Issue Mar 20-26 2024: In a collaborative effort aimed at addressing chronic child malnutrition and enhancing living conditions among Ecuador’s Indigenous communities, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints donated over $500,000 to UNICEF Ecuador.
Read More- Published in Society
Issue Mar 20-26 2024: Catholics in La Paz are preparing to participate in the traditional procession of the Lord of the Holy Sepulcher, which this year will return to its old route.
Read More- Published in Society
Issue Mar 20-26 2024: The Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) issued a ruling that Peru is responsible for violating the rights of 80 inhabitants in La Oroya, Junín.
Read More- Published in Society
Issue Mar 13-19 2024: Following rumors that the delivery of oncological medicines would be canceled, Argentina’s Ministry of Health of the Nation became the subject of controversy.
Read More- Published in Society
Issue Mar 13-19 2024: The significance of March 8th extends beyond mere celebration; it’s a stark reminder of the persistent gender inequalities in higher education.
Read More- Published in Society
Issue Mar 13-19 2024: In Brazil, xenophobia against Northeasterners is a common occurrence propagated and enabled by a media culture stuck in the past, reliant on stereotypes and long-tired tropes portraying them as illiterate, dyslexic, starving, flour-stealing, lizard-eating, Corinthians-supporting mendicants.
Read More- Published in Society
Issue Mar 13-19 2024: The military and police searched the prison in the Jipijapa Canton in Manabí Province, Ecuador.
Read More- Published in Society
Issue Mar 06-12 2024: During a tour of the Maule Region, Chilean President Gabriel Boric and Minister of Education Nicolás Cataldo visited the Colegio Gerónimo Lagos Lisboa de San Javier, where the finishing touches have been put on emergency restorations following a fire in 2022 which destroyed 30% of the university’s buildings.
Read More- Published in Society
Issue Mar 06-12 2024: In Brazil, the Zion Church, the religious association Dunamis Movement, the Akachi Institute, and the evangelical pastors Lucas Hayashi and Teo Hatashi are threatening to sue all individuals and media outlets that criticized or raised doubts about their interest in the recent denunciation of the sexual exploitation of children in the
Read More- Published in Society