News
“Seville’s commitment” must not remain on paper
By Mariana Matamoros, Sergio Chaparro Hernández | | Financing for Development, Human Rights, ONU
Climate budgets
By Mariana Matamoros | | climate budgets, Tax policy, Taxes and climate change
News
Search in News
“Seville’s commitment” must not remain on paper
By Mariana Matamoros, Sergio Chaparro Hernández | | Financing for Development, Human Rights, ONU
Climate budgets
By Mariana Matamoros | | climate budgets, Tax policy, Taxes and climate change
Taxes and spending with a sense of social justice
By Mariana Matamoros | | Climate Change, Colombia, Justicia Fiscal, Tax justice, Tax policy, taxes
What’s in the shopping cart: the hidden history of “neutral” taxes
By Diana Esther Guzmán Rodríguez, Mariana Matamoros | | care work, Inequality, neutral taxes, tax system
The Hungarian Case and its Anti-NGO Laws
By Nina Chaparro González, Oliver Hodges-Jackson | | Authoritarianism, civil society, Closure of civil society spaces, NGOs non-governmental organizations
Reclaiming multilateralism for a shared future
By Christy Crouse, Abby Steckel | | Estados Unidos, Multilateralismo, Trump
Search in Opinion
Memory and Atrocities
By Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes | | Comisión de la verdad, Comisión de la verdad, Conflicto armado, Posconflicto
The French philosopher Jean Francois Lyotard proposed a suggestive metaphor about the difficulty a society has in recording the truth and remembering a period of mass atrocities, like the genocide by the Nazis.
Radio Debates
By Mauricio García Villegas | | Acceso a la información, Acceso a la información, Colombia, Colombia, Medios, Medios
In Colombia the radio has greatly developed, encouraged perhaps by difficult geography and poor communication among regions. Lacking highways, Colombians have communicated through radiowaves.
The Subtle Vengeance of the Law
By César Rodríguez-Garavito (Retired in 2019) | | Derecho a la paz, Derecho a la paz, Justicia, Marco jurídico para la paz
"The rich don't need the law because they already have money and power; it is the poor that need the law," once said Albie Sachs, the lengendary South African activist that advised Mandela in the peace dialogues and became judge of the first post-Apartheid Constitutional Court.
Stories
FromTheTerritory
We travel with 20 indigenous activists of the world to the heart of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta. Listen to this story about the Kankuama Resistance.
Dejusticia's
Documentaries
Discover some of the documentary pieces that we have made. Indigenous resistance, migration of Venezuelans to Colombia and stories of women coca growers, are some of our topics of interest.
