Issue Apr 17-23 2024: In Guatemala, two milestones have been passed: the first 100 days of Bernardo Arévalo’s presidency, and 100 days with no investigation into the corruption perpetrated by the previous Giammattei administration.
Read More- Published in Editorials & Commentary
Issue Apr 17-23 2024: Extrajudicial execution processes against several ex-military officials in Colombia have moved on to the Jurisdicción Especial para la Paz (JEP)’s Unidad de Investigación y Acusación.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
Issue Apr 17-23 2024: Soon enough, Venezuela will reveal its opposition candidate in the country’s upcoming presidential election. However, the matter of who deserves to run against the current president remains a source of contention.
Read More- Published in Editorials & Commentary
Issue Apr 17-23 2024: Mexico’s War on Drugs generates two kinds of victims: those who have lost their lives to violence and those who have endured its effects.
Read More- Published in War, Peace, Drugs and Violence
Issue Apr 17-23 2024: As Mexico’s criminal organizations expand their influence across the country, where they are largely free to murder rivals, undermine law enforcement, and seize property, their grip over local and regional governments continues to tighten.
Read More- Published in Politics
Issue Apr 17-23 2024: “Chucos” or “mata niños” have become a dish widely recognized by both locals and foreigners who visit Santa Ana in El Salvador.
Read More- Published in Travel & Tourism
Issue Apr 17-23 2024: Over 25 years ago, Intel installed a plant in Costa Rica to produce and test the processors that gave computing power to computers of that time.
Read More- Published in Editorials & Commentary
Issue Apr 17-23 2024: Nine environmental sacrifice zones have been identified in Bolivia, according to the League for the Defense of the Environment (Lidema), on International Mother Earth Day.
Read More- Published in Environment
Issue Apr 17-23 2024: In Nueva Oceanía, a community in the Peruvian Amazon, sightings of the Mashco Piro, an Indigenous group in isolation, have increased due to nearby forestry concessions.
Read More- Published in Society