Indigenous men and women wearing masks at the wake of Cacique Messias Martins

Spotlight

Costa Rica

Photo by Jose Díaz (@josediaz2491)

Is Costa Rica different?  Without an army since 1949, the small Central American country of six million people has been a democratic bastion in a region of conflict. What it has not spend on defense has been invested in health and education. Yet the quality of these public services, Costa Ricans say, is eroding. Homicide rates are rising. So is inequality. Costa Rica is at a crossroads.

Articles

The Caribbean Spirit: Preserving Our Heritage and Ancestral Rights

The Caribbean Spirit: Preserving Our Heritage and Ancestral Rights

Our community and other Afro-descendant tribal communities on Costa Rica’s Caribbean coast are confronting what seems to be a systematic attempt by the state to uproot our community.  For decades, Costa Rica has refused to grant property titles and infringed on our rights to property by targeting ownership over our ancestral lands, even to the extent of issuing demolition orders.

The Evolution of Education in Costa Rica: Challenges and Opportunities

The Evolution of Education in Costa Rica: Challenges and Opportunities

If you were a child in Costa Rica in the late 19th century, you would have been able to go to public school free of charge—a social privilege and means of inclusion virtually unknown in the developing world. This early investment in education has enabled Costa Rica to achieve one of the highest literacy rates in Latin America.

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