Either returning to industrialization or ending the deindustrialization of the shelter of one-sided free trade could put Colombia in a major dilemma.
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Something feels off in Argentina as Argentine power players are forgetting their roots and shifts in the nation’s history.
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In the last 40 years, Mexico has excelled in the field of science and technology due to its sustained strategy to create and strengthen human capital. Still lacking in the national system, however, are the significant advancements needed to match in terms of infrastructure.
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Even though the evaluation of technocracy’s role in the last 26 years has been complex, and it is once again fashionable to throw tomatoes at it, it is realistic to conclude that politics owe more to technocracy than the other way around.
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Though soy products were barely used in Uruguay until 2000, the crop now dominates the country’s agricultural production.
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Three reprehensible cases in recent days have once again put the issues of violence against women and the outrageous validity of forms of family mistreatment as an extremely permeant and difficult-to-eradicate daily reality.
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George Orwell’s 1984 has some lessons for Latin American politics.
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Considering how deeply rooted corruption is in Mexican society, and how much harm it causes, it might be easier to fight if it were considered a disease.
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Famed Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa presented his book “The Outbreak of Populism” in Chile, which, according to Axel Kaiser, the Executive Director of the Foundation for Progress, continues Vargas Llosa’s lifelong preoccupation with the threats to liberal democracy.
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With the country still reeling in the aftermath of Central Mexico’s latest earthquake, which left over 300 civilians dead and thousands more injured, many are starting to question whether more could have been done to prevent such vast destruction.
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