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Colombia,[b] officially the Republic of Colombia,[c] is a country primarily located in South America with insular regions in North America. The Colombian mainland is bordered by the Caribbean Sea to the north, Venezuela to the east and northeast, Brazil to the southeast, Peru and Ecuador to the south and southwest, the Pacific Ocean to the west, and Panama to the northwest. Colombia is divided into 32 departments. The Capital District of Bogotá is also the country's largest city hosting the main financial and cultural hub. Other major urban areas include Medellín, Cali, Barranquilla, Cartagena, Santa Marta, Cúcuta, Ibagué, Villavicencio and Bucaramanga. It covers an area of 1,141,748 square kilometers (440,831 sq mi) and has a population of around 52 million. Its rich cultural heritage[15]—including language, religion, cuisine, and art—reflects its history as a colony, fusing cultural elements brought by immigration from Europe[16][17][18][19] and the Middle East,[20][21][22] with those brought by the African diaspora,[23] as well as with those of the various Indigenous civilizations that predate colonization.[24] Spanish is the official language, although Creole, English and 64 other languages are recognized regionally.

Key Information

Colombia has been home to many indigenous peoples and cultures since at least 12,000 BCE. The Spanish first landed in La Guajira in 1499, and by the mid-16th century, they had colonized much of present-day Colombia, and established the New Kingdom of Granada, with Santa Fe de Bogotá as its capital. Independence from the Spanish Empire is considered to have been declared in 1810, with what is now Colombia emerging as the United Provinces of New Granada. After a brief Spanish reconquest, Colombian independence was secured and the period of Gran Colombia began in 1819. The new polity experimented with federalism as the Granadine Confederation (1858) and then the United States of Colombia (1863), before becoming a centralised republic—the current Republic of Colombia—in 1886. With the backing of the United States and France, Panama seceded from Colombia in 1903, resulting in Colombia's present borders. Beginning in the 1960s, the country has suffered from an asymmetric low-intensity armed conflict and political violence, both of which escalated in the 1990s. Since 2005, there has been significant improvement in security, stability, and rule of law, as well as unprecedented economic growth and development.[25][26] Colombia is recognized for its healthcare system, being the best healthcare in Latin America according to the World Health Organization and 22nd in the world.[27][28] Its diversified economy is the third-largest in South America, with macroeconomic stability and favorable long-term growth prospects.[29][30]

Colombia is one of the world's seventeen megadiverse countries; it has the highest level of biodiversity per square mile in the world and the second-highest level overall.[31] Its territory encompasses Amazon rainforest, highlands, grasslands and deserts. Colombia is a key member of major global and regional organizations including the UN, the WTO, the OECD, the OAS, the Pacific Alliance and the Andean Community; it is also a NATO Global Partner[32] and a major non-NATO ally of the United States.[33]

Etymology

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The name "Colombia" is derived from the last name of the Italian navigator Christopher Columbus (Latin: Christophorus Columbus, Italian: Cristoforo Colombo, Spanish: Cristóbal Colón). It was conceived as a reference to all of the New World.[34] The name was later adopted by the Republic of Colombia of 1819, formed from the territories of the old Viceroyalty of New Granada (modern-day Colombia, Panama, Venezuela, Ecuador, and northwest Brazil).[35]

When Venezuela, Ecuador, and Cundinamarca came to exist as independent states, the former Department of Cundinamarca adopted the name "Republic of New Granada". New Granada officially changed its name in 1858 to the Granadine Confederation. In 1863 the name was again changed, this time to United States of Colombia, before finally adopting its present name – the Republic of Colombia – in 1886.[35]

To refer to this country, the Colombian government uses the terms Colombia and República de Colombia.[36]

History

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Pre-Columbian era

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Location map of the pre-Columbian cultures of Colombia

Owing to its location, the present territory of Colombia was a corridor of early human civilization from Mesoamerica and the Caribbean to the Andes and Amazon basin. The oldest archaeological finds are from the Pubenza and El Totumo sites in the Magdalena Valley 100 kilometers (62 mi) southwest of Bogotá.[37] These sites date from the Paleoindian period (18,000–8000 BCE). At Puerto Hormiga and other sites, traces from the Archaic Period (~8000–2000 BCE) have been found. Vestiges indicate that there was also early occupation in the regions of El Abra and Tequendama in Cundinamarca. The oldest pottery discovered in the Americas, found in San Jacinto, dates to 5000–4000 BCE.[38][39]

Indigenous people inhabited the territory that is now Colombia by 12,500 BCE. Nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes at the El Abra, Tibitó and Tequendama sites near present-day Bogotá traded with one another and with other cultures from the Magdalena River Valley.[40] A site including eight miles (13 km) of pictographs that is under study at Serranía de la Lindosa was revealed in November 2020.[41] Their age is suggested as being 12,500 years old (c. 10,480 B.C.) by the anthropologists working on the site, because of extinct fauna depicted. It was during the earliest known human occupation of the area.

Between 5000 and 1000 BCE, hunter-gatherer tribes transitioned to agrarian societies; fixed settlements were established, and pottery appeared. Beginning in the 1st millennium BCE, groups of Amerindians including the Muisca, Zenú, Quimbaya, and Tairona developed the political system of cacicazgos with a pyramidal structure of power headed by caciques. The Muisca inhabited mainly the area of what is now the Departments of Boyacá and Cundinamarca high plateau (Altiplano Cundiboyacense) where they formed the Muisca Confederation. They farmed maize, potato, quinoa, and cotton, and traded gold, emeralds, blankets, ceramic handicrafts, coca and especially rock salt with neighboring nations. The Tairona inhabited northern Colombia in the isolated mountain range of Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta.[42][43] The Quimbaya inhabited regions of the Cauca River Valley between the Western and Central Ranges of the Colombian Andes.[44] Most of the Amerindians practiced agriculture and the social structure of each indigenous community was different. Some groups of indigenous people such as the Caribs lived in a state of permanent war, but others had less bellicose attitudes.[45] During the 1200s, Malayo-Polynesians and Native Americans in Colombia made contact, thereby spreading Native American genetics from Precolonial Colombia to some Pacific Ocean islands.[46][47]

Colonial period

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Vasco Núñez de Balboa, founder of Santa María la Antigua del Darién, the first stable European settlement on the continent

