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Society

What Will It Take? Reversing Alves’ Rape Conviction Tells Women They’re Still Not Safe

A Spanish court has quashed a rape conviction against a Barcelona soccer star, describing it as based, technically speaking, on evidence that was not compelling. This can only further discourage women already daunted by having to take an aggressor to court.

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Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics

Viva American Democracy! A Foreign Take On Why The “Trump Interlude” Will Pass

The daily spectacle of Donald Trump and his minions striking at institutions and backstabbing allies may be depressing, but the United States is more than that. Once the fever subsides, that vibrant, inclusive country will recall that greatness does not rest on meanness, thuggery or wealth.

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Eyes on the U.S. Ideas

Unpacking The Contradictions Of Pro-Trump Latinos

As Donald Trump makes his third bid for the White House, Catalina Uribe Rincón considers, in the Colombian daily El Espectador, why so many Hispanic-Americans back a racist and anti-immigrant candidate.

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LGBTQ Plus Society Women Worldwide

Tamales, Soccer And A Lesbian Bar: The Singular Journey Of A Medellín LGBTQ+ Leader

Marta Lida Arias, a veteran LGBTQ+ activist in Medellín, discusses how she’s created a community for other women who were once intimidated by Colombia’s patriarchal society and norms, and why their fight isn’t over yet.

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Eyes on the U.S. Geopolitics Migrant Lives

Migrant Crackdowns At The Mexico-U.S. Border: How To Build A Death Trap

Since U.S. immigration laws were tightened in the 1990s, at least 8,000 people have died trying to cross from Mexico to the United States. Of those, more than 4,000 died in the Sonoran Desert in Arizona. While authorities call for migration through legal channels, NGOs argue that regulatory barriers are pushing people to make this dangerous journey.

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Economy Geopolitics

For Chiquita, Time Is Ripe To Pay For A Long History Of Corruption And Intimidation

Chiquita — the former United Fruit Company — is being ordered to compensate victims of the paramilitaries it financed in Colombia in the late 20th century. Like Monsanto with pesticides, it might begin saving funds to pay more such fines.

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