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Two years ago, over 1 million Chileans flooded the streets of Santiago to demand a more inclusive and representative social contract, with chants announcing "Chile Despertó!" (Chile has awakened). As a result of the protests, Chile inaugurated its Constitutional Convention, which to many, is an unprecedented innovative tool that can bring about a democratic watershed in the country. Nevertheless, with the uncertainty of the presidential election, violence against the Mapuche indigenous people, and the persistence of the neoliberalism economic model, it is unclear if the Convention really will alter Chile's flawed democratic reality. To help us detangle this and more, in this episode of The Global Review we are joined by William Skewes-Cox, International Human Rights Lawyer and Latin American Political Analyst.
By The Global ReviewTwo years ago, over 1 million Chileans flooded the streets of Santiago to demand a more inclusive and representative social contract, with chants announcing "Chile Despertó!" (Chile has awakened). As a result of the protests, Chile inaugurated its Constitutional Convention, which to many, is an unprecedented innovative tool that can bring about a democratic watershed in the country. Nevertheless, with the uncertainty of the presidential election, violence against the Mapuche indigenous people, and the persistence of the neoliberalism economic model, it is unclear if the Convention really will alter Chile's flawed democratic reality. To help us detangle this and more, in this episode of The Global Review we are joined by William Skewes-Cox, International Human Rights Lawyer and Latin American Political Analyst.