Alonso de Ojeda (who had sailed with Columbus) reached the Guajira Peninsula in 1499.[48][49] Spanish explorers, led by Rodrigo de Bastidas, made the first exploration of the Caribbean coast in 1500.[50] Christopher Columbus navigated near the Caribbean in 1502.[51] In 1508, Vasco Núñez de Balboa accompanied an expedition to the territory through the region of Gulf of Urabá and they founded the town of Santa María la Antigua del Darién in 1510, the first stable settlement on the continent.[d][52] Santa Marta was founded in 1525,[53] and Cartagena in 1533.[54] Spanish conquistador Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada led an expedition to the interior in April 1536, and christened the districts through which he passed "New Kingdom of Granada". In August 1538, he provisionally founded its capital near the Muisca cacicazgo of Muyquytá, and named it "Santa Fe". The name soon acquired a suffix and was called Santa Fe de Bogotá.[55][56] Two other notable journeys by early conquistadors to the interior took place in the same period. Sebastián de Belalcázar, conqueror of Quito, traveled north and founded Cali, in 1536, and Popayán, in 1537;[57] from 1536 to 1539, German conquistador Nikolaus Federmann crossed the Llanos Orientales and went over the Cordillera Oriental in a search for El Dorado, the "city of gold".[58][59] The legend and the gold would play a pivotal role in luring the Spanish and other Europeans to New Granada during the 16th and 17th centuries.[60]

The conquistadors made frequent alliances with the enemies of different indigenous communities. Indigenous allies were crucial to conquest, as well as to creating and maintaining empire.[61] Indigenous peoples in Colombia experienced a decline in population due to conquest as well as Eurasian diseases, such as smallpox, to which they had no immunity.[62][63] Regarding the land as deserted, the Spanish Crown sold properties to all persons interested in colonized territories, creating large farms and possession of mines.[64][65][66] In the 16th century, the nautical science in Spain reached a great development thanks to numerous scientific figures of the Casa de Contratación and nautical science was an essential pillar of the Iberian expansion.[67] In 1542, the region of New Granada, along with all other Spanish possessions in South America, became part of the Viceroyalty of Peru, with its capital in Lima.[68] In 1547, New Granada became a separate captaincy-general within the viceroyalty, with its capital at Santa Fe de Bogota.[69] In 1549, the Royal Audiencia was created by a royal decree, and New Granada was ruled by the Royal Audience of Santa Fe de Bogotá, which at that time comprised the provinces of Santa Marta, Rio de San Juan, Popayán, Guayana and Cartagena.[70] But important decisions were taken from the colony to Spain by the Council of the Indies.[71][72]

An illustration of the Battle of Cartagena de Indias, a major Spanish victory in the War of Jenkins' Ear[73]

In the 16th century, European slave traders had begun to bring enslaved Africans to the Americas. Spain was the only European power that did not establish factories in Africa to purchase slaves; the Spanish Empire instead relied on the asiento system, awarding merchants from other European nations the license to trade enslaved peoples to their overseas territories.[74][75] This system brought Africans to Colombia, although many spoke out against the institution.[e][f] The indigenous peoples could not be enslaved because they were legally subjects of the Spanish Crown.[80] To protect the indigenous peoples, several forms of land ownership and regulation were established by the Spanish colonial authorities: resguardos, encomiendas and haciendas.[64][65][66]

However, secret anti-Spanish discontentment was already brewing for Colombians since Spain prohibited direct trade between the Viceroyalty of Peru, which included Colombia, and the Viceroyalty of New Spain, which included the Philippines, the source of Asian products like silk and porcelain which was in demand in the Americas. Illegal trade between Peruvians, Filipinos, and Mexicans continued in secret, as smuggled Asian goods ended up in Córdoba, Colombia, the distribution center for illegal Asian imports, due to the collusion between these peoples against the authorities in Spain. They settled and traded with each other while disobeying the forced Spanish monopoly.[81]

Map of the Viceroyalty of New Granada

The Viceroyalty of New Granada was established in 1717, then temporarily removed, and then re-established in 1739. Its capital was Santa Fé de Bogotá. This Viceroyalty included some other provinces of northwestern South America that had previously been under the jurisdiction of the Viceroyalties of New Spain or Peru and correspond mainly to today's Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama. Bogotá became one of the principal administrative centers of the Spanish possessions in the New World, along with Lima and Mexico City, though it remained less developed compared to those two cities in several economic and logistical ways.[82][83]

Great Britain declared war on Spain in 1739, and the city of Cartagena quickly became a top target for the British. A massive British expeditionary force was dispatched to capture the city, but, after achieving initial inroads, devastating outbreaks of disease crippled their numbers, and the British were forced to withdraw. The battle became one of Spain's most decisive victories in the conflict, and secured Spanish dominance in the Caribbean until the Seven Years' War.[73][84] The 18th-century priest, botanist, and mathematician José Celestino Mutis was delegated by Viceroy Antonio Caballero y Góngora to conduct an inventory of the nature of New Granada. Started in 1783, this became known as the Royal Botanical Expedition to New Granada. It classified plants and wildlife, and founded the first astronomical observatory in the city of Santa Fe de Bogotá.[85] In July 1801 the Prussian scientist Alexander von Humboldt reached Santa Fe de Bogotá where he met with Mutis. In addition, historical figures in the process of independence in New Granada emerged from the expedition as the astronomer Francisco José de Caldas, the scientist Francisco Antonio Zea, the zoologist Jorge Tadeo Lozano and the painter Salvador Rizo.[86][87]

Independence

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The departments of Gran Colombia in 1824

Rebellions against Spanish rule had occurred in the empire since the advent of conquest and colonization, but most were either crushed or remained too weak to change the overall situation. The last one that sought outright independence from Spain sprang up around 1810 and culminated in the Colombian Declaration of Independence, issued on 20 July 1810, the day that is now celebrated as the nation's Independence Day.[88] This movement followed the independence of Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti) in 1804, which provided some support to an eventual leader of this rebellion: Simón Bolívar. Francisco de Paula Santander also would play a decisive role.[89][90][91]

