The New Colombia: Peace and prosperity in sight: the country comes of age is an e-book version of a special edition of the Financial Times magazine, free courtesy of FT Publishing International, who in their related FT Press imprint used to give us rather nice business/science freebies every week like clockwork, which I kind of miss.
This is a pretty nice overview of the country not just in terms of economic issues and business opportunities, but also related socio-cultural current events issues, and contains profiles of prominent Colombian individuals (including an activist and a journalist), and strikes me as a good introduction to the country for people who aren't familiar with the region and would like to get to know more than just the typical sort of country profile data.
It's also the first e-book I've seen which contains actual ads (apparently transplanted from the print edition).
Currently free on a permanent basis @
B&N (also in the
UK; there's another edition at this
EAN, but it seems to be older and smaller in filesize),
Amazon (available to Canadians and in the
UK),
Kobo &
iTunes (both available to Canadians).
Description
Colombia is usually associated with drug cartels, guerrilla wars and violence. But the biggest Spanish-speaking country after Mexico is changing. The economy is already larger, by some measures, than South Africa’s; if peace talks are successful, it will do better still. This free ebook is an indispensable guide to the new Colombia, reproducing a magazine published earlier this year by the Financial Times.
FT writers interview President Juan Manuel Santos and profile both the Bogota establishment and young Colombians to watch. They explore the development challenges of the Colombian outback and the rise of a new national export - security expertise ranging from bullet proof fashion to mercenaries. Essays by Oscar Naranjo, former head of the national police, and Malcolm Deas, historian, provide further context.