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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:The Moynihan Institute's&nbsp\;Program on Latin America and the
  Caribbean presents&nbsp\;Salvador del Solar\, former minister of culture 
 (2017) and prime minister (2019) of Peru.&nbsp\;In less than a decade\, Pe
 ru has had eight presidents—not through coups\, but through the systematic
  weaponization of Congress. An all-powerful yet deeply fragmented legislat
 ure has hollowed out democratic norms\, rewritten the rules of political c
 ompetition\, and severed the link between elections and genuine representa
 tion. What remains is a the form of democracy without much of its substanc
 e.Salvador del Solar (Lima\, 1970) is a lawyer from the Pontifical Catholi
 c University of Peru. He is a former de Sardon-Glass fellow and he studied
  international relations at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public A
 ffairs at Syracuse University. He served as Peru’s minister of culture (20
 17) and prime minister (2019) and was a visiting fellow at the David Rocke
 feller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University (2018). He 
 is an actor\, screenwriter and director of the films Magallanes and Ramón 
 y Ramón.
DTEND:20260421T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260510T084422Z
DTSTART:20260421T190000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Salvador del Solar | Elections Without Representation: Peru and the
  Limits of Democracy
UID:RFCALITEM639139850626133073
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>The Moynihan Institute's&nbsp\;Program on L
 atin America and the Caribbean presents&nbsp\;Salvador del Solar\, former 
 minister of culture (2017) and prime minister (2019) of Peru.&nbsp\;</p><p
 >In less than a decade\, Peru has had eight presidents—not through coups\,
  but through the systematic weaponization of Congress. An all-powerful yet
  deeply fragmented legislature has hollowed out democratic norms\, rewritt
 en the rules of political competition\, and severed the link between elect
 ions and genuine representation. What remains is a the form of democracy w
 ithout much of its substance.<strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong>Salv
 ador del Solar (Lima\, 1970) is a lawyer from the Pontifical Catholic Univ
 ersity of Peru. He is a former de Sardon-Glass fellow and he studied inter
 national relations at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs
  at Syracuse University. He served as Peru’s minister of culture (2017) an
 d prime minister (2019) and was a visiting fellow at the David Rockefeller
  Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University (2018). He is an 
 actor\, screenwriter and director of the films <em>Magallanes</em> and <em
 >Ramón y Ramón</em>.<br></p>
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