A movement was initiated by Antonio Nariño, who opposed Spanish centralism and led the opposition against the Viceroyalty.[92] Cartagena became independent in November 1811.[93] In 1811, the United Provinces of New Granada were proclaimed, headed by Camilo Torres Tenorio.[94][95] The emergence of two distinct ideological currents among the patriots (federalism and centralism) gave rise to a period of instability called the Patria Boba.[96] Shortly after the Napoleonic Wars ended, Ferdinand VII, recently restored to the throne in Spain, unexpectedly decided to send military forces to retake most of northern South America. The viceroyalty was restored under the command of Juan de Sámano, whose regime punished those who participated in the patriotic movements, ignoring the political nuances of the juntas.[97] The retribution stoked renewed rebellion, which, combined with a weakened Spain, made possible a successful rebellion led by the Venezuelan-born Simón Bolívar, who finally proclaimed independence in 1819.[98][99] The pro-Spanish resistance was defeated in 1822 in the present territory of Colombia and in 1823 in Venezuela.[100][101][102] During the Independence War, between 250 and 400 thousand people (12–20% of the pre-war population) died.[103][104][105]

Changes to the borders of Colombia between 1811 and 2012

The territory of the Viceroyalty of New Granada became the Republic of Colombia, organized as a union of the current territories of Colombia, Panama, Ecuador, Venezuela, parts of Guyana and Brazil and north of Marañón River.[106] The Congress of Cúcuta in 1821 adopted a constitution for the new Republic.[107][108] Simón Bolívar became the first President of Colombia, and Francisco de Paula Santander was made Vice President.[109] However, the new republic was unstable and the Gran Colombia ultimately collapsed.

Modern Colombia comes from one of the countries that emerged after the dissolution of Gran Colombia, the other two being Ecuador and Venezuela.[110][111][112] Colombia was the first constitutional government in South America,[113] and the Liberal and Conservative parties, founded in 1848 and 1849, respectively, are two of the oldest surviving political parties in the Americas.[114] Slavery was abolished in the country in 1851.[115][116]

Internal political and territorial divisions led to the dissolution of Gran Colombia in 1830.[110][111] The so-called "Department of Cundinamarca" adopted the name "New Granada", which it kept until 1858 when it became the "Confederación Granadina" (Granadine Confederation). After a two-year civil war in 1863, the United States of Colombia was created, which became known as the Republic of Colombia in 1886.[113][117] Internal divisions remained between the bipartisan political forces, occasionally igniting very bloody civil wars, the most significant being the Thousand Days' War (1899–1902), in which between 100 and 180 thousand Colombians lost their lives when the Liberal Party, supported by Venezuela, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Guatemala rebelled against the Nationalist government and took control of Santander, ultimately being defeated in 1902 by nationalist forces.[118]

20th century

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The United States of America's intentions to influence the area (especially the Panama Canal construction and control)[119] led to the secession of the Department of Panama in 1903 and its political independence.[120] The United States paid Colombia $25,000,000 in 1921, seven years after completion of the canal, for redress of President Roosevelt's role in the creation of Panama, and Colombia recognized Panama under the terms of the Thomson–Urrutia Treaty.[121] Colombia and Peru went to war because of territory disputes far in the Amazon basin. The war ended with a peace deal brokered by the League of Nations. The League finally awarded the disputed area to Colombia in June 1934.[122]

The Bogotazo in 1948

Soon after, Colombia achieved some degree of political stability, which was interrupted by a bloody conflict that took place between the late 1940s and the early 1950s, a period known as La Violencia ("The Violence"). Its cause was mainly mounting tensions between the two leading political parties, which subsequently ignited after the assassination of the Liberal presidential candidate Jorge Eliécer Gaitán on 9 April 1948.[123][124] The ensuing riots in Bogotá, known as El Bogotazo, spread throughout the country and claimed the lives of at least 180,000 Colombians.[125]

Colombia entered the Korean War when Laureano Gómez was elected president. It was the only Latin American country to join the war in a direct military role as an ally of the United States. Particularly important was the resistance of the Colombian troops at Old Baldy.[126]

The violence between the two political parties decreased first when Gustavo Rojas deposed the President of Colombia in a coup d'état and negotiated with the guerrillas, and then under the military junta of General Gabriel París.[127][128]

The Axis of Peace and Memory, a memorial to the victims of the Colombian conflict (1964–present)

After Rojas' deposition, the Colombian Conservative Party and the Colombian Liberal Party agreed to create the National Front, a coalition that would jointly govern the country. Under the deal, the presidency would alternate between conservatives and liberals every 4 years for 16 years; the two parties would have parity in all other elective offices.[129] The National Front ended "La Violencia", and National Front administrations attempted to institute far-reaching social and economic reforms in cooperation with the Alliance for Progress.[130][131] Despite the progress in certain sectors, many social and political problems continued, and guerrilla groups were formally created such as the FARC, the ELN and the M-19 to fight the government and political apparatus.[132]

Since the 1960s, the country has suffered from an asymmetric low-intensity armed conflict between government forces, leftist guerrilla groups and right wing paramilitaries.[133] The conflict escalated in the 1990s,[134] mainly in remote rural areas.[135] Since the beginning of the armed conflict, human rights defenders have fought for the respect for human rights, despite staggering opposition.[g][h] Several guerrillas' organizations decided to demobilize after peace negotiations in 1989–1994.[25]

The United States has been heavily involved in the conflict since its beginnings, when in the early 1960s the U.S. government encouraged the Colombian military to attack leftist militias in rural Colombia. This was part of the U.S. fight against communism. Mercenaries and multinational corporations such as Chiquita Brands International are some of the international actors that have contributed to the violence of the conflict.[133][25][139]

Beginning in the mid-1970s Colombian drug cartels became major producers, processors and exporters of illegal drugs, primarily marijuana and cocaine.[140]

On 4 July 1991, a new Constitution was promulgated. The changes generated by the new constitution are viewed as positive by Colombian society.[141][142]

21st century

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Former President Juan Manuel Santos signing a peace accord

The administration of President Álvaro Uribe (2002–2010) adopted the democratic security policy which included an integrated counter-terrorism and counter-insurgency campaign.[143] The government economic plan also promoted confidence in investors.[144] As part of a controversial peace process, the AUC (right-wing paramilitaries) had ceased to function formally as an organization .[145] In February 2008, millions of Colombians demonstrated against FARC and other outlawed groups.[146]

