Society and Politics In-depth Interviews
First Person | History
“It is only a question of time.” The Last Days of Salvador Allende – an insider’s story

Isabel Camus worked for Chile’s nationalized copper company and was a close aide of Salvador Allende. In the days leading up to the coup in 1973, Isabel travelled to Europe to try to counteract a big legal operation mounted by…

In-depth Interviews | History
“Che had the voice of a brother”

Ciro Bustos was Che Guevara’s right-hand man in Argentina and survivor of Che’s Bolivia campaign. Once accused of betraying Che, in his new book ‘Che Wants to See You’ Ciro relates what really happened and his life beside the…

Features | Politics
For As Long As It Takes

The story of the men who have been camped on Buenos Aires’ Plaza de Mayo for two and a half years

Features | Human Rights
Screaming for Justice

A Chilean brought up in Britain returns home to find that little justice has been achieved for Pinochet's victims, despite four years of a president, Michelle Bachelet, who was tortured under the dictatorship of General…

Spotlight on... | Politics
Porfirio Lobo Sosa

Lobo who? You mean wolf? Oooh, I’m scared…

Features | Society
Argentina's strange brand of nationalism

Argentine nationalistic fervour rests on symbol and myth. This can be impossibly romantic – or eerily macabre. We look at the strange phenomenon of Argentine national fervour from Perón to the present day

First Person |
Confessions of a Coolhunter

Amaranta Wright was hired by Levi's to travel through Latin America, befriending teenagers and reporting their ideas, hopes and aspirations. As time passed, the more sinister and divisive aspects of what she was being asked…

Opinion |
Argentina's Bi-Centenary: Something to Celebrate?

As several South American countries celebrate 200 years of independence, Nick Caistor gives a view from Argentina.

Opinion |
Richard Gott on Argentina's Bi-Centenary Celebrations

Renowned for his critical-thinking 'people's histories' of Latin America, the UK's most authoritative Latin Americanist - author of 'Land Without Evil' and 'Cuba: A New History' - explores…

Obituaries |
Patrick Rice

The Irish Priest who became one of Latin America's most committed and loved Human Rights activists. He dedicated his life to the defence of human dignity and to the hope of a better world

Things You Should Know About... | Politics
... Latin American Revolutionaries

1. Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara – Ask anyone to name a revolutionary and, male or female, the word Che will ooze dreaminly from their lips. The straggly-haired, wispy-bearded, implausibly handsome Argentine hero of the Cuban revolution…

Postcard From... |
... Bogotá

Like strangling puppies or bankers’ bonuses, bullfighting does not enjoy a good press in the UK. Yet here and now in Colombia, it’s fashionable. As a resident of Bogotá’s La Macarena barrio, I could hardly be nearer to the…

Features | Society
The Roma Gypsies of Colombia

Hazel Marsh celebrates the community that is conspicuously ignored by Latin American history books and modern day media.

Features |
2012 and The End of the World as we know it… Mayan Prophecy or Hollywood Hoax?

Based on the ancient Mayan prophecy, the recent Hollywood blockbuster 2012 depicts the imminent end of the world. How much of it relays truth as the Mayans saw it and, more importantly, what did the Mayans know that we don’t?

Features | Politics
In Colombia, Who Needs to Invent a False Victim, President Santos?

While Santos enjoys an official visit to the UK, his inflamatory remarks about a group of human rights lawyers who have worked for years to end impunity in Colombia, has left them fearing for their lives in Bogotá. What does this…

Features | Human Rights
Gay Marriage Legalized in Argentina Despite Huge Opposition From Church

On Thursday the 15th of July, Argentina became the first country in Latin America to legalize gay marriage, granting to gay and lesbian couples the same legal rights and benefits that heterosexual couples have traditionally…

Features | Society
Making their Mark - the rise and rise of The Latino-Brits

First generation Latino-Brits are bubbling under the surface and seeping through into mainstream British cultural life.

