The Trump administration’s volatility on foreign policy reveals internal divisions within Trumpism. But when threats and ...
El Salvador's offer to house deportees and U.S. citizens in its infamous prisons – for profit – signals a new and troubling escalation in the criminalization of migration.
The Tuiuiti samba school uplifts trans identities and highlights the political dimensions of Brazil’s Carnival celebrations.
The North American Congress on Latin America (NACLA) is an independent, nonprofit organization founded in 1966 to examine and critique U.S. imperialism and political, economic, and military ...
Despite the ongoing criminalization and racist persecution of African tradition, from the criminalization of Vodou to restrictions against Gagá, Afro-Dominican culture persists.
Bret Gustafson teaches anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis. He is author of Bolivia in the Age of Gas (Duke, 2020) and New Languages of the State: Indigenous Resurgence and the Politics ...
As of 2016, the NACLA Report is published by Routledge/Taylor & Francis. Each issue, a select number of articles are available open access for a limited time. Read recent NACLA Report articles on our ...
Esther Whitfield's book examines how art produced in Guantánamo transcends cultural and linguistic divides to find common ground, reimagining empathy and resistance against political forces.
In 1968, NACLA published the pamphlet "Who Rules Columbia?" an attempt to turn the tools of power-structure research on the university, and to elaborate the greivances behind the 1968 student strike.
The Caribbean continues to be a site of intense transformation, resilience, and resistance due to the ever-increasing pressures of market-led globalization. In an era where traditional economies have ...