Bolivia

The Carter Center worked in Bolivia with the overall aim of supporting a democratic transformation process that was peaceful, inclusive, and respectful of human rights. Our work included helping to establish access to information legislation; providing training to government officials in conflict management; observing a new voter registration process; and strengthening the role of media in the promotion of peace and stability.

Impact

  • Supported the drafting, passage, implementation, and enforcement of an access-to-information law
  • Created mechanisms and spaces to increase tolerance, inclusion, and consensus between social groups
  • Conducted conflict-management training with government officials and other social and political actors
Legacy

Democracy

The Carter Center sent a small mission of observers to monitor Bolivia’s constitutional referendum in January 2009, launched a voter registration observation a bit later that year, and then in December monitored its election process, which was peaceful and had record turnout. A decade later, after a disputed  October 2019 general election — which led to large-scale protests, the fall of the president and his government, and nearly civil conflict — we were invited to observe the new general election in 2020, which proved both calm and respectful. 

Link to election reports for Bolivia: Election Report

Legacy

Rule of Law

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