Mexicans proclaim their rights to defend themselves amid chronic government inaction in the face of violence by organized crime.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
In Brazil, Guatemala, and El Salvador past dirty wars continue to reverberate, while in Colombia and Mexico they never actually ended. Current practices of political violence (or the threat of its use) and torture show clear continuities with the past.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
Paramilitary groups and so-called “self-defense” groups are active in Mexico, Colombia, and Ecuador (as well as other counties). Some are community-based while others have clear ties to organized crime and regional elites.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
Many observers in Brazil and Argentina are pointing to the futility of the “war on drugs.”
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
Many Colombians oppose the process with the FARC in Havana, and the candidate of former President Uribe’s Democratic Center (UDC) summarized their arguments very well; what are the reasons and how valid are they?
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
In Central America the “criminal and terrorism nexuses are maturing.”
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
Venezuela’s attorney general said Friday that prosecutors have received 145 complaints for human-rights violations by members of security forces during the last two months of anti-government protests.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
Taxi drivers in the DR are fearful of the night.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
President Mujica has sponsored the bill as an alternative to drugs repression which has failed worldwide.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
In late March 2014 several “lynchings” were carried out or at least attempted in various cities of Argentina. In one, 18-year-old David Moreira was killed by a group of citizens after he allegedly tried to steal a woman’s purse in Rosario.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence


