NACLA is currently accepting proposals for our Winter 2026 issue on state violence, insecurity, and the political production of “criminality.”
More details: https://t.co/sK3YdGJtj2
My article on Colombia's elections in @nacla: "When the runoff comes on June 21, the Colombian people will face a clear choice between deepening Petro’s progressive policies or a decline into the barbarity of fascism and a return to some of the darkest points in Colombia’s recent history." https://t.co/xzI2KsHq10
Abelardo de la Espriella’s first-round victory demonstrated the strength of the country's surging populist far-right, putting the left in a bind.
https://t.co/ZSOTF1aiNP
Despite co-hosting a milestone climate conference, the Netherlands has left the Dutch Caribbean islands alone in their fight against climate change.
https://t.co/uVo3FJSOin
37 leaked messages. The biggest scandal you're hearing nothing about. A shocking network pushing to undermine leftist leaders. And it implicates the Trump administration, Israel, Argentina's Javier Millei, and a load of right-wing Honduran officials #UndertheShadow@mfox_us@nacla@extremearturo@albmaresca
https://t.co/PcEgqaYGBX
Read this week's newsletter for original reporting on protests in Bolivia and China's presence in Bogotá. Read as well about Colombia's elections, Peru's runoff, Mexico's striking teachers, and more.
https://t.co/apnPeKHg0S
As Peru heads toward another polarized runoff, the country remains caught between two competing visions of the national future.
https://t.co/MjMGaZ7LsJ
Write for NACLA! We're accepting proposals for our Winter 2026 issue on state violence, insecurity, and the political production of “criminality.”
https://t.co/RGEP4vx8dF
Fuel shortages, inflation, and political exclusion have triggered a wave of fragmented unrest with no clear movement capable of channeling popular anger.
https://t.co/UhUOUS8BlF
Our editors revisited decades of coverage and curated this open access selection to help readers understand how Cuba’s current crisis has been years in the making, and the roles the U.S. and Latin American countries have played in shaping it.
https://t.co/j6WstQHtNu
China’s presence in Colombia is no longer an abstract geopolitical discussion but rather a reality negotiated day by day through construction work, commercial exchange, language learning, and personal relationships.
https://t.co/HIVGhrga70
One week left to send us your pitch for the Winter 2026 issue: Narcoterrorism, State Power, and Transnational Criminal Organizations Reconsidered ⏰⏰
More info:
https://t.co/RGEP4vx8dF
Read this week's newsletter for an original web series on Haiti's path to liberation and the dispute over Essequibo. Read as well about U.S. threats against Cuba, Bolivia protests, a Bolsonaro scandal, Peru's runoff, U.S. strikes, and more.
https://t.co/Ey8isM0pmV
📘 Book Review Friday📘
Katia Chornik's book details how music was used as a form of torture and resistance during the Pinochet dictatorship.
Read Ramona Wadi's review for NACLA
https://t.co/uDBjpBNQrb
The Trump administration's indictment of Raúl Castro, a clear pretense for invasion, is but the latest in more than six decades of U.S. war on the island and its revolution.
For more on this war, as well as more than a decade of writing on the island's revolutionary process, changing society, and regional impact, check out the "Making of Cuba's Crisis," a guide to NACLA 's best coverage, hand-picked by our editors.
https://t.co/fIuN9cRnuc
“On May 11, oral arguments concluded over the fate of Essequibo. At stake is the ownership of the most commercially viable sweet light oil reserves in the world.”
My latest in @NACLA, with contributions from @venanalysis, @TamanishaJohn, Hintzen, Main, Rosales, and Tinker-Salas.
A 185-year-old territorial dispute between Venezuela and Guyana reveals the enduring contradictions of U.S. foreign policy in the Caribbean, with the “Donroe Doctrine” introducing fresh diplomatic risks.
Read Logan McMillen's (@South_Gradient) latest analysis for NACLA 👇
https://t.co/j03Y17FMDk