahamas
  4. Barbados
  5. Belice
  6. Bolivia
  7. Brasil
  8. Chile
  9. Colombia
  10. Costa Rica
  11. Cuba
  12. Dominica
  13. Ecuador
  14. El Salvador
  15. Grenada
  16. Guatemala
  17. Guyana
  18. Haití
  19. Jamaica
  20. México
  21. Nicaragua
  22. Panamá
  23. Paraguay
  24. Perú
  25. República Dominicana
  26. Santa Lucía
  27. San Cristóbal y Nieves
  28. San Vicente y las Granadinas
  29. Surinam
  30. Trinidad y Tobago
  31. Uruguay
  32. Venezuela

Fuentes