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“The people are afraid and still reeling from the devastating earthquake that struck Mexico City on September 19, 2017. “But they are also angry about bureaucratic obstructions that complicate living.”

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International human rights violations have recently been gaining the attention of the Brazilian government.

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French psychoanalyst, Colette Soler, led a conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina at the Haroldo Conti Cultural Center of Memory, symbolic of the memory of victims of the dictatorship and of human rights.

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The World Bank recently published in its Global Development Report that “teaching without learning is not just a wasted opportunity, but also a great injustice.”

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Many young Guatemalans decide to migrate in search of a better future and for better economic prospects for their families.

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A national study found that at least four out of ten respondents in Honduras, aged nine to twenty-four, have used tobacco.

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In a bus terminal in Caracas, Jesús Ravelo and his wife Haydeé say good-bye to Josué, the second of their sons to leave Venezuela, just a week after their firstborn went away. Josué recently left his studies in Architecture after several of his teachers also left the country.

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After Nicaragua’s Agrarian Reform, 92 out of every 100 beneficiaries were male, creating, “A great gap of inequality.”

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In Mexico, more than half of the population has bribed authorities for access to basic public services, according to the Barómetro Global de la Corrupción (Global Corruption Barometer).  The report revealed that one in three Latin Americans paid bribes to basic public services in the last 12 months. After Mexico, the highest rates of bribery

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One grain of quinoa can supply double the protein of one grain of rice, and has been labeled the “golden grain of the Andes” by local farmers.

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