Article Justice Thirty Years in the Making In 1989, eight people were murdered at a Jesuit university in El Salvador. Now, the man who helped orchestrate the killing is finally brought to justice. By Martha Doggett September 23, 2020 Foreign Affairs Social Justice Latin America
Article Lessons from German Policing Germany, in reckoning with its violent history, has made de-escalation and diplomacy priorities for its police force. America should do the same. By Rand Richards Cooper September 17, 2020 Foreign Affairs Domestic Affairs War and Peace
Article How COVID-19 Has Affected One Mexican Pueblo Pandemic denialism isn’t just a U.S. phenomenon. Here’s how it’s playing out in one Mexico City neighborhood. By Joseph Sorrentino September 11, 2020 Coronavirus Social Justice Foreign Affairs
Article Zero Tolerance, Zero Progress El Salvador’s ‘tough on crime’ approach toward groups like MS-13 shows how such policies only exacerbate the gang problem. By César J. Baldelomar September 9, 2020 Foreign Affairs Poverty Social Justice Election 2020
Article Precious Protector Not unlike the pope after the collapse of the Papal States in the nineteenth century, the Dalai Lama now occupies a largely spiritual role. By Thomas Albert Howard September 2, 2020 Foreign Affairs Spirituality
Article Madonnas in Gas Masks The art that has emerged from the Chilean ‘estallido social’ is often ironic, playfully sending up the conventions of Catholic hagiography. By Joseph S. Flipper September 1, 2020 Arts Social Justice Foreign Affairs