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Amid Jamaica crisis, tourism could take a beating
As the manhunt for alleged drug kingpin Christopher "Dudus" Coke drags into a third week and the government takes its anti-gang crusade nationwide, this nation of 2.6 million is fretting about the strength of its economic backbone: the event and tourism industries.
Maybe Buenos Aires?
A universal story that touches upon many of the themes that cross the modern world we live in: dislocation of people, destruction of their dreams overnight by crises they are not responsible for and their efforts to survive.
Mexico City's literary circle
The Centro Histórico area is the nation's repository of rare and antique bookstores.
Villa de Leyva, graceful colonial window
At first glance, the vast, empty expanse of the plaza of Villa de Leyva, a colonial city that is three and a half hours by car or bus from Bogotá, seems designed to reduce the onlooker to a contemplation of his or her own insignificance. One of the largest town squares in South America, the Plaza Mayor lacks the decorative playfulness of so many of its smaller siblings in Colombia and elsewhere, with only the paving stones giving it shape and form.
Costa Rica draws sex trade
The global recession has attracted more prostitutes and patrons to Costa Rica, where sex tourism thrives.
U.S.-Cuba travel flourishing
Legal travel to and from Cuba is booming, even though the Obama administration has not officially changed any rules regarding nonfamily travel to the island.
House hunting in ... Colombia
The apartment is on the second story of a three-story, walk-up building, constructed of concrete about 40 years ago. The old city is Cartagena's tourist and cultural center; shopping, dining and public transportation are within walking distance.
Introduction to Playa Nosara
Playa Nosara is a bucket term used to refer to several neighboring beaches, spread along an isolated stretch of coast.
Introduction to Margarita Island
Known locally as "La Perla del Caribe," or the Pearl of the Caribbean, Isla de Margarita is Venezuela's most popular tourist destination.
An old capital’s new look in Ecuador
Quito, the bustling capital of Ecuador, was for many years just a stopover for tourists heading to the Galápagos. Its Old Town was a maze of litter-strewn streets and dilapidated colonial facades, and its New Town was known for raucous partying and muggings.
The place to be: Florianópolis, Brazil
PRINCE PIERRE CASIRAGHI of Monaco has paid tribute. The heartthrobs Ben Harper and Stavros Niarchos have partied on its beachfront dance floor. And on many Champagne-fueled nights, leggy models straight from the pages of Sports Illustrated and the Victoria’s Secret catalog have perched on its billowing banquettes.
Exploring Argentina's deepest south
USHUAIA, Argentina, on the south coast of Tierra del Fuego, is about as far south as a tourist can comfortably go in the Americas. It faces the Beagle Channel, named for the ship that brought Charles Darwin on his 1832 exploration of local wildlife.
Argentine nights

Lalo de Almeida for The New York Times David Lampson, from Boston, and Maria Faccioti, of Argentina, tango at Salón Canning.

World heritage list grows by 13
Two natural sites, the Dolomite range of the Italian Alps, and the coastal wetlands of the Dutch and German sections of the Wadden Sea, have been added to Unesco´s World Heritage List.
The pulse of Rio de Janeiro's slums luring foreign guests
Tourists and expats are flocking to the city's favelas for 'authenticity' while fearful middle-class Brazilians stay away.
Cartagena (NYT)

WHY GO NOW The people of Cartagena want the world to know that their city is not like the rest of Colombia. Perched atop South America on the southern rim of the Caribbean Sea, Cartagena feels a million mile s from anything having to do with guerrillas, paramilitaries, narcotics or kidnappings.

Spring break in Cancun is subdued affair

Cancún rebuilt beaches after Hurricane Wilma, but the spring break destination is more sedate this year.

A jolt of coffee culture in the jungle

The valley narrows as we move east toward the Andes on horseback, rolling pasture rising into virgin jungle. Along the ridgelines high above us march lines of swaying wax palms. Their towering trunks, topped by small tufts of fronds, appear like visions from a Dr. Seuss tale.

Tourism officials fear storms will scare from Florida

Is the hurricane season any time for a convention in South Florida? Tourism officials worry meeting bookers are asking just that after two hurricanes hit Florida and a third might be on the way.







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