Issue May 24-30 2023: Good governance cannot rely on the better angels of human nature; it is instead fostered through a free citizenry and structural limitations such as presidential term limits.
Read More- Published in Editorials & Commentary
Issue May 24-30 2023: The Asociación Venezolana para una Educación Sexual Alternativa (AVESA) presented the results of a survey they conducted at the Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales (FACES) of the Universidad Central de Venezuela, which reflected that only three out of ten women use contraceptives.
Read More- Published in Society
Issue May 24-30 2023: Part of the criticisms made of the Nueva Escuela Mexicana (NEM) concern two main lines of principles, ideological and pedagogical, both of which the Secretaría de Educación Pública (SEP) has had difficulty explaining.
Read More- Published in Editorials & Commentary
Issue May 24-30 2023: Argentina continues to walk a path of long and troublesome garbage.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue May 24-30 2023: The president of Brazil, leftist Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, reported in late May that King Carlos III personally requested that he “take care of the Amazon.”
Read More- Published in Latin America & World
Issue May 24-30 2023: Since the end of Title 42 on May 11, 2023, the United States announced that it will create immigration processing centers in Latin America for people interested in emigrating to apply for refugee status.
Read More- Published in Latin America & US
Issue May 24-30 2023: Diego Gambetta is one of the most well-known modern authors, popular for his painstaking views on topics such as organized and transnational crime.
Read More- Published in Inter-American Relations
Issue May 24-30 2023: Electricity generation has been reduced by almost a quarter in just the past four years in Cuba. According to recently published data by the National Statistics Office (ONEI), 25% fewer gigawatts (GW) per hour were produced on the island.
Read More- Published in Economy and Business
Issue May 24-30 2023: Salvatore Mancuso revived the ghosts that continue to haunt former president Álvaro Uribe for the alleged support he received from the paramilitary group United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) in his electoral campaigns.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence