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IDB America April 2004 Roger Hamilton |
Bioprospecting, with no Apologies Costa Rica uses home-grown scientific muscle to unlock nature's treasure chest, maximizing the benefits from its bioligical reasources. |
IDB America March 2004 Roger Hamilton |
Biodiversity for profit Take a look at six projects that small Costa Rican companies are doing to make profits with natural resources. |
IDB America March 2004 Roger Hamilton |
Keep your money in the gene bank Bioprospecting is one more economic reason to conserve nature |
IDB America March 2004 Roger Hamilton |
Don't let the smell fool you A native tree yields a very distinctive and nutritious beverage. Carmen Chan of Costa Rica brews this elixir in her small factory. |
Global Services July 29, 2007 Adyasha Sinha |
Offshoring to Costa Rica Although the past decade has been a rough ride for Costa Rica, its economy has, in many ways, been a model for developing nations. |
Global Services July 29, 2007 Adyasha Sinha |
Q&A With Alfredo Ribeiro, HP Costa Rica HP has an IT and support service center in Costa Rica, which was created in August 2003, to provide services to their main client P&G. |
Fast Company May 2012 Christina Chaey |
At Starbucks's New Costa Rican Cafe, Costa Rican Coffee Is Hard To Come By This month, the caffeine chain opens its first store in Costa Rica, a nation that already knows a thing or two about java |
Sports Central February 18, 2010 Diane M. Grassi |
Baseball, Rawlings Bring New Meaning to Free Trade In 2006, this reporter shed light on the seemingly unfair labor practices taking place in Costa Rica in a factory operated by the Rawlings Sporting Goods Co., Inc. |
IDB America Charo Quesada |
Civil society causes a political earthquake in Costa Rica The 2002 national elections in Costa Rica offer a vivid example of just how influential civil society organizations have become in Latin America. |
IDB America May/Jun 2000 Peter Bate |
Who gains in the Internet age? As it eagerly embraces new technologies, Latin America also worries about competition and a growing digital divide |
Real Estate Portfolio Special Issue 2005 Antillon & Roberts |
Spotlight on Central America Over the past decade, Costa Rica has experienced sustained economic growth with an average annual growth rate of 4.5 percent from 1994 to 2004. The high-growth economy has fueled the need to develop business centers, malls and residential communities. |