This bulletin was published by the Servicio Paz y Justicia en Nicaragua, the Nicaraguan branch of Servicio Paz y Justicia (Peace and Justice Service) and contains issues ranging from 1985 to 1996. It is mainly concerned with national socieconomic issues, emphasizing active non-violent resistance and a pacifist Christian-inspired perspective. A recurring preoccupation in the older issues is political violence, specifically the relationship with the United States and the military aid given to the Contras, while the more recent numbers are more focused in peace and human rights education, social work with different vulnerable groups, such as women and prisoners, and the consequences of neoliberalism.
This bulletin was published by the Servicio Paz y Justicia en Nicaragua, the Nicaraguan branch of Servicio Paz y Justicia (Peace and Justice Service) and contains issues ranging from 1985 to 1996. It is mainly concerned with national socieconomic issues, emphasizing active non-violent resistance and a pacifist Christian-inspired perspective. A recurring preoccupation in the older issues is political violence, specifically the relationship with the United States and the military aid given to the Contras, while the more recent numbers are more focused in peace and human rights education, social work with different vulnerable groups, such as women and prisoners, and the consequences of neoliberalism.
Justicia y Paz es una publicación mensual del Servicio Paz y Justicia Perú, la rama peruana del Servicio Paz y Justicia, y en consecuencia su preocupación fundamental es la lucha en pos de la justicia social a través de la resistencia no-violenta, con un énfasis en la acción de las iglesias y siguiendo preceptos cristianos, adhiriendo particularmente a la Teología de la Liberación. Contiene números de 1983 y 1984. Mientras que sus tópicos principales son la violencia política y los problemas socioeconómicos en el Perú, también informa sobre violaciones a los derechos humanos en otros países latinoamericanos.
This bulletin is published by the Fundación Servicio, Paz y Justicia de Nicaragua (Service, Peace and Justice Foundation), an institution of the Nicaraguan Episcopal Church (Anglican). It is not explicitly tied to the Servicio Paz y Justicia Nicaragua, which already existed at the time, although the two groups shared a physical location. The publication is mainly concerned with Christian solidarity with the poor and the work the church does to help with social problems, some structural, some conjunctural, some caused by various natural disasters. The issues are from 1988 and 1989, and they also touch upon United States intervention in Nicaragua.
Paz y Justicia es una publicación mensual (a veces bimestral, trimestral o cuatrimestral) del Servicio Paz y Justicia América Latina. Contiene números que van desde 1973 (un año antes de la fundación formal del Servicio Paz y Justicia) hasta 1998. Su foco son los conflictos sociales y los problemas socioeconómicos en latinoamérica, con un énfasis en la acción no violenta, identificándose con un movimiento noviolento internacional de corte cristiano (fundamentalmente católico, pero en ocasiones también evangélico).
This bulletin was published by the Servicio Paz y Justicia en Nicaragua, the Nicaraguan branch of Servicio Paz y Justicia (Peace and Justice Service) and contains issues ranging from 1985 to 1996. It is mainly concerned with national socieconomic issues, emphasizing active non-violent resistance and a pacifist Christian-inspired perspective. A recurring preoccupation in the older issues is political violence, specifically the relationship with the United States and the military aid given to the Contras, while the more recent numbers are more focused in peace and human rights education, social work with different vulnerable groups, such as women and prisoners, and the consequences of neoliberalism.
This bulletin was published by the Servicio Paz y Justicia en Nicaragua, the Nicaraguan branch of Servicio Paz y Justicia (Peace and Justice Service) and contains issues ranging from 1985 to 1996. It is mainly concerned with national socieconomic issues, emphasizing active non-violent resistance and a pacifist Christian-inspired perspective. A recurring preoccupation in the older issues is political violence, specifically the relationship with the United States and the military aid given to the Contras, while the more recent numbers are more focused in peace and human rights education, social work with different vulnerable groups, such as women and prisoners, and the consequences of neoliberalism.