Society and Politics Articles
Features | Human Rights, Politics
Colombia: What does Peace Mean in Comuna 13?

Gwen Burnyeat visits Comuna 13, the Medellín community blighted by guerrilla, militia and state violence during Colombia's civil war and finds that graffiti and urban escalators have achieved a sense of pride and…

Features | Environment, History, Human Rights
Brazil: Munduruku People Fear Annihilation

The Tapajós River Basin lies at the heart of the Amazon, and at the heart of an exploding controversy: whether to build 40+ large dams, a railway, and highways, turning the Basin into a vast industrialized commodities export…

Features | Culture, Society
United Migrations?

Walk around London and it’s hard to avoid the Spanish vowels swirling around the air. The recent influx of Spaniards and Latin Americans arriving through Spain adds yet another layer to the original Spanish speaking communities.…

Obituaries | History
Ciro Bustos, Che Guevara’s friend and ally

Artist and revolutionary, Ciro Bustos was a key confident of Che Guevara in his fated attempt to trigger revolution across Latin America, through Argentina and Bolivia. He was wrongly accused of betraying Che, when it is now…

Features |
Brazil's prison massacres - a bloody start to the year

A flurry of brutal deaths in Brazil's overcrowded prisons has shocked the country.

Features | Politics
The Angora Cat, the Saint and the End of the World

The Supreme Court and the Senate found a 'jeitinho' to get around part of their present impasse. But time and their credibility are running out.

Features |
Colombia's Plebiscite: Catharsis in Writing

Colombians in the UK blog to express their hope, sadness and determination to keep peace alive

Opinion |
The death of Fidel Castro, what his legacy to Cuba has been, and how he should be remembered.

Richard Gott, historian, journalist and one of the few foreigners who met both Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, recounts his impressions of the 20th century revolutionary icon.

Features | Human Rights
TEN YEARS A GRAVE

More than a decade after the Pasta de Conchos mining disaster killed 65 miners in Mexico, families are asking the UK to help with their struggle for justice, reports Elizabeth Mistry

Features | Environment
Belize: Punta Gorda, a forgotten district

Maya and Garifuna communities are resisting over-zealous national park regulation and encroaching oil exploration. Rachel Simon explores indigenous land rights and social issues in southern Belize over three blog posts. Rachel…

Spotlight on... | Human Rights
Brazil: the Cardinal who stood up to the military

A moving tribute to Dom Paulo Evaristo Arns on his 95th birthday

Opinion | Human Rights, Politics
Santos proposes peace as framework for investment, but trade must be accompanied by human rights

Attending a formal banquet with President Santos’ as part of his official State visit to the UK, leading Colombian human rights lawyer Reinaldo Villalba highlights the importance of human rights protection in light of President…

Reviews | Society
White Flowers - When Santos met London's Colombian Community

For the UK’s Colombian community, one of the world’s largest Colombian diasporas, President Juan Manuel Santos’ state visit was a historic event. Following the international media spotlight on Colombia, the recent rejection of…

Opinion | Society
Narconovelas – Glorifying or Challenging Stereotypes?

Latinolife explores the two sides of this controversial debate.

Features | Politics
Cunha: The Man Who Knew Too Much

The arrest of the former speaker of Congress has sent shock-waves through Brasilia.

Features | Politics
Brazil - Election Post-Mortem

The PT (Workers' Party) fared very badly in the recent municipal elections and is unlikely to recover before 2018. The political system is entering a new era, but no one knows where it will lead.

Features | Society
AFRO LATINOS: Un Pedazito de la Historia Negra

To be or not to be Afro-Latino? Maria V. Luna explores the resurgance of black pride in Latin America and its diasporas.

Features | Politics
Colombia: the double edged sword of peace in Tumaco

As the referendum nears, asking the public to take a leap of faith in Peace, the residents in Tumaco know that it will come at a price and move forward under no ilusions, as Niamh Ni Bhriain explores

Features | Environment
How Green Has Brazil's Olympics Been?

