Unable to stay in their native villages due to persecution, they create their own communities on the plantations, where photographer Lena Mucha documents their lives.
Unable to stay in their native villages due to persecution, they create their own communities on the plantations, where photographer Lena Mucha documents their lives.
Cristina Maza - Foreign policy and defense correspondent - National Journal
Indigenous Trans Women in Colombia Work on Coffee Farms
The Mixed-Up Brothers of Bogotá - The New York Times
Climate change is devastating Central American coffee farms — and spurring migration - The San Diego Union-Tribune
Mad Honey: A Novel: Picoult, Jodi, Boylan, Jennifer Finney: 9781984818409: : Books
Tennis triumph: Mia Fedra's inspiring journey
Trans In Transition: Finding Friends And Community In D.C.
State's $68 Billion Budget Shortfall, California Bountiful Society's New Project for Farmers and Ranchers
Watch Casa Susanna, American Experience, Official Site
Conservation after Conflict in Colombia
Washington Life Magazine - Holiday 2015 by Washington Life Magazine - Issuu
Out of the Sun: How Shade Coffee Lends Conservation a Hand - Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas
Photo essay: Growing coffee, sowing peace in Colombia
Potato farming, past and present: Colombian farmer tries to survive despite increasing obstacles - Orato
Burke and Kazyak publish in Washington Post on decline in support for transgender rights