The International Criminal Court and Negotiated Peace: Lessons from Colombia
By Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes, Nelson Camilo Sánchez León |
Territorial Peace without Environmental Peace?
By César Rodríguez-Garavito (Retired in 2019) |
Cajamarca-- This week, in a session of the city council meeting of this corner of Tolima, it was clear that the future of peace is in municipalities like this one, as the national Government and the United Nations have said.
Trusting Each Other’s Choices
By Nathalia Sandoval Rojas |
If the Colombian Constitutional Court trusts that heterosexuals and homosexuals alike can decide who makes up their families, the debate about homoparental families should not end.
Santos’ Plan without Afros
By Ana Margarita González Vásquez, Carlos Andrés Baquero Díaz |
Should the Santos administration have consulted afro-descendent communities before presenting the National Development Plan before Congress?
Should the Use of the Bull Plaza for Bullfighting Be Decided by Popular Consultation?
By César Rodríguez-Garavito (Retired in 2019) |
New "For and Against" session by the newspaper @ElEspectador. Lawyer César Rodríguez-Garavito and columnist Antonio Caballero argue their positions.
The ICC and Negotiated Peace: Reflections from Colombia
By Nelson Camilo Sánchez León, Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes |
The Colombian case shows the need for flexibility in balancing the duty to prosecute international crimes with the duty to negotiate an end to the civil war.
State-Sanctioned Femicide: How Criminalizing Abortion Puts Women’s Lives at Risk
By Celeste Kauffman |
From #JeSuisCharlie to #YoSoyBonil
By César Rodríguez-Garavito (Retired in 2019) |
The court hearing tomorrow, in which the Ecuadorian cartoonist Xavier Bonil (also known as Bonil) could be convicted, evinces the Correa administration's growing intolerance against satire and civil liberties.
Referendum as Process
By Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes |
One of the problems with the discussion about a referendum on the peace accord in that many give it at least two different meanings, which are linked but are important to distinguish, to debate the issue more productively and find better solutions.
