Summits of the Americas
The Summits of the Americas (SOA) is a series of international summit meetings bringing together the leaders of countries in the OAS. All countries sent representatives to all meetings except for Cuba, who was expelled from the OAS under US pressure after its Revolution. Cuba joined the Summit on its seventh edition.[1] In the early 1990s, what were formerly ad hoc summits came to be institutionalized into a regular "Summit of the Americas" based on the principles of democracy and free trade.[2] The meetings, organized by a number of multilateral bodies led by the Organization of American States, provide an opportunity for discussions about a variety of issues and topics.
List of summits
Summit | Dates | Host Country | Host City | Host leader |
---|---|---|---|---|
First | December 9–11, 1994 | United States[3] | Miami | Bill Clinton |
Second | April 18–19, 1998 | Chile[4] | Santiago | Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle |
Third | April 20–22, 2001 | Canada[5] | Quebec City | Jean Chrétien |
Fourth | November 4–5, 2005 | Argentina[6] | Mar del Plata | Néstor Kirchner |
Fifth | April 17–19, 2009 | Trinidad and Tobago[7] | Port-of-Spain | Patrick Manning |
Sixth | April 14–15, 2012 | Colombia[8] | Cartagena | Juan Manuel Santos Calderón |
Seventh | April 10–11, 2015 | Panama[9] | Panama City | Juan Carlos Varela |
Eighth | March 23–25, 2018 | Peru[10] | Lima | Pedro Pablo Kuczynski |
The summits that garnered most general public and media attention were the Quebec City and Mar del Plata events, both of which provoked very large anti-globalization and anti–Free Trade Area of the Americas protests and attendant police response.
OAS member states
All 35 independent nations of the Americas are members of the OAS.
Non-members
The following jurisdictions are not members of the OAS as they are dependencies of other nations. They are grouped under the nation that has sovereignty over them.
- Guadeloupe
(Overseas region) - French Guiana
(Overseas region) - Martinique
(Overseas region) - Saint Barthélemy
(Overseas collectivity) - Saint Martin
(Overseas collectivity) - Saint Pierre and Miquelon
(Overseas collectivity)
- Aruba
(Constituent country) - Bonaire
(Public body) - Curaçao
(Constituent country) - Saba
(Public body) - Sint Maarten
(Constituent country) - Sint Eustatius
(Public body)
- Anguilla
(Overseas territory) - Bermuda
(Overseas territory) - Cayman Islands
(Overseas territory) - Falkland Islands
(Overseas territory)
Disputed with Argentina - Montserrat
(Overseas territory) - South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
(Overseas territory)
Disputed with Argentina - Turks and Caicos Islands
(Overseas territory) - British Virgin Islands
(Overseas territory)
- [[File:|23x15px|border |alt=|link=]] Navassa Island
(unincorporated unorganized territory)
Disputed with Haiti - Puerto Rico
(Unincorporated organized commonwealth) - U.S. Virgin Islands
(Unincorporated organized territory)
References
Notes
Citations
- ↑ Prieto, Alfredo. "Everybody But Cuba," Havana Times. April 15, 2009.
- ↑ Twaddle, Andrew C. (2002). Health Care Reform Around the World, p. 382.
- ↑ Summit Americas: I summit (1st)
- ↑ Summit Americas: II summit (2nd)
- ↑ Summit Americas: III summit (3rd)
- ↑ Summit Americas: IV summit (4th)
- ↑ Summit Americas: V summit (5th)
- ↑ Summit Americas: VI summit (6th)
- ↑ Summit Americas: VII summit (7th)
- ↑ Summit Americas: VIII summit (8th)
- ↑ "Human Development Report 2015 – "Rethinking Work for Human Development"" (PDF). HDRO (Human Development Report Office) United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
- Twaddle, Andrew C. (2002). Health Care Reform Around the World. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing. ISBN 978-0-86569-288-6; OCLC 48132063
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Summits of the Americas. |
- Summits of the Americas
- The Fifth Summit of The Americas
- Summits of the Americas Follow-up System (SISCA)
- Follow-up and Implementation of Summits
- Summits Virtual community (SVC)