Things That Matter To | Politics
Things That Matter to ...Aleida Guevara

Aleida Guevara was the first born of Ernesto “Che” Guevara’s seven children. The Argentine-born revolutionary fought in Cuba and the Congo before dying in Bolivia in 1967 at the age of 39. Aleida has grown up with an iconic…

Blog | Society
Why we should save Pueblito Paisa

Maria Castro makes a case against the demolition of Seven Sister's indoor market, where Colombians who have fled displacement to build a livelihood, face displacement again.

Features | Politics
The Change in the Latino Vote

Once thought of as natural Republicans, Barack Obama captured the hearts of Latinos in the last US election. But the words 'American Dream' are no longer enough, they want help to achieve it. In the run up to the 2012…

Things You Should Know About... | Society
Things You Should Know About….Santería

Santeria is a belief system that travelled from West Africa to the Caribbean and is now practiced all over Latin America, the US and even Europa. Yet much fear, mystery and misunderstanding surrounds it. To explode some of the…

Porque No Te Callas? |
Favourite Quotes From our Favourite Latinos

We have dedicated this section to the fond memory of President Hugo Chávez being told, in mid-rant, 'why don't you just shut up?' by the King of Spain. Candela celebrates the gaff, the rant and the good 'ole…

Obituaries | Politics
Life After Kirchner

The death of former president leaves power vacuum in Argentina.

In-depth Interviews | Politics
The Iraq Inquiry Needs this Brazilian!

Few people know that José Bustani was one of the single biggest obstacles to Tony Blair and George Bush’s plans for regime change in Iraq. He had to be got rid of. For the first time the recent Brazilian Ambassador to Britain…

Features | Politics
The Uribe Legacy: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

In his eight years as president Álvaro Uribe changed Colombia. But was it all for the best?

Features |
The President and the Miners

Chilean president enjoys his moment in the spotlight after rescuing ‘the 33’. But beneath the media coverage he is in danger of burying some more complex issues.

Features | Politics
¿Viva la Revolución? What happened to Mexico’s Zapatista Movement...

“Excuse the inconvenience, but this is a revolution,” proclaimed Subcomandante Marcos on the 1st January 1994. But in 2010, is it just a mild inconvenience that the government and media readily ignore, or is the Zapatista…

In-depth Interviews | Politics
Evo Morales, President of Bolivia

Ana Caistor-Arendar falls under the Aymaran charm of Bolivia’s first indigenous president.

Things You Should Know About... | History, Human Rights
Latin American Liberation Theologists

Liberation theology is a brand of Catholicism that prioritises the helping of the poor by actively seeking social change, and came to prominence in Latin America in the 1970s and 1980s. Many priests who took this position were…

Spotlight on... | Politics
Abimael Guzman

Yes Peru’s most notorious inmate! I hear he wants another ball and chain...

First Person | Human Rights
Bodyguard Grandmother

Human shield in Colombia at 65? A daughter leaves London to find her mother who has decided to be an ‘unarmed bodyguard’ in the Colombian jungle.

Features | History
Los Niños Vascos and The English Lord

In 1937, as Bilbao was being bombarded, 4,000 Basque children arrived in Southamption, thanks to some extraordinary individuals who defied the British government's official policy of appeasement (which ultimately contributed…

Features | Society
Modern Spain: Stylizing the Stereotypes?

Spain is a country that attracts strong stereotypes. Images of wife-beating machos, blood thirsty sports and crazy drivers may have dissolved since the years of Franco isolation, but siestas, fiestas and Flamenco is still what…

Features | History
Sarmiento: Argentine National Hero or Ideologue of White Settler Racism?

2011's Latin American bi-centenaries saw governments celebrating their national heroes again. In Argentina, a broader process of revising its recent 'Dirty War' history has made many eager to revisit their more…

Features | History
Sarmiento: The Forging of a Racist Ideologue (part 2)

In this second part of our article on the Argentine national hero, we travel with Sarmiento to Africa where he took notes on how the French waged war on the natives to promote white immigration and settlement. The lessons he…

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