After peace negotiations in Cuba, the Colombian government of President Juan Manuel Santos and the guerrillas of the FARC-EP announced a final agreement to end the conflict.[147] However, a referendum to ratify the deal was unsuccessful.[148][149] Afterward, the Colombian government and the FARC signed a revised peace deal in November 2016,[150] which the Colombian congress approved.[151] In 2016, President Santos was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.[152] The Government began a process of attention and comprehensive reparation for victims of conflict.[153][154] Colombia shows modest progress in the struggle to defend human rights, as expressed by HRW.[155] A Special Jurisdiction of Peace has been created to investigate, clarify, prosecute and punish serious human rights violations and grave breaches of international humanitarian law which occurred during the armed conflict and to satisfy victims' right to justice.[156] During his visit to Colombia, Pope Francis paid tribute to the victims of the conflict.[157]

Gustavo Petro, the country's first left-wing president

In June 2018, Iván Duque, the candidate of the right-wing Democratic Center party, won the presidential election.[158] On 7 August 2018, he was sworn in as the new President of Colombia to succeed Juan Manuel Santos.[159] Colombia's relations with Venezuela have fluctuated due to ideological differences between the two governments.[160] Colombia has offered humanitarian support with food and medicines to mitigate the shortage of supplies in Venezuela.[161] Colombia's Foreign Ministry said that all efforts to resolve Venezuela's crisis should be peaceful.[162] Colombia proposed the idea of the Sustainable Development Goals and a final document was adopted by the United Nations.[163] In February 2019, Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro cut off diplomatic relations with Colombia after Colombian President Ivan Duque had helped Venezuelan opposition politicians deliver humanitarian aid to their country. Colombia recognized Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó as the country's legitimate president. In January 2020, Colombia rejected Maduro's proposal that the two countries restore diplomatic relations.[164]

Protests started on 28 April 2021 when the government proposed a tax bill that would greatly expand the range of the 19 percent value-added tax.[165] The 19 June 2022 election run-off vote ended in a win for former guerrilla, Gustavo Petro, taking 50.47% of the vote compared to 47.27% for independent candidate Rodolfo Hernández. The single-term limit for the country's presidency prevented President Iván Duque from seeking re-election. On 7 August 2022, Petro was sworn in, becoming the country's first leftist president.[166][167]

Geography

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Topographic map of Colombia

The geography of Colombia is characterized by its six main natural regions that present their unique characteristics, from the Andes mountain range region; the Pacific Coastal region; the Caribbean coastal region; the Llanos (plains); the Amazon rainforest region; to the insular area, comprising islands in both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.[168] It shares its maritime limits with Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Jamaica, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic.[169]

Colombia is bordered to the northwest by Panama, to the east by Venezuela and Brazil, and to the south by Ecuador and Peru;[170] it established its maritime boundaries with neighboring countries through seven agreements on the Caribbean Sea and three on the Pacific Ocean.[169] It lies between latitudes 12°N and 4°S and between longitudes 67° and 79°W.

East of the Andes lies the savanna of the Llanos, part of the Orinoco River basin, and in the far southeast, the jungle of the Amazon rainforest. Together these lowlands make up over half Colombia's territory, but they contain less than 6% of the population. To the north the Caribbean coast, home to 21.9% of the population and the location of the major port cities of Barranquilla and Cartagena, generally consists of low-lying plains, but it also contains the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta mountain range, which includes the country's tallest peaks (Pico Cristóbal Colón and Pico Simón Bolívar), and the La Guajira Desert. By contrast the narrow and discontinuous Pacific coastal lowlands, backed by the Serranía de Baudó mountains, are sparsely populated and covered in dense vegetation. The principal Pacific port is Buenaventura.[168][171][172]

Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta as seen from the ISS

Part of the Ring of Fire, a region of the world subject to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions,[173] in the interior of Colombia the Andes are the prevailing geographical feature. Most of Colombia's population centers are located in these interior highlands. Beyond the Colombian Massif (in the southwestern departments of Cauca and Nariño), these are divided into three branches known as cordilleras (mountain ranges): the Cordillera Occidental, running adjacent to the Pacific coast and including the city of Cali; the Cordillera Central, running between the Cauca and Magdalena River valleys (to the west and east, respectively) and including the cities of Medellín, Manizales, Pereira, and Armenia; and the Cordillera Oriental, extending northeast to the Guajira Peninsula and including Bogotá, Bucaramanga, and Cúcuta.[168][171][172] Peaks in the Cordillera Occidental exceed 4,700 m (15,420 ft), and in the Cordillera Central and Cordillera Oriental they reach 5,000 m (16,404 ft). At 2,600 m (8,530 ft), Bogotá is the highest city of its size in the world.[168]

The main rivers of Colombia are Magdalena, Cauca, Guaviare, Atrato, Meta, Putumayo and Caquetá. Colombia has four main drainage systems: the Pacific drain, the Caribbean drain, the Orinoco Basin and the Amazon Basin. The Orinoco and Amazon Rivers mark limits with Colombia to Venezuela and Peru respectively.[174]

Climate

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Colombia map of Köppen climate classification

The climate of Colombia is characterized for being tropical presenting variations within six natural regions and depending on the altitude, temperature, humidity, winds and rainfall.[175] Colombia has a diverse range of climate zones, including tropical rainforests, savannas, steppes, deserts and mountain climates.

Mountain climate is one of the unique features of the Andes and other high altitude reliefs where climate is determined by elevation. Below 1,000 meters (3,281 ft) in elevation is the warm altitudinal zone, where temperatures are above 24 °C (75.2 °F). About 82.5% of the country's total area lies in the warm altitudinal zone. The temperate climate altitudinal zone located between 1,001 and 2,000 meters (3,284 and 6,562 ft) is characterized for presenting an average temperature ranging between 17 and 24 °C (62.6 and 75.2 °F). The cold climate is present between 2,001 and 3,000 meters (6,565 and 9,843 ft) and the temperatures vary between 12 and 17 °C (53.6 and 62.6 °F). Beyond lies the alpine conditions of the forested zone and then the treeless grasslands of the páramos. Above 4,000 meters (13,123 ft), where temperatures are below freezing, the climate is glacial, a zone of permanent snow and ice.[175]

