Workers handled beef in Avellaneda in the province of Buenos Aires, Argentina. People cooled off in Arpoador beach in Rio de Janeiro.
The US-based Rockefeller Foundation has announced Lyana Latorre as its new vice president and head of Latin America and the Caribbean.   Latore will help establish a new team and oversee the foundation’s new regional
As we enter 2025, the global television industry finds itself at a pivotal juncture. In Miami, during a Content Americas presentation today, Ampere analyst Fred Black provided a comprehensive overview of the current landscape and the future trajectory of the broadcast and streaming sector,
Juan Cruz Díaz, Brian Winter, and Carin Zissis discuss the region's place in Trump's inauguration and first executive orders.
Google the most violent region of the world and Latin America will come up. Violence in the region takes many forms and starts young. Data from UNICEF shows nearly two in three children aged 1–14 years in Latin America and the Caribbean face violent discipline at home.
By the end of 2024, TikTok has generated approximately $8 billion in ad revenue in the U.S. As revealed by Omdia's Senior Research Director María Rua Aguete at a Content Americas panel, it surpassed 1.
At the direction of President Trump, about 1,500 troops are being deployed to the southern border with increased operations to block illegal immigrant crossings set to start in the coming days. Meanwhile,
The U.S. president signed directives to militarize the border, consider designating cartels as terrorist groups, and cut foreign aid.
The inaugural list features Fundación Santa Fe de Bogotá, which is recognized for hip surgeries and replacements; Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, which specializes in cataract surgeries; and Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires, which offers first-class knee surgeries.
With Donald Trump’s return to the U.S. presidency on January 20, Latin America faces a transformative and turbulent period in its relations with its neighbor to the north. Trump’s first term was defined by transactional dealings,
President Trump’s expected designation of Mexican cartels and international gangs as foreign terrorists will upend how the U.S. and Latin America conduct the war against criminal organizations that smuggle drugs and weapons.