When Latin America talks about Latin America, the first thing usually encountered is a beautiful place, dominated by poor farmers who are largely unaware of these things. The only thing that comes to mind is that it is a good place to go for a holiday, but it may be that Latin America may not be familiar to us Americans or we are good for them I think so. Whatever the reason for not knowing Latin America, change, what do you think about Latin America?
Latin America is a field of alarming inequality and exclusion. Despite recent developments, the United Nations Economic Committee of Latin America and the Caribbean (CEPAL) reported that Latin America is still the region with the highest level of inequality on the planet. In April 2017, Mexican Veracruz Governor Javier Duarte was arrested in Guatemala after requesting a vacation a few months ago. He took out millions of dollars of debt and left his country and he knew that he had misused funds and allowed children of public hospitals to carry out fake chemotherapy so that extensive anger .
By contrast, the United States is located in the north of the most intense area on Earth. Latin America. The most dangerous and violent country on Earth is Latin America. Honduras, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil. People from these countries wish to immigrate to the United States. That is, of course, twenty years ago. Since then, the proportion of Hispanic Americans has increased almost by a third. According to the 2000 census (the closest census in 1998 is possible), the proportion of blacks is almost the same as today, non-Hispanic whites make up 75% of the population, 61% today. In other words, because the ethnic breakdown of today's American gang grows as a group, it is likely to be Hispanic.
Before proceeding, it is important to emphasize that Latin America is a wide variety of complex areas. This means that any research focused on "Latin America" or "typical" Latin American countries is too simple. But through regional negotiations, I was able to focus on some of the structural and institutional features shared in most countries. In order to provide as much context as possible, I discussed several country-specific experiences and cases throughout the book. I discussed in detail the experiences of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, Mexico and Venezuela.