After cutting 30 percent of the educational budget which unleashed a wave of demonstrations throughout Brazil, the Ministry of Education is involved in another controversy.
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All throughout Honduras, the authorities reported the obstruction of highways, looting in fast food restaurants in the Kennedy neighborhood, and protests in front of the Supreme Court of Justice, since the marchers could not enter the Presidential House.
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In Bolivia, the Ley de Imprenta, or Law of Press, ensures liberty of the press and the right to work as a journalist.
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An initiative that began with a science project at Northern Catholic University (UCN) in Chile has now spread to universities in Peru, Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, and across the globe.
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In Honduras, there are 400,000 child laborers, and most of them work in agriculture in the country’s southern region. Education is the key to breaking this cycle of exploitation.
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In the rural areas of Manabí, Ecuador, horses, donkeys, or mules are the preferred mode of transportation because of their ability to navigate the rugged terrain.
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Sooner rather than later, traveling by car to everyday destinations will be a thing of the past in San José.
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Venezuelans will have to wait longer and longer each day in order to get food and gas. In this situation, how, then, does one explain the decrease in street protests?
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Abraham Weintraub, the current Brazilian Minister of Education is notorious for his often callously insensitive comments about Brazil’s universities.
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