
Q&A: The Threats Facing Honduras’s Fight Against Corruption
Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández has until January 19 to decide whether or not to renew the mandate of internationally-backed…
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Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández has until January 19 to decide whether or not to renew the mandate of internationally-backed…
For much of the past decade, Guatemala’s citizenry lived through something unprecedented in the country: a popular anti-corruption movement. The…
Over the last decade, victims of human rights abuses and their families, defenders, prosecutors, and other advocates for justice persisted…
Taking Stock of the Government’s Performance in Addressing Key Human Rights Concerns Since taking office last December, Mexican President Andrés…
On February 24, Cubans went to the polls to vote on the ratification of a new constitution, one that makes…
Guatemala’s most notorious dictator, retired army general José Efraín Ríos Montt, died last Sunday of a heart attack at the…
The prison population throughout Latin America has been growing steadily for the past few decades. Harsh drug laws and anti-gang…
On April 24, 2016, the Group of Experts appointed by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to provide technical assistance in the investigation of the case of the 43 disappeared students in Mexico presented its final report.
Maureen Meyer examines Mexico’s proposed gendarmerie—a force to be made up of tens of thousands of former soldiers—and its potential implications for human rights.
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