LGBTQ Rights in Latin America and the Caribbean: No Longer a Left-Right Issue
To understand why some LGBTQ movements in the region have stalled —and to advocate for future change—we have to look beyond party ideology.
To understand why some LGBTQ movements in the region have stalled —and to advocate for future change—we have to look beyond party ideology.
Chile could become a global beacon for a younger generation of social democrats, inspiring new leaders from Brazil to Belarus. To do so, Boric will need to find balance as well as inspiration for a brighter, inclusive, and more modern Chilean model in the years to come.
Brazilians learned they have a gay governor; LGBTQ acceptance is expanding in some countries; and Chile adopted full marriage equality.
The Chilean election poses a positive, if selective, narrative about Chile’s past and its remarkable transformation, against a new generation’s discontent with some parts of that transformation and the problems it has generated or failed to resolve.
This November, voters in five countries across Latin America head to the polls. In Chile, Argentina, and Honduras, the electorate will have an opportunity to choose from an array of candidates from different ideological backgrounds. In Nicaragua and Venezuela, free and fair elections are far from guaranteed.
Several major Latin American leaders spoke this week at the 76th session of the United Nations (UN) General Assembly in New York City, largely echoing common concerns about climate change and the unequal distribution of COVID-19 vaccines internationally.
The 155 delegates to Chile’s constitutional convention share an obvious goal—drafting a constitution—but it is far from clear whether they share a common view on much else. What will their unprecedented focus on personal and collective identities mean for Chile’s new constitution and the future of Chile’s existing institutional order?
Para que la democracia funcione, los políticos deberían hacer mayores esfuerzos por cumplir sus promesas de campaña. Es más, cuando los candidatos se comprometen a hacer algo o a oponerse a algo, una vez electos debieran hacer lo imposible por hacerlo realidad.