In Argentina, confusion over private vs. public property and the disagreement over ownership of subsoil vs. superficial land has caused conflict for centuries.
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Neither elections nor democracy are new to Latin America, but these may hold the answer to solving the crisis in Venezuela.
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Silence cannot go on! It is essential that Brazilian people break their boundaries to meet others and discuss how to stop the violence that affects certain social groups and threatens civil rights’ evolution.
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Mexico’s 2018 presidential election signaled the birth of a new political identity.
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Industrial projects in Oaxaca, Mexico threaten the well-being of indigenous people and the environment.
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Colombian farmers have claimed to be unprotected by the State and subjugated to violence and crime, leading to demands to legitimize the rearmament of large landowners.
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The rupture of the dam in one mining facility in Brumadinho is a tragedy that cannot be attributed to President Jair Bolsonaro’s administration given his recently initiated term, but nevertheless imposes a high duty to step up the inspection and control over mining companies’ operations and thus, to guarantee the security of the population that surrounds
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In order to register as a new national party in Mexico, a political party must meet strict federal requirements.
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Violence against women has been a problem present throughout history, manifesting in diverse forms and types, in all sectors, classes, and social strata.
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Colombia’s past is one of war and violence, with the country’s economic and political model sustaining a stagnant confrontation between Colombians and their permanence. Colombia’s history is dark and gloomy, characterized by endless killings, war, and successive social, economic, political, and humanitarian conflicts.
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