Ecuador is facing many of the same issues we see across Latin America today. Long one of the region’s most peaceful countries, it has recently seen a daunting increase in violence, as international drug cartels use the country as a transit point. It is also immersed in a debate about how and whether to exploit its oil and minerals, during an era of rapid climate change. Politics have been unstable this year. In October there will be a runoff for a new president to serve out the rest of Guillermo Lasso’s term, after he invoked a constitutional mechanism that triggered fresh elections for both the presidency and the legislature. In this episode, Brian Winter and Will Freeman discuss the two candidates, Luisa González and Daniel Noboa, and how Ecuador might fit into wider regional trends when it comes to ideological tendencies and environmental issues. Freeman, a columnist for Americas Quarterly, is a fellow for Latin America studies at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and a political scientist.
What To Expect From Claudia Sheinbaum in Mexico
A Surprising Case for Optimism in Peru
Panama: New President, Global Challenges
AQ Podcast Will Return on May 23
What Biden 2.0 Would Mean for Latin America Policy
Why Argentines Seem to Be Sticking With Milei
Warning Lights for Brazil’s Economy?
Venezuela: Maduro's and the Opposition’s Strategies
The Shifting Sands of Organized Crime in Latin America
Mexico: Claudia Sheinbaum's Election to Lose?
South-South Ties: Hype And Reality
An X-Ray of Peru’s Tinderbox
Brazil’s Big Year on the Global Stage
Today’s LGBTQ+ Politics in Latin America
Argentina: Javier Milei Runs into Resistance
What Trump Would Mean for Latin America Policy
Ecuador’s Crossroads: Can Noboa Succeed?
Guyana, Oil and the Resource Curse
How to Think About Latin America's Security Crisis
LatAm’s Economies in 2024: What to Expect
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Jim & Bill (It‘s Another Day)
HauntingLive
Dr. Paul’s Worldviews
The Ben Shapiro Show
The Daily