Biodiversity and conservation

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Colombia is one of the megadiverse countries in biodiversity,[176] ranking first in bird species.[177] Colombia is the country with the planet's highest biodiversity, having the highest rate of species by area as well as the largest number of endemisms (species that are not found naturally anywhere else) of any country. About 10% of the species of the Earth live in Colombia, including over 1,900 species of bird, more than in Europe and North America combined. Colombia has 10% of the world's mammals species, 14% of the amphibian species and 18% of the bird species of the world.[178]

The national flower of Colombia, the endemic orchid Cattleya trianae, is named for Colombian botanist and physician José Jerónimo Triana.[179]

As for plants, the country has between 40,000 and 45,000 plant species, equivalent to 10 or 20% of total global species, which is even more remarkable given that Colombia is considered a country of intermediate size.[180] Colombia is the second most biodiverse country in the world, lagging only after Brazil which is approximately 7 times bigger.[31]

Colombia has about 2,000 species of marine fish and is the second most diverse country in freshwater fish. It is also the country with the most endemic species of butterflies, is first in orchid species, and has approximately 7,000 species of beetles. Colombia is second in the number of amphibian species and is the third most diverse country in reptiles and palms. There are about 1,900 species of mollusks and according to estimates there are about 300,000 species of invertebrates in the country. In Colombia there are 32 terrestrial biomes and 314 types of ecosystems.[181][182]

Protected areas and the "National Park System" cover an area of about 14,268,224 hectares (142,682.24 km2) and account for 12.77% of the Colombian territory.[183] Compared to neighboring countries, rates of deforestation in Colombia are still relatively low.[184] Colombia had a 2018 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 8.26/10, ranking it 25th globally out of 172 countries.[185] Colombia is the sixth country in the world by magnitude of total renewable freshwater supply, and still has large reserves of freshwater.[186]

Government and politics

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Casa de Nariño is the official home and principal workplace of the President of Colombia.

The government of Colombia takes place within the framework of a presidential participatory democratic republic as established in the Constitution of 1991.[142] In accordance with the principle of separation of powers, government is divided into three branches: the executive branch, the legislative branch and the judicial branch.[187]

As the head of the executive branch, the President of Colombia serves as both head of state and head of government, followed by the Vice President and the Council of Ministers. The president is elected by popular vote to serve a single four-year term (In 2015, Colombia's Congress approved the repeal of a 2004 constitutional amendment that changed the one-term limit for presidents to a two-term limit).[188] At the provincial level executive power is vested in department governors, municipal mayors and local administrators for smaller administrative subdivisions, such as corregimientos or comunas.[189] All regional elections are held one year and five months after the presidential election.[190][191]

Capitolio Nacional, seat of the Congress

The legislative branch of government is represented nationally by the Congress, a bicameral institution comprising a 166-seat Chamber of Representatives and a 102-seat Senate.[192][193] The Senate is elected nationally and the Chamber of Representatives is elected in electoral districts.[194] Members of both houses are elected to serve four-year terms two months before the president, also by popular vote.[195]

Palace of Justice of Colombia, seat and symbol of the Judiciary of Colombia

The judicial branch is headed by four high courts,[196] consisting of the Supreme Court which deals with penal and civil matters, the Council of State, which has special responsibility for administrative law and also provides legal advice to the executive, the Constitutional Court, responsible for assuring the integrity of the Colombian constitution, and the Superior Council of Judicature, responsible for auditing the judicial branch.[197] Colombia operates a system of civil law, which since 1991 has been applied through an adversarial system.[198]

Despite a number of controversies, the democratic security policy has ensured that former President Álvaro Uribe remained popular among Colombian people, with his approval rating peaking at 76%, according to a poll in 2009.[199] However, having served two terms, he was constitutionally barred from seeking re-election in 2010.[200] In the run-off elections on 20 June 2010 the former Minister of Defense Juan Manuel Santos won with 69% of the vote against the second most popular candidate, Antanas Mockus. A second round was required since no candidate received over the 50% winning threshold of votes.[201] Santos won re-election with nearly 51% of the vote in second-round elections on 15 June 2014, beating right-wing rival Óscar Iván Zuluaga, who won 45%.[202] In 2018, Iván Duque won in the second round of the election with 54% of the vote, against 42% for his left-wing rival, Gustavo Petro. His term as Colombia's president ran for four years, beginning on 7 August 2018.[203] In 2022, Colombia elected Gustavo Petro, who became its first leftist leader,[204] and Francia Marquez, who was the first black person elected as vice president.[205]

Administrative divisions

[edit]

Colombia is divided into 32 departments and one capital district, which is treated as a department (Bogotá also serves as the capital of the department of Cundinamarca). Departments are subdivided into municipalities, each of which is assigned a municipal seat, and municipalities are in turn subdivided into corregimientos in rural areas and into comunas in urban areas. Each department has a local government with a governor and assembly directly elected to four-year terms, and each municipality is headed by a mayor and council. There is a popularly elected local administrative board in each of the corregimientos or comunas.[206][207][208][209]

In addition to the capital, four other cities have been designated districts (in effect special municipalities), on the basis of special distinguishing features. These are Barranquilla, Cartagena, Santa Marta and Buenaventura. Some departments have local administrative subdivisions, where towns have a large concentration of population and municipalities are near each other (for example, in Antioquia and Cundinamarca). Where departments have a low population (for example Amazonas, Vaupés and Vichada), special administrative divisions are employed, such as "department corregimientos", which are a hybrid of a municipality and a corregimiento.[206][207]

Click on a department on the map below to go to its article.

