With their pleated skirts and bowler hats the “cholita” women are a common sight in Bolivia’s administrative capital La Paz.
With her hair in two braids, a wide pollera skirt, and black gothic corset and boots, Bolivian tattoo artist Daniela Artemisa ...
YUNGAS, Bolivia (AP) — Cielo Torres had always lived in Bolivia. Yet before moving at age 17 to the remote town of Tocaña — where much of the country’s Afro-descendant community lives — she had rarely ...
Here’s how the United States can help cement Bolivian democracy and capitalism after twenty years of socialism.
Bolivia's cholita wrestlers are making a comeback to the ring after the iconic female fighters were forced to hang up their billowing skirts and bowler hats due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Long criminalized as the raw material for cocaine, coca is woven into Bolivian life. The government is lobbying the U.N. to ...
Daryl Grigsby on the burning need for ordained female ministry to honor Christian tradition and enliven a stagnant, ...
Afro-Bolivians, though recognized in their country's 2009 constitution, remain among Bolivia’s most invisible groups ...
A young member of the Afro-Bolivian community dances the “saya,” a traditional dance performed with drums and chants, as part of the celebrations to mark the upcoming National Day of Afro-Bolivian ...
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