The EU trans-Atlantic relations should not exclude Latin America
On the historic date of March 08th – International Women’s Day, a large number of international affairs specialists gathered for the second consecutive summit in Vienna, Austria. This leg of the Vienna Process titled: “Europe – Future – Neighbourhood at 75: Disruptions Recalibration Continuity”. The conference, jointly organized by the Modern Diplomacy, IFIMES and their partners, with the support of the Diplomatic Academy of Vienna, was aimed at discussing the future of Europe and its neighbourhood in the wake of its old and new challenges.[1]
Along with the two acting State Presidents, the event was endorsed by the keynote of the
Georgia State University, Clinton Global Initiative Partner To Improve Educational Opportunity In The Caribbean
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Tackling the pandemic: examining the role of social movements and organizations in Argentina
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No split in army - yet
Derek James details the brutal response to the mass protest movement in Colombia and what needs to be done to avoid yet another failure
A wave of protests and strikes is sweeping Colombia and is being met with brutal state repression, which has resulted so far in more than 50 deaths.
The protests began on April 28, initially in response to government tax reforms that favoured the wealthy and fell hardest on the poorest sections of society. But they have now broadened into a much wider attack on the Duque government’s policies.
2 Alongside protests organised by the main trade union federation, the Central Unitaria de Trabajadores (CUT), youth movements, small-business owners, peasant farmers and indigenous people have also been mobilised.
Twelve-year-old Moises Bracamonte knows how to prepare fertiliser and water the black beans and corn that his family grows in Venezuela’s western Tachira state. He says the most difficult part of agricultural work is “breaking the ground” to sow the seeds without a tractor or an ox.
“Why is it difficult with a pick? Because the pick is heavy, and you have to do a lot of picking if you have a lot of seeds,” he said in an interview in the living room of his house in Cordero, a town some 800km (500 miles) southwest of Caracas.
With schools closed and no access to the internet, Moises and his 11-year-old brother Jesus help their father, also named Moises, 58, grow the food that provides for their family, something they almost never did before the coronavirus pandemic.