La Guajira DepartmentMagdalena DepartmentAtlántico DepartmentCesar DepartmentBolívar DepartmentNorte de Santander DepartmentSucre DepartmentCórdoba DepartmentSantander DepartmentAntioquia DepartmentBoyacá DepartmentArauca DepartmentChocó DepartmentCaldas DepartmentCundinamarca DepartmentCasanare DepartmentVichada DepartmentValle del Cauca DepartmentTolima DepartmentMeta DepartmentHuila DepartmentGuainía DepartmentGuaviare DepartmentCauca DepartmentVaupés DepartmentNariño DepartmentCaquetá DepartmentPutumayo DepartmentAmazonas Department, ColombiaRisaralda DepartmentRisaralda DepartmentQuindío DepartmentQuindío DepartmentBogotáBogotáArchipelago of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina
Department Capital city
1 Flag of the Department of Amazonas Amazonas Leticia
2 Flag of the Department of Antioquia Antioquia Medellín
3 Flag of the Department of Arauca Arauca Arauca
4 Flag of the Department of Atlántico Atlántico Barranquilla
5 Flag of the Department of Bolívar Bolívar Cartagena
6 Flag of the Department of Boyacá Boyacá Tunja
7 Flag of the Department of Caldas Caldas Manizales
8 Flag of the Department of Caquetá Caquetá Florencia
9 Flag of the Department of Casanare Casanare   Yopal
10 Flag of the Department of Cauca Cauca Popayán
11 Flag of the Department of Cesar Cesar Valledupar      
12 Flag of the Department of Chocó Chocó Quibdó
13 Flag of the Department of Córdoba Córdoba Montería
14 Flag of the Department of Cundinamarca Cundinamarca Bogotá
15 Flag of the Department of Guainía Guainía Inírida
16 Flag of the Department of Guaviare Guaviare San José del Guaviare
17 Flag of the Department of Huila Huila Neiva
Department Capital city
18 Flag of La Guajira La Guajira   Riohacha
19 Flag of the Department of Magdalena Magdalena Santa Marta
20 Flag of the Department of Meta Meta Villavicencio
21 Flag of the Department of Nariño Nariño Pasto
22 Flag of the Department of Norte de Santander Norte de Santander Cúcuta
23 Flag of the Department of Putumayo Putumayo Mocoa
24 Flag of the Department of Quindío Quindío Armenia
25 Flag of the Department of Risaralda Risaralda Pereira
26 Flag of the Department of San Andres, Providencia and Santa Catalina San Andrés, Providencia
and Santa Catalina
San Andrés
27 Flag of the Department of Santander Santander Bucaramanga
28 Flag of the Department of Sucre Sucre Sincelejo
29 Flag of the Department of Tolima Tolima Ibagué
30 Flag of the Department of Valle del Cauca Valle del Cauca Cali
31 Flag of the Department of Vichada Vaupés Mitú
32 Flag of the Department of Vichada Vichada Puerto Carreño
33 Flag of Bogotá Bogotá Bogotá

Foreign relations

[edit]
The VII Summit of the Pacific Alliance: Former President of Colombia, Juan Manuel Santos is second from the left.

The foreign affairs of Colombia are headed by the President, as head of state, and managed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs.[210] Colombia has diplomatic missions in all continents.[211]

Colombia was one of the four founding members of the Pacific Alliance, which is a political, economic and co-operative integration mechanism that promotes the free circulation of goods, services, capital and persons between the members, as well as a common stock exchange and joint embassies in several countries.[212] Colombia is also a member of the United Nations, the World Trade Organization, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the Organization of American States, the Organization of Ibero-American States, and the Andean Community of Nations.[213][214][215][216][217]

Colombia is a global partner of NATO[218] and a major non-NATO ally of the United States.[33]

Military

[edit]
Colombian Navy Frigate ARC Caldas

The executive branch of government is responsible for managing the defense of Colombia, with the President commander-in-chief of the armed forces. The Ministry of Defence exercises day-to-day control of the military and the Colombian National Police. Colombia has 455,461 active military personnel.[219] In 2016, 3.4% of the country's GDP went towards military expenditure, placing it 24th in the world. Colombia's armed forces are the largest in Latin America, and it is the second largest spender on its military after Brazil.[220][221] In 2018, Colombia signed the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.[222]

The Colombian military is divided into three branches: the National Army of Colombia; the Colombian Aerospace Force; and the Colombian Navy. The National Police functions as a gendarmerie, operating independently from the military as the law enforcement agency for the entire country. Each of these operates with their own intelligence apparatus separate from the National Intelligence Directorate (DNI, in Spanish).[223]

The National Army is formed by divisions, brigades, special brigades, and special units,[224] the Colombian Navy by the Naval Infantry, the Naval Force of the Caribbean, the Naval Force of the Pacific, the Naval Force of the South, the Naval Force of the East, Colombia Coast Guards, Naval Aviation, and the Specific Command of San Andres y Providencia[225] and the Aerospace Force by 15 air units.[226]

Economy

[edit]
Skyline of Bogotá's skyscrapers
Colombia GDP by sector in 2017
Bancolombia headquarters in Medellín

Historically an agrarian economy, Colombia urbanized rapidly in the 20th century, by the end of which just 15.8% of the workforce were employed in agriculture, generating just 6.6% of GDP; 20% of the workforce were employed in industry and 65% in services, responsible for 33% and 60% of GDP respectively.[227][228] The country's economic production is dominated by its strong domestic demand. Consumption expenditure by households is the largest component of GDP.[229][29][230]

Colombia's market economy grew steadily in the latter part of the 20th century, with gross domestic product (GDP) increasing at an average rate of over 4% per year between 1970 and 1998. The country suffered a recession in 1999 (the first full year of negative growth since the Great Depression), and the recovery was long and painful. However, growth reaching 7% in 2007, one of the highest in Latin America.[26] According to International Monetary Fund estimates, in 2023, Colombia's GDP (PPP) was US$1 trillion, 32nd in the world and third in South America, after Brazil and Argentina.

Total government expenditures account for 28% of the domestic economy. External debt equals 40% of gross domestic product. A strong fiscal climate was reaffirmed by a boost in bond ratings.[231][232][233] Annual inflation closed 2017 at 4.09% YoY (vs. 5.75% YoY in 2016).[234] The average national unemployment rate in 2017 was 9.4%,[235] although the informality is the biggest problem facing the labour market (the income of formal workers climbed 24.8% in 5 years while labor incomes of informal workers rose only 9%).[236] Colombia has free-trade zones (FTZ),[237] such as Zona Franca del Pacifico, located in the Valle del Cauca, one of the most striking areas for foreign investment.[238]

The financial sector has grown favorably due to good liquidity in the economy, the growth of credit and the positive performance of the Colombian economy.[30][239][240] The Colombian Stock Exchange through the Latin American Integrated Market (MILA) offers a regional market to trade equities.[241][242] Colombia is now one of only three economies with a perfect score on the strength of legal rights index, according to the World Bank.[243]