Brazil proclaimed that it would be hosting a Green Olympics. Despite some bright spots, the result was disappointing, our Brazil correspondent says.

Features | Environment
BRAZIL: Tapajós industrial waterway -- a potential environmental disaster

In early August, the Brazilian government unexpectedly cancelled the São Luiz do Tapajós hydroelectric power station, the largest of a series of major dams planned along the Tapajós River and its tributaries. Indigenous groups…

Features | Human Rights
Colombia: Will the people say Yes to peace?

With the entire final agreement finally signed in Havana, the peace accords must now be submitted to a national referendum on October 2. The outcome remains uncertain. Gwen Burnyeat is a British anthropologist and writer, who has…

Opinion | Society
How Latinos in the UK Can Show Support for Black Lives Matter

A young Afro Latina from the US is inspired by a show of UK solidarity for Black Lives Matter in Brixton and suggests ways Latinos in the UK can help

Features |
Brazil's Scandals; Cunha on the Rack

Brazil’s congressional ethics committee recently voted to remove Deputy Eduardo Cunha, one of the orchestrators of President Dilma Rousseff’s impeachment, from his position as Lower House Speaker. This decision comes after a…

Features |
Colombia: A Historic Agreement on Peace

From remote cities in Colombia’s South like Pasto, to Bogotá, the financial and political capital, tens of thousands of people turned out to watch the signing of the historic ‘End of Conflict’ agreement on big screens in main…

Features |
Argentine Culture Wars: writing Kirchnerism out of history

Argentina has always been a country of extremes and now is no different. With the change of government in Argentina, there is not only a change in cultural direction, but a determination to write the ideas of 'the other…

Features | Human Rights, Society
RUNNING FOR JUSTICE

Wall to wall coverage - but 43 students remain missing in Mexico. Karen Harding meets a new generation of London based human rights campaigners looking to turn the spotlight on the unfolding tragedy of the disappeared students in…

Features | Human Rights, Society
Signs of Hope for the Munduruku

Two important advances for the Munduruku Indians in the Brazilian Amazon in recent days suggest that they could pull off an extraordinary victory.

Features |
Brazil: The Morning After the Night Before

So, the Chamber of Deputies has voted to proceed with the impeachment of the President. What next?

First Person | Society
The Blue Line to Cali

Mirca Moreira revels in the short London journey that quenches her craving for a little piece of Colombia.

Features | Human Rights, Politics
Colombia Brings Hope

Kristian Herbolzheimer, a key analyst in the soon-to-be-signed Colombia peace agreement, explains how this historic achievement came about and its significance for Colombia and the world.

Features |
Maracujá, the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party and the March of Folly

When tempers run high in Brazil - as they are over the clamour for Dilma's Impeachment - ask for passion fruit juice to calm the nerves. And so it was done in Congress' special session on the matter, where the Attorney…

Spotlight on... | Culture, Society
The UK's Top Colombian Movers and Shakers

Take a trip to Elephant and Castle or Seven Sisters’ indoor market and you’d be forgiven for thinking that you’d been transported to Colombia. Salsa blaring out of little shops, couples dancing between tables in mid-afternoon,…

Features | Politics
Brazil: Full Speed Ahead for Impeachment

Jan Rocha reports on the attempted impeachment of Dilma and fears of vested interests behind it

Features | Society
Altamira: Victim of the Belo Monte Construction Boom

Sue Branford chronicles the rapid development in the town of Altamira in the Brazilian Amazon, whose inhabitants have yet to reep any benefits.

Features | Human Rights
Colombia: Commemorating the Mulatos Massacre

On 21st February 2005, paramilitaries and Colombian soldiers massacred eight people from two hamlets of the San Jose Peace Community, in Apartadó, Colombia. Despite assassinations and forced displacement since the Peace Community…

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