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Is Costa Rica Different?

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A Review of The Two Faces of Fear: Violence and Inequality in the Mexican Metropolis

A Review of The Two Faces of Fear: Violence and Inequality in the Mexican Metropolis

On March 19, 2010, two graduate students at the Tec de Monterrey, Jorge Antonio Mercado Alonso and Javier Francisco Arredondo Verdugo, were killed by members of the Mexican Army inside the university campus. To cover up the murder, the Army and Mexican authorities initially claimed the victims were armed sicarios—hitmen— with organized crime connections. An investigation later revealed that Jorge and Javier were engineering students who did not belong to any criminal group and were unarmed when the perpetrators shot them.

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Spotlight

Perspectives in Times of Change

Check out these reflections on social, economic, cultural and political transformations in Latin America, the Caribbean and Latinx communities in the United States.

fisher man wearing a mask walks by a port with boats and no other people
On Settler Colonialism: From Adam Kirsch to Latin America

On Settler Colonialism: From Adam Kirsch to Latin America

In school, we may have learned that Simón Bolívar proposed expansion into northeastern Colombia in his quest for regional unification. What we may not have learned is that he blithely suggested that “the savages who live there would be civilized and our possessions increased,” using what we call today explicitly settler colonial terms, Indigenous peoples there perceived Colombian intruders as “Spanish” throughout the 19th century, and the return of Catholic missions at the end of the century followed the logic of state-sponsored religious “Hispanicization.”

Reinventing Ourselves: Art and Artificial Intelligence

Reinventing Ourselves: Art and Artificial Intelligence

For several years, seeking to renew the meaning of my new stage of life, to continue learning and living with enthusiasm, I recovered a hobby that I´ve been passionate about for a long time: watercolor. Since I rediscovered the magic of water and color, in every free moment, I try to learn a new technique, combine new colors, discover different papers or try a new brush.

StudEnt Views

Book ReviewS

A Review of Mesquite Pods to Mescal: 10,000 Years of Oaxacan Cuisines

A Review of Mesquite Pods to Mescal: 10,000 Years of Oaxacan Cuisines

Mexican culinary nationalists have enshrined Oaxaca as the “land of seven moles,” the diverse chile stews that provide an Indigenous counterpoint to the supposed cradle of creole gastronomy, Puebla, with its chile and chocolate centerpiece, mole poblano. Although the count of seven moles is an invented tradition, Oaxaca’s culinary roots indeed reach deep into the past, as is shown by the essays in this splendid collection. The volume also effectively illustrates the advances of the archaeological study of food, from an early focus on the processes of domestication and subsistence regimes.

A Review of Trippy: The Peril and Promise of Medicinal Psychedelics

A Review of Trippy: The Peril and Promise of Medicinal Psychedelics

At a recent Harvard Petrie-Flom Center event, Law and Policy of Psychedelic Medicine, author Ayelet Waldman offered a nuanced perspective on microdosing and government policy. I asked her how we could incorporate understandings of Indigenous cosmologies into our practices of understanding psychedelic integration both in clinical and non-clinical settings. She emphasized the importance of agency, arguing that Indigenous peoples who hold these lineages sacred should lead the conversation.

A Review of From Peril to Partnership: US Security Assistance and the Bid to Stabilize Colombia and Mexico

A Review of From Peril to Partnership: US Security Assistance and the Bid to Stabilize Colombia and Mexico

Oxford University Press, in collaboration with The Council on Foreign Relations, published Paul J. Angelo’s much-anticipated monograph in March 2024. The book is a comparative study, focusing on U.S. security policy to two countries in Latin America at roughly the same period, i.e. during the first fifth of the 21st century. From Peril to Partnership represents a nearly 20-year focus by the author on Latin America in general, Colombia and Mexico, specifically.

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