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Economic Justice

Columns & Blogs

What Could Happen If Latin America Questions the Utopia of a World without Drugs at the UN?

The prohibitionist utopia of a “world without drugs” expressed in the Conventions on Narcotic Drugs signed in 1961, 1971, and 1988, is just that: an unreachable utopia.
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Memory and Atrocities

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.

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Radio Debates

In Colombia the radio has greatly developed, encouraged perhaps by difficult geography and poor communication among regions. Lacking highways, Colombians have communicated through radiowaves.

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The Subtle Vengeance of the Law

"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.

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Asking For Forgiveness or Permission

Data management cannot be done by any means and much of that data can affect people's privacy.

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Watching Out from the South

For now, most anti-corruption activists demand for greater transparency. My specific call is that just as the global South human rights movement has enriched the debate on human rights generally, something similar could happen with anti-corruption monitoring from our countries.
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The Politics of Human Rights Policies at the OAS

The relationship of member states with the OAS and the structure of human rights have changed over time. This conference, given within the framework of the event "Impact and Future Directions for the Inter-American Human Rights System" May 29th in Puerto Rico, analyzes in what manner it has evolved.

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Profamilia’s Campaign

In Colombia abortion is legal in three exceptional cases: when the life or health of the pregnant woman is at risk, when the fetus' malformations make it impossible from him/her to live outside the uterus, and when the pregnancy is a result of a carnal violation.

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More Catholic Than the Pope

For those that were educated in Catholic schools during John Paul II's papacy, to be more Catholic than the pope meant defending ultraconservative positions on topics like birth control or the rights of women and same-sex couples.

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