Obituaries•
Games•
ADN Store•
e-Edition•
Sponsored Content•
Promotions
Promotions•
Get our free newsletters
Connect
Coffee growers are combating a killer fungus and rock-bottom pay.
The US government spied on Brazil's Dilma Rousseff and Mexico's Enrique Peña Nieto, new Edward Snowden leaks allege. Why don't they seem surprised?
As its Andean neighbors drop coca crop acres, according to UN reports, Peru is cultivating the world's largest cocaine production.
GlobalPost's Simeon Tegel visits the Brazilian gym that's a training ground for some of the world's toughest cage fighters.
Analysis: Besieged by one of the worlds highest murder rates, Venezuelans are hoping against hope that new gun controls may finally halt the violent crime wave engulfing their country. Will strict gun control laws work? Come September, they'll find out and the world will be watching.
Anger over the unscheduled Vienna stopover of Bolivian President Evo Morales plane continued to reverberate Friday, after his South American allies gathered in support of the leftist leader and claimed hed been taken hostage.
Already a top emitter, Brazil could spew hundreds of millions more tons of gases blamed for climate change, such as CO2 and methane, as it floods Amazon forest for hydro power, new research suggests.
A year ago, Ecuador allowed fugitive WikiLeaker Julian Assange to seek refuge in its London embassy. Now its new media law tightens the vice on journalists critical of the South American countrys government.
Lawmakers approved a deal for a Chinese tycoon to build a canal to link Pacific and Atlantic that would rival the Panama Canal.
Julian Assange has some advice for NSA über-leaker Edward Snowden: Go to Latin America.
South America's cocaine giant is also the best at fabricating phony dollar bills. The US Secret Service is working with Peruvian police to stop it.
Analysis: Argentinas president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, exhibits authoritarian tendencies, her opponents say, pointing to her new judicial reform as a case in point.
Efrain Rios Montt, Guatemala's US-backed ruler, was found guilty of genocide and war crimes Friday in a landmark ruling.
The Argentine Supreme Court will decide whether the company can be put on trial in the United States for its role in the 1970s crackdowns.
The Peruvian anchovy is the world's most heavily exploited fish. Now Peru's government is trying to reduce overfishing of the popular little forager.