Leonidas Iza, Ecuador’s presidential candidate with the Indigenous-aligned Pachakutik political movement, outlines his vision ...
Through storytelling and analysis, Blanc’s book tells an interior history of Brazil by recounting the political initiatives ...
Mexico's experience with the militarization of prohibition and migration is defined by violence and displacement.
Activists link the disappearance of land defender Julia Chuñil to the state’s militarization of the region and its deep ties ...
The North American Congress on Latin America (NACLA) is an independent, nonprofit organization founded in 1966 to examine and critique U.S. imperialism and political, economic, and military ...
This investigative podcast series takes listeners across Latin America to the scenes of some of the region’s most devastating, revolutionary, and historic moments. In Season 1, independent journalist ...
Trump's threat to take back the Panama Canal signals a new era of U.S. expansionism and the greatest attack on Central American sovereignty since the 1990s.
As of 2016, the NACLA Report is published by Routledge/Taylor & Francis. Each issue, a select number of articles are available open access for a limited time. Read recent NACLA Report articles on our ...
Bret Gustafson teaches anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis. He is author of Bolivia in the Age of Gas (Duke, 2020) and New Languages of the State: Indigenous Resurgence and the Politics ...
In Mexico City, families of the disappeared mobilize for justice for their loved ones and the accountability of forensic authorities.
In 1968, NACLA published the pamphlet "Who Rules Columbia?" an attempt to turn the tools of power-structure research on the university, and to elaborate the greivances behind the 1968 student strike.
In 2022, Guyana became the first country in the world to issue carbon credits on a national scale. Indigenous people say they were excluded from the negotiations and criticize the loss of autonomy in ...
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