Sexual violence in the Special Jurisdiction for Peace: more penalties do not mean more truth
By Ana Jimena Bautista |
More important than the symbolic message that Congress intended to give by increasing the penalties for sexual violence against children is that truth and justice do in fact exist.
Read more Why talk about rural Cartagena?
By Irina Alejandra Junieles Acosta |
91.1% of Cartagena is rural: according to the SISBEN, approximately 70,000 of those who live in the 551 square kilometers face a situation of vulnerability. There, extreme poverty is four times what it is in urban areas.
Read more What happens with rural reform in Montes de María?
By Irina Alejandra Junieles Acosta |
The delays in the construction of Development Programs with a Territorial Approach are shortening the time to guarantee spaces for the effective participation of communities and can endanger this citizen exercise if it overlaps with electoral campaigns.
Read more The reduction of penalties for small growers is necessary
By Lucía Ramírez Bolívar |
The Ministry of Justice's proposal, a bill that regulates the differential criminal treatment for small coca, marihuana and poppy growers, proposes a permanent reduction of penalties for the cultivation and conservation offenses. This reform is an urgent and necessary step towards drug reform policy.
Read more Human rights, climate change and displacement: Where do we even begin?
By Camila Bustos |
As climate-induced displacement forces more and more people to move, the international community grapples with the challenge of how to define, categorize, and respond to the phenomenon. While the loss of place is irreplaceable, we can certainly implement a human rights approach to move forward in a way that does justice to the needs of those directly affected.
Read more Bittersweet sentence
By Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes |
The ruling of the Constitutional Court on the Special Jurisdiction for Peace has ambiguous effects: it could give a stronger floor to the JEP and peace, but for now everyone seems dissatisfied.
Read more The invisible city
By Mauricio García Villegas |
Citizen culture, which is a very important part of what a city is, is an invisible form of capital that cannot be sold on the stock market, but that is worth a lot.
Read more Obese and famished
By César Rodríguez Garavito (Se retiró en 2019) |
According to the latest Survey on the Nutritional Situation of Colombians, which was released this week, overweight rates in adults and children increased. This revelation opened the debate once again to imposing limits on ultra-processed food advertising and a tax on sugary drinks.
Read more Restricting junk food advertising: censorship or health protection?
By Diana Guarnizo |
It is time for Latin America to take on the challenge and decide whether commercial speech needs to be protected over children’s health or whether it can be restricted in order to prevent increasing children’s obesity rates. The recent decision by the Colombian Constitutional Court is a good step forward, but it is not enough.
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