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Economic Justice

Columns & Blogs

From Civilization to Barbarism

In the Law Faculty of the University of Antioquia there is a plaque (I guess it is still there today) honoring the judges who were murdered in 1985 in the Palace of Justice siege. It reads: "If the appearance of a judges signals the transition from a natural state to a civilized coexistente, their brutal sacrifice in the crossfire of intransigents is the most dramatic symbol of the return to the barbarism."
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Regulating Prior Consultation in South America

I provide an implementation map of the right to FPIC in Latin America, showcasing the countries that have created national legislation to implement the right.
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It Depends on How It Goes

If we had to measure how much a person respects the rule of law, I would propose that we count the number of times a person complies with the law, regardless of whether they end up harmed by complying with it or whether they ideologically agree with the law.
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The Long Road Toward Inter-American Justice

The Inter-American System’s individual complaint procedure is in many cases the only opportunity for thousands of people in the Americas to be heard and eventually receive an effective remedy.
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Electoral Fraud

In Colombia, politicians don't resign themselves to losing. Once a congressional election for is over we witness the same ritual of the losers denouncing that the winners committed fraud (along with the electoral authorities).
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Black Communities in the Islands of Rosario: Between Tourism Development and Environmental Regulation

The government could formulate a policy that reconciles the rights of the community, the protection of the environment, and the development of tuorism to resolve these tensions.
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Drones: For Good or for Bad?

The US’ failure gives the global South a perfect opportunity to take a leading role in using drones in a way that respects international law and human rights.
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Less than What the Land Gives Us

According to a popular saying, societies have the governments they deserve, and by extension, the customs and politicians they deserve. There is something both true and false about this saying.
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“First World Problems:” Why Can’t Everyone Have Them?

I am sure the unemployed, the homeless, the families going hungry in the United States and Europe, as well as in India, China and South Africa, can remind global elites that we still have a long way to go in ensuring that all people have a respectable standard of living.
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