Washington Office on Latin America

Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA)
Founded 1974
Type Non-profit
NGO
Location
Fields Human rights, advocacy
Website http://wola.org

The Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) is an American non-governmental organization (NGO) whose stated goal is to promote human rights, democracy and social and economic justice in Latin America and the Caribbean.[1]

The Washington Office on Latin America aims to facilitate dialogue between governmental and non-governmental actors, to monitor the impact of U.S. foreign policy on human rights, democracy and equitable development in Latin America, and to promote alternatives through reporting and advocacy. It reports on these activities in order to inform and educate policy-makers, religious and non-governmental organizations, and the general public about that impact. The briefings of WOLA bring policy-makers and the media in direct contact with Latin American leaders and experts, and the organization works closely with civil society organizations and government officials throughout the Americas.

History

WOLA was founded in 1974 after the 1973 Chilean coup d'état.[2] The first long-term executive director of the organization was Joseph Eldridge, who is currently the chaplain for American University.[3] In its early years, some of WOLA's contacts were priests and nuns who lived in Latin America and bore witness to the events there.[4]

WOLA has provided U.S. citizens and policy-makers firsthand information from Latin America. It informs the U.S. government about the effects of U.S. policy on the region. It facilitates communications and helps to sponsor visits from Latin Americans with expertise and experiences in human rights.

In 1975, WOLA acted as advisors for congressional staff for the drafting of the first major legislation that put conditions on U.S. military aid abroad regarding human-rights practices.[5]

Current work

WOLA has played a key role in most major Washington policy debates over human rights in Latin America since its foundation. The organization is called upon regularly to provide information and analysis to the executive branch, to multilateral organizations, to members of Congress,[6] and to U.S. and Latin American news media.

The organization works on issues such as drug policy, rural development, violence against women, organized crime and the rights of internally displaced people. Its focusses are split between nations and issues of health and security across the nations. It operates within four networks of non-governmental organizations: the human rights community, the foreign policy community, academic think-tanks, and the community of peace, justice, solidarity and religious-based organizations.

In the media

WOLA members are widely used as sources for commentary and interpretation on Latin American human rights by media outlets such as the New York Times,[7] CNN, the Washington Post[8] and the LA Times, among others.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.