One region, all voices

Tag: Ideas

Pandemics not only expose but also exacerbate social inequalities, becoming more deadly and prolonged in contexts where inequity is greatest.
Latin America faces a historic crossroads: to adapt to artificial intelligence designed by others, or to create its own technological future with justice and digital sovereignty.
From Morocco to Peru, Generation Z is transforming platforms such as Discord into their new public square, where outrage is organized, votes are cast, and action is born.
Dina Boluarte’s fall reflects Peru’s deeper democratic fatigue, revealing structural crises, social fractures, and the failure of representation.
Many people share left-wing ideas but feel an emotional rejection toward the parties that promote them, revealing that today trust carries more weight than the platform.
In a region marked by deep inequalities, artificial intelligence reflects and amplifies society’s gender biases, turning a technological challenge into a human development problem.
In Ecuador, every political crisis finds its way out at the ballot box, but the successive popular consultations have ended up reinforcing the cycle of uncertainty rather than fostering institutional renewal.
The removal of Dina Boluarte is not an isolated event, but rather the confirmation of the pattern of instability that has characterized Latin American presidencies for more than four decades.
The attempt by Bolsonarism to promote an amnesty law for those convicted of the 2022 assault on democracy rekindles in Brazil the debate over the limits of political forgiveness and the risk of turning justice into an instrument of impunity.
Colombia’s Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP) rulings expose FARC kidnappings and “false positives” as state crimes, marking a historic step toward truth and reconciliation.