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Hosting a Speaker


One of the best ways to get people in your community engaged and involved in Latin America issues is to host a speaker. There are a number of groups who run regular speaking tours, bringing visitors from Latin America to communities all across the US. Not everyone in your community is able to travel abroad, but hosting a speaker helps bring that first-hand experience to your community; and often, the personal connection that is established when people meet a visitor from Latin America and listen to their story is what drives them to work for a more just and humane US policy toward Latin America.

Here are some of the organizations that regularly host speaking tours:

  • Global Exchange hosts speakers regularly who travel around the country and discuss issues ranging from globalization to labor. See www.globalexchange.org/getInvolved/speakers for more information.
  • Witness for Peace runs delegations to a number of different Latin American countries, but also brings visitors from Latin America to the United States for speaking tours. See www.witnessforpeace.org for more information. The main office in DC can give you information on regional chapters, who will be able to tell you when there is a speaker coming to your area.
  • Mexico Solidarity Network runs delegations to Mexico and hosts speaking tours with visiting Mexicans in the United States on fair trade, immigrants' and indigenous rights, globalization, and labor. See www.mexicosolidarity.org for more information.
  • NISGUA, the Network in Solidarity with the People of Guatemala, runs speaking tours with visiting Guatemalans in the US on human rights and justice issues. See www.nisgua.org for more information.
  • The US Office on Colombia runs speaking tours in the US with visiting Colombians, discussing human rights, peace, and justice issues. Please see www.usofficeoncolombia.org for more information.
Tips for hosting a speaker: · For more ideas about how to host a speaker and set up an event with a speaker in your community, please see Amnesty International's Activist Toolkit at www.amnestyusa.org/activist_toolkit/guide.html. · The Student Peace Action Network has some great tips on how to talk about peace and justice issues which may be useful if you have to give an introduction-- see http://www.studentpeaceaction.org/speakout.html.