Nicaragua
No. 51237. United States of America and Nicaragua
Agreement Between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of Nicaragua Regarding the Surrender of Persons to the International Criminal Court. Managua 4 June 2003
No. 50939. United States of America and Nicaragua
MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND THE NICARAGUAN INSTITUTE OF TERRITORIAL STUDIES OF NICARAGUA CONCERNING SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL COOPERATION IN THE EARTH AND MAPPING SCIENCES. RESTON 4 MARCH 1999 AND MANAGUA 10 MARCH 1999 [United Nations Treaty Series vol. 2927 I-50939.]
No. 50823. United States of America and Nicaragua
Agreement Between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the Republic of Nicaragua Concerning the Imposition of Import Restrictions on Archaeological Material from the Pre-Hispanic Cultures of the Republic of Nicaragua. Managua 16 June 1999 [United Nations Treaty Series vol. 2918 I-50823.]
No. 51024. United States of America and Nicaragua
Agreement between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the Republic of Nicaragua concerning cooperation to suppress illicit traffic by sea and air. Managua 1 June 2001
Transnational Families, Care Arrangements and the State in Costa Rica and Nicaragua
Nicaragua has the second-highest emigration rate in Central America behind El Salvador and 40 per cent of Nicaraguan households receive remittances. In contrast to migrants from other Central American countries however Nicaraguan migrants are more likely to move within the region to Costa Rica than to the United States. This paper is concerned specifically with the implications of migration within Central America for family life. Focusing on the case of Costa Rica and Nicaragua the paper argues that the provision of care in Nicaraguan transnational families occurs in the context of multiple insecurities both historical and contemporary. In this sense migration represents both a solution to the insecure climate of care provision and a source of further insecurity. The paper frames this analysis within scholarship on the privatization of care work caregiving in transnational families and historical patterns of diverse family configurations. It then draws on more than 24 months of ethnographic research between 2009 and 2016 including interviews and participant observation with migrants living in Costa Rica and their families in Nicaragua to show how Nicaraguan families develop strategies based on a history of informal and flexible caregiving. In particular marriage informality and grandmother caregiving are highlighted. While these informal strategies allow families to navigate the challenges migration and family separation entail they also contribute to continued vulnerability and reinforce the gendered burdens of caregiving within transnational families.
No. 51489. United States of America and Nicaragua
Exchange of notes constituting an Agreement between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of Nicaragua regarding the Cooperating Nation Information Exchange System. Managua 18 October 2004 and 23 November 2004
No. 50939. United States of America and Nicaragua
Memorandum of Understanding between the U.S. Geological Survey of the Department of the Interior of the United States of America and the Nicaraguan Institute of Territorial Studies of Nicaragua concerning scientific and technical cooperation in the earth and mapping sciences (with annexes). Reston 4 March 1999 and Managua 10 March 1999