Recent Articles in the NACLA Report

June 27, 2022

As electoral candidates and movement leaders, Black women in Brazil are reshaping political power and forging new, affirming representations in the process.

June 27, 2022

For a quilombola leader and fisherwoman, Black and Indigenous struggles for land and life are essential to collective survival in the face of the climate crisis.

June 27, 2022

Brazil’s so-called Quota Law has expanded access to higher education for low-income and Black students. The future of the policy now hangs in the balance.

June 17, 2022

For the latest wave of the Left in power sweeping the region, the challenges are steep. Radical politics will continue to emerge from the streets.

March 19, 2022

For a Venezuelan artist, photography offers a democratic means of expression and experimentation from differing viewpoints.

March 16, 2022

Beyond polarized interpretations, revisiting Chavismo’s long origins and many mutations reveals a political project marked more by adaptation and contradiction than by rigid ideological lines.

March 16, 2022

Popular power was a cornerstone of the Bolivarian Revolution. Facing co-optation, crisis, and decline, its future remains in question.

March 16, 2022

With Hugo Chávez’s celebrated health care project progressively in ruins, the pandemic underlines the need to rebuild.

March 16, 2022

Persistent internal conflicts have prevented Chavismo’s detractors from organizing a serious political proposal to successfully contest power. Can the opposition democratize?

March 11, 2022

Exclusive content and additional resources accompanying our Spring 2022 issue of the NACLA Report.

March 11, 2022

From oil to mining, resource exploitation is the central battlefield for Venezuela’s land and environmental movements.

March 11, 2022

When political tensions run high and misinformation proliferates, there’s no better way to get a clear view than with your own eyes.

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