Colombia is rich in natural resources, and it is heavily dependent on energy and mining exports.[244] Colombia's main exports include mineral fuels, oils, distillation products, fruit and other agricultural products, sugars and sugar confectionery, food products, plastics, precious stones, metals, forest products, chemical goods, pharmaceuticals, vehicles, electronic products, electrical equipment, perfumery and cosmetics, machinery, manufactured articles, textile and fabrics, clothing and footwear, glass and glassware, furniture, prefabricated buildings, military products, home and office material, construction equipment, software, among others.[245] Principal trading partners are the United States, China, the European Union and some Latin American countries.[246][247]

Non-traditional exports have boosted the growth of Colombian foreign sales as well as the diversification of destinations of export thanks to new free trade agreements.[248] Recent economic growth has led to a considerable increase of new millionaires, including the new entrepreneurs, Colombians with a net worth exceeding US$1 billion.[249][250]

In 2017, however, the National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE) reported that 26.9% of the population were living below the poverty line, of which 7.4% were in "extreme poverty". The multidimensional poverty rate stands at 17.0 percent of the population.[251] The Government has also been developing a process of financial inclusion within the country's most vulnerable population.[252]

The contribution of tourism to GDP was US$5,880.3bn (2.0% of total GDP) in 2016. Tourism generated 556,135 jobs (2.5% of total employment) in 2016.[253] Foreign tourist visits were predicted to have risen from 0.6 million in 2007 to 4 million in 2017.[254][255]

Agriculture and natural resources

[edit]
Cerrejón is an open-pit coal mine, the largest of its type, the largest in Latin America and the tenth biggest in the world.

In agriculture, Colombia is one of the five largest producers in the world of coffee, avocado and palm oil, and one of the 10 largest producers in the world of sugarcane, banana, pineapple and cocoa. The country also has considerable production of rice, potato and cassava. Although it is not the largest coffee producer in the world (Brazil claims that title), the country has been able to carry out, for decades, a global marketing campaign to add value to the country's product. Colombian palm oil production is one of the most sustainable on the planet, compared to the largest existing producers. Colombia is also among the 20 largest producers in the world of beef and chicken meat.[256][257][258] Colombia is also the 2nd largest flower exporter in the world, after the Netherlands.[259] Colombian agriculture emits 55% of Colombia's greenhouse gas emissions, mostly from deforestation, over-extensive cattle ranching, land grabbing, and illegal agriculture.[260]

Colombia is an important exporter of coal and petroleum – in 2020, more than 40% of the country's exports were based on these two products.[261] In 2018 it was the 5th largest coal exporter in the world.[262] In 2019, Colombia was the 20th largest petroleum producer in the world, with 791 thousand barrels/day, exporting a good part of its production – the country was the 19th largest oil exporter in the world in 2020.[263] In mining, Colombia is the world's largest producer of emerald,[264] and in the production of gold, between 2006 and 2017, the country produced 15 tons per year until 2007, when its production increased significantly, beating the record of 66.1 tons extracted in 2012. In 2017, it extracted 52.2 tons. Currently, the country is among the 25 largest gold producers in the world.[265]

Energy and transportation

[edit]
Sogamoso Dam

The electricity production in Colombia comes mainly from Renewable energy sources. 69.93% is obtained from the hydroelectric generation.[266] Colombia's commitment to renewable energy was recognized in the 2014 Global Green Economy Index (GGEI), ranking among the top 10 nations in the world in terms of greening efficiency sectors.[267]

Port of Cartagena

Transportation in Colombia is regulated within the functions of the Ministry of Transport[268] and entities such as the National Roads Institute (INVÍAS) responsible for the Highways in Colombia,[269] the Aerocivil, responsible for civil aviation and airports,[270] the National Infrastructure Agency, in charge of concessions through public–private partnerships, for the design, construction, maintenance, operation, and administration of the transport infrastructure,[271] the General Maritime Directorate (Dimar) has the responsibility of coordinating maritime traffic control along with the Colombian Navy,[272] among others, and under the supervision of the Superintendency of Ports and Transport.[273]

In 2021, Colombia had 204,389 km (127,001 mi) of roads, 32,280 km (20,058 mi) of which were paved. At the end of 2017, the country had around 2,100 km (1,305 mi) of duplicated highways.[274][275][276] Rail transportation in Colombia is dedicated almost entirely to freight shipments and the railway network has a length of 1,700 km of potentially active rails.[276] Colombia has 3,960 kilometers of gas pipelines, 4,900 kilometers of oil pipelines, and 2,990 kilometers of refined-products pipelines.[276]

The Colombian government aimed to build 7,000 km of roads between 2016 and 2020, which would reduce travel times by an estimated 30 per cent, and transport costs by an estimated 20 per cent. A toll road concession programme will comprise 40 projects, and is part of a larger strategic goal to invest nearly $50 bn in transport infrastructure, including railway systems, making the Magdalena River navigable again, improving port facilities, and an expansion of El Dorado International Airport.[277][needs update] Colombia is a middle-income country.[278]

Science and technology

[edit]
Colciencias is a Colombian Government agency that supports fundamental and applied research.

Colombia has more than 3,950 research groups in science and technology.[279] iNNpulsa, a government body that promotes entrepreneurship and innovation in the country, provides grants to startups, in addition to other services it and institutions provide. Colombia was ranked 61st in the Global Innovation Index in 2024.[280] Co-working spaces have arisen to serve as communities for startups large and small.[281][282] Organizations such as the Corporation for Biological Research (CIB) for the support of young people interested in scientific work has been successfully developed in Colombia.[283] The International Center for Tropical Agriculture based in Colombia investigates the increasing challenge of global warming and food security.[284]

Important inventions related to medicine have been made in Colombia, such as the first external artificial pacemaker with internal electrodes, invented by the electrical engineer Jorge Reynolds Pombo, an invention of great importance for those who suffer from heart failure. Also invented in Colombia were the microkeratome and keratomileusis technique, which form the fundamental basis of what now is known as LASIK (one of the most important techniques for the correction of refractive errors of vision) and the Hakim valve for the treatment of hydrocephalus.[285] Colombia has begun to innovate in military technology for its army and other armies of the world; especially in the design and creation of personal ballistic protection products, military hardware, military robots, bombs, simulators and radar.[286][287]

