Justice without Judges
By Sebastián Lalinde Ordóñez |
Not all conflicts have to reach the judicial system for resolution given the existence of highly effective mechanisms like direct agreements between parties without the intervention of a third party (be that a judge, conciliator, arbiter, etc.).
Read more Yoreli Rincón’s Goal
By Nina Chaparro González |
Just a few months from the 2015 Women's FIFA World Cup in Canada, we do not know if the national media will broadcast it.
Read more Law and Reconciliation in Colombia
By Nelson Camilo Sánchez León, Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes |
Here's how to achieve both justice and reconciliation.
Read more Peru and COP 20: Among Violence and Forests
By Carlos Andrés Baquero Díaz |
Chota’s death is not an isolated incident within Peru, but rather is yet one of many instances of violence in the history of violence perpetuated against local leaders who fight for the protection of their lands, forests and jungles.
Read more Racial Discrimination in Latin America: The “Pigmentocracy” Approach
By Juan Andrés Páez López |
In general terms, the study proves what many already knew intuitively: the darker the person’s skin tone, the worse his quality of life in Latin America.
Read more Mediocrity and Fraud
By Mauricio García Villegas |
Karl-Theodor Zu Guttembertg, German Minister of Defense and star politician of the center right, had to resign in March 2011 when it was revealed that he had copied parts of his doctoral thesis.
Read more An Independent DANE?
By Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes |
Now that the balance of powers has been discussed so widely, is it not worth it to promote a truly independent statistical public institution? (DANE is the Colombian government's bureaucracy charged with developing statistical reports, much like the U.S. CBO)
Read more Radicalized Environment
By César Rodríguez-Garavito (Retired in 2019) |
We need to "deradicalize" the debate about the environment.
Read more Did the Amazon’s lifesaver get punctured?
By Carlos Andrés Baquero Díaz, Diana Rodríguez Franco |
The Santos adminsitration's good intentions in the Amazon have been undone by its own actions. As told by La Silla Vacía, in August 2012 ex-Minster of the Environment Frank Pearl, before leaving office, threw a lifesaver for the Amazon. Pearl released Resolution 1518 of 2012, which establishes that no one can drill any part of the Amazon classified as Forest Reserve (according to Law 2 of 1959) for mining activities, until the Ministry of the Environment zoned the territory. In other words, until it defined which areas of the Amazon territory classified as Forest Reserve-- the large majority (see Map 1)-- should be protected and which can house economic projects, among them mining.
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