
The Bicentennial Framework: opportunities and challenges as U.S.-Mexico security cooperation begins a new chapter
On October 8, 2021, the governments of Mexico and the United States announced a new security cooperation plan: the Bicentennial…
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On October 8, 2021, the governments of Mexico and the United States announced a new security cooperation plan: the Bicentennial…
Since the intensification of the war on crime in Mexico nearly fifteen years ago—characterized by the deployment of the armed…
The incoming Biden administration offers a chance for a massive reset of the Trump administration’s illegal and unprecedentedly cruel and…
The murder of environmental activist Adán Vez Lira in Veracruz state on April 8—the same day that the slain body…
A new study by the Research Consortium on Drugs and the Law (Colectivo de Estudios Drogas y Derecho, CEDD) analyzes…
Strengthening Military’s Role in Fighting Crime Puts Human Rights at Risk In a troubling development for Mexico, the country’s new…
As the political, social, and economic crisis in Venezuela worsens, more and more Venezuelans are fleeing their country. Countries across…
The people in the videos are featured because they represent the rarely revealed human side of the war on drugs.
By Ximena Suárez Enriquez, WOLA Associate, José Knippen, Researcher at Fundar, and Maureen Meyer, WOLA Senior Associate This report was produced…
The successes and failures of Rio de Janeiro’s Police Pacification Units offers important lessons learned for other countries in the region looking to move away from “mano dura” security policies.
After decades of failed policies, the U.S. is finally reconsidering the mass incarceration model it promoted in Latin America. The paradigm shift opens up space for reforms in Latin America.
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