One region, all voices

Tag: Ideas

For a long time, the development model in Latin America and the Caribbean followed an upward trajectory: escaping poverty through economic growth would lead to the emergence of a stable middle class.
The constant purges and widespread discontent suggest that many will betray the first lady in order to seek a new direction for the nation in the face of the imminent succession.
The country is currently experiencing a cycle of public dissatisfaction and institutional questioning that goes beyond the current situation, forcing us to look a little further back.
In a scenario of information proliferation, misinformation, and attacks on the press, journalistic ethics become even more important.
Far from ushering in a new era of gender justice, Sheinbaum's administration has overseen devastating budget cuts to women's services.
If, in the October elections—when many provinces will renew deputies and senators—the government highlights the president during the campaign, the economic vote, in a year of growth, could work in its favor.
Geopolitics is applied today to almost everything, but its frequent use is fraught with limited approaches and prejudices that impoverish rather than enrich the analysis.
Regulatory frameworks and international cooperation must be strengthened to effectively combat these threats to Latin America's economic and social stability.
Faced with a changing international order, the Greater Caribbean must urgently assume a firm and coordinated integration in order to leave fragmentation behind and consolidate itself as a relevant geostrategic actor.
Today's politics is no longer explained only with ideologies or programs, but with emotions and digital narratives. Understanding why figures like Bukele and Milei dominate this new language is key to understanding -and disputing- power in the 21st century.