Issue Oct 02-08 2024: A society without security and with democratic governments—right or left—that are incapable of controlling the spread of crime, is the main contribution of authoritarianism and extremism.
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Issue Sep 25-Oct 01 2024: Beyond merely reporting the effects of climate change, it is time for Brazilian journalism to shift its approach toward addressing the causes of this ongoing crisis – especially in light of the country’s rapidly deteriorating climate conditions.
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Issue Sep 25-Oct 01 2024: In 2021, Elisa Loncon assumed the presidency of Chile’s Constitutional Convention, the first Mapuche woman to occupy a position of leadership in Chilean politics.
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Issue Sep 25-Oct 01 2024: The new extreme right feeds on chosen enemies, but is hesitant to praise its own.
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Issue Sep 25-Oct 01 2024: The Guatemalan Public Prosecutor’s Office is facing criticism for its apparent lack of progress in investigating cases involving former President Alejandro Giammattei and his associate, Miguel Martínez.
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Issue Sep 18-24 2024: In a country where a woman is killed every six hours due to femicide, maintaining the same punitive measures as ten years ago is unacceptable.
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Issue Sep 18-24 2024: While Alberto Fujimori may be dead, his legacy, “fujimorism,” remains present in Peruvian politics. Currently, everything seems to indicate that anti-Fujimorism will transcend the disappearance of its nemesis in the short term.
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Issue Sep 18-24 2024: Democracy is a term that echoes through the halls of the Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales (FCPS) of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM).
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Issue Sep 18-24 2024: The Gramscian expression is often used by millenarian intellectuals and those close to Javier Milei’s regime.
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Issue Sep 11-17 2024: Domingo Faustino Sarmiento was a “shining beacon in the history of education,” a proponent of the idea that ignorance is not simply the lack of knowledge, but rather a “kind of entity that perpetuates the vicious cycle of barbarism and social stagnation.”
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