Endorsement, abstention and blank ballot
By Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes |
A critique to the so-called "plebiscite for peace" is that it replaced the "participation threshold" (UP) for an "approval threshold" (UA), which deprives abstention from having legal effects. The latter would be anti-democratic and would violate the right to "active abstention," which the Constitutional Court has recognized in citizen participation mechanisms such as referendums, plebiscites or consultations.
Blank ballot and endorsement
By Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes |
José Manuel Acevedo proposed, in his most recent column, that the Constitutional Court signal that in the "plebiscite for peace" (which, in reality, is closer to a people's consultation) voters are allowed to cast blank ballots.
Five years of land restitution
By Nelson Camilo Sánchez León |
While public attention has been focused on recent announcements about the peace process, the fact that the Victims' Law just reached five years of existence has gone almost unnoticed.
Multiculturalism, for what?
By Carlos Andrés Baquero Díaz |
Two steps against corruption at the Office of the Prosecutor
By Vivian Newman Pont |
Sixteen ministers and Vice President Vargas Lleras have already made public their assets and income. The whole Cabinet accepted an invitation by President Santos's and by a Transparency for Colombia campaign to disclose the income of public officials.
The Conundrum of Political Humor
By |
The crime against comedian Jaime Garzón has been solved. This was what the prosecutor managed to say recently. Maybe it's my own ignorance, but I don't think any light has been shed on the death of political humor in Colombia
Body Politics: Governing Women’s Bodies
By Isabel Pereira Arana |
Women’s bodies are a battleground for the meanings vested in them, and for the social and cultural resources expected to be obtained by intervening on them. Two modes of intervention on the body show this, and pose particular risks for girls: Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) and plastic surgery.
A Constitutional Peace and a Constitution During Peace
By Diana Isabel Güiza Gómez, Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes |
Both a plebiscite and an act of the legislature are part of a normative system, and they must be interpreted together, not in a disjointed way.
After conflict, forgiveness will not be the most important: lessons from Sierra Leone
By Nicolás Torres Echeverry |
I attended a two-week international workshop on post-conflict politics that brought together over 150 people from war-torn countries. Most of them came from places with civil wars like Colombia, while others were from countries involved in large external wars with serious internal repercussions. There were people from Liberia, Mali, Sri Lanka, India, Egypt, Ethiopia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Turkey, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sudan, Mexico, Yemen, and Nepal. All their stories are striking, interesting, and share similarities with the Colombian case.
