2021 Review: Honduras closes the year with major challenges and some achievements for LGBT+
The year in Honduras was also marked by the elections that resulted in Xiomara Castro being elected as the country's first female president.
The year in Honduras was also marked by the elections that resulted in Xiomara Castro being elected as the country's first female president.
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic was severe for the LGBTI community. Shelters and soup kitchens provided refuge for hundreds of people. There is growing concern about the wave of hate crimes.
Artists, poets, and musicians formed the Amorales collective, which is responsible for denouncing and demanding women's rights in El Salvador.
Indigenous women are a crucial part of the resistance in the Lof (community) Quemquemtrew. Chronicle of a territorial reclamation in Patagonia and a death foretold. A month later, they receive an eviction notice.
The years of institutional crisis that Peru experienced ended after the July elections. The political administration made no progress on LGBTI+ rights and protections. Few advances and many deaths.
Chile will have a president who is committed to defending the rights of women, LGBTQ+ people, and Indigenous people. Why is he considered an ally, and what expectations are placed on the youngest head of state in the country's history?
Bukele's government made it clear that the rights of LGBTI people are not a priority for his administration.
Women United for Forest Conservation tell how they care for the trees of the Cofre de Perote and transform them into Christmas trees.
The activist edited her book Furia Travesti. Diccionario de la T a la T where she uses her own biography to trace a journey through the violence, struggles and conquests of the transvestite trans community.
The association documented hundreds of instances worldwide in which state agents imposed fines, imprisonment, and other penalties on people of diverse sexual orientations, gender identities, and expressions.