Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 09/2012

CELAC: a voice for Latin America and the Caribbean?

Carlos Portales

February 2012

Norwegian Peacebuilding Resource Centre

Abstract

This paper analyses the creation of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) in Caracas on 3 December 2011, locating it within the current context of cooperation and integration in Latin America and the Caribbean. This new body is based on an agreement that includes political cooperation functions and the task of seeking inter-governmental coordination of public policies. CELAC is not a replacement for the cooperation and integration groups that have been set up around three distinct visions: the desire to actively open up to the world (Mexico, the South American countries of the Pacific Basin and, to some extent, the Central American countries); the desire for a limited opening, subject to negotiations that seek first of all to bring about a very significant transformation in the international trading system (Mercosur); and the search for the special situation of small states to be recognised (CARICOM). Neither does it replace groups that encourage cooperation – mainly inter-governmental bodies – in order to address what they see as the threat of globalisation (ALBA). Although the idea of coordinating sub-regional policies and processes is one of CELAC’s aims, the tools it has for doing so are poor. CELAC also superimposes itself over important sub-regional treaty-based coordinating bodies, such as UNASUR, as well as other cooperation mechanisms that extend beyond the region, such as the OAS and the Ibero-American summits.