Some leading Colombian scientists are Joseph M. Tohme, researcher recognized for his work on the genetic diversity of food, Manuel Elkin Patarroyo who is known for his groundbreaking work on synthetic vaccines for malaria, Francisco Lopera who discovered the "Paisa Mutation" or a type of early-onset Alzheimer's,[288] Rodolfo Llinás known for his study of the intrinsic neurons properties and the theory of a syndrome that had changed the way of understanding the functioning of the brain, Jairo Quiroga Puello recognized for his studies on the characterization of synthetic substances which can be used to fight fungus, tumors, tuberculosis and even some viruses and Ángela Restrepo who established accurate diagnoses and treatments to combat the effects of a disease caused by Paracoccidioides brasiliensis.[289][290][291]

Demographics

[edit]
Population density of Colombia in 2013
Population history of Colombia

With an estimated 50 million people in 2020, Colombia is the third-most populous country in Latin America, after Brazil and Mexico.[292] At the beginning of the 20th century, Colombia's population was approximately 4 million.[293] Since the early 1970s Colombia has experienced steady declines in its fertility, mortality, and population growth rates. The population growth rate for 2016 is estimated to be 0.9%.[294] About 26.8% of the population were 15 years old or younger, 65.7% were between 15 and 64 years old, and 7.4% were over 65 years old. The proportion of older persons in the total population has begun to increase substantially.[295] Colombia is projected to have a population of 55.3 million by 2050.[296]

Estimates for the population of the area that is now Colombia range between 2.5 and 12 million people in 1500; estimates between the extremes include figures of 6[56] and 7 million. With the Spanish conquest, the region's population had collapsed to around 1.2 million people in 1600, for an estimated decrease of 52–90%. By the end of the colonial period, it had declined further to around 800,000; it began rising in the early 19th century to around 1.4 million, where it would drop again in the Colombian War of Independence to between 1 and 1.2 million. The country's population did not recover to pre-conquest levels until the 1940s, nearly 450 years after its 16th-century peak.[297]

The population is concentrated in the Andean highlands and along the Caribbean coast, also the population densities are generally higher in the Andean region. The nine eastern lowland departments, comprising about 54% of Colombia's area, have less than 6% of the population.[171][172] Traditionally a rural society, movement to urban areas was very heavy in the mid-20th century, and Colombia is now one of the most urbanized countries in Latin America. The urban population increased from 31% of the total in 1938 to nearly 60% in 1973, and by 2014 the figure stood at 76%.[298][299] The population of Bogotá alone has increased from just over 300,000 in 1938 to approximately 8 million today.[300] In total seventy-two cities now have populations of 100,000 or more (2015). As of 2012 Colombia has the world's largest populations of internally displaced persons (IDPs), estimated to be up to 4.9 million people.[301]

The life expectancy was 74.8 years in 2015, and infant mortality was 13.1 per thousand in 2016.[302][303] In 2015, 94.58% of adults and 98.66% of youth are literate and the government spends about 4.49% of its GDP on education.[304]

Urbanization

[edit]

Colombia is a highly urbanized country with 77.1% of the population living in urban areas. The largest cities in the country are Bogotá, with 7,387,400 inhabitants, Medellín, with 2,382,399 inhabitants, Cali, with 2,172,527 inhabitants, and Barranquilla, with 1,205,284 inhabitants.[305]

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Colombia
According to the 2018 Census[306]
Rank Name Department Pop. Rank Name Department Pop.
1 Bogotá Distrito Capital 7,387,400 11 Ibagué Tolima 492,554
2 Medellín Antioquia 2,382,399 12 Villavicencio Meta 492,052
3 Cali Valle del Cauca 2,172,527 13 Santa Marta Magdalena 455,299
4 Barranquilla Atlántico 1,205,284 14 Valledupar Cesar 431,794
5 Cartagena Bolívar 876,885 15 Manizales Caldas 405,234
6 Cúcuta Norte de Santander 685,445 16 Montería Córdoba 388,499
7 Soacha Cundinamarca 655,025 17 Pereira Risaralda 385,838
8 Soledad Atlántico 602,644 18 Neiva Huila 335,994
9 Bucaramanga Santander 570,752 19 Pasto Nariño 308,095
10 Bello Antioquia 495,483 20 Armenia Quindío 287,245

Ethnic groups

[edit]
Racial groups in Colombia (2018 census)[307]
  1. Undeclared (85.0%)
  2. Blacks (9.34%)
  3. Indigenous (4.31%)
  4. Romanis (0.01%)
  5. Not specified (1.35%)

Colombia is ethnically diverse, its people descending from the original Native inhabitants, Spanish conquistadors, Africans originally brought to the country as slaves, and 20th-century immigrants from Europe and the Middle East, all contributing to a diverse cultural heritage.[308] The demographic distribution reflects a pattern that is influenced by colonial history.[309] Whites live all throughout the country, mainly in urban centers and the burgeoning highland and coastal cities. The populations of the major cities also include mestizos. Mestizo campesinos (people living in rural areas) also live in the Andean highlands where some Spanish conquerors mixed with the women of Amerindian chiefdoms. Mestizos include artisans and small tradesmen that have played a major part in the urban expansion of recent decades.[310][2] In a study by the American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Colombians have an average ancestry of 47% Amerindian DNA, 42% European DNA, and 11% African DNA.[311]

The 2018 census reported that the "non-ethnic population", consisting of whites and mestizos (those of mixed European and Amerindian ancestry), constituted 87.6% of the national population. 6.7% is of African ancestry. Indigenous Amerindians constitute 4.3% of the population. Raizal people constitute 0.06% of the population. Palenquero people constitute 0.02% of the population. 0.01% of the population are Roma. A study by Latinobarómetro in 2023 estimates that 50.3% of the population are Mestizo, 26.4% are White, 9.5% are Indigenous, 9.0% are Black, 4.4% are Mulatto, and 0.4% are Asian, these estimates would equate to around 26 million people being Mestizo, 14 million being White, 5 million being Indigenous, 5 million being Black, 2 million being Mulatto, and 200k being Asian.[312]

Ethnic groups of Colombia according to Latinobarómetro 2023[312]
  1. Mestizo (50.3%)
  2. White (26.4%)
  3. Amerindian (9.50%)
  4. Black (9.00%)
  5. Mulatto (4.40%)
  6. East Asian (0.40%)

The Federal Research Division estimated that the 86% of the population that did not consider themselves part of one of the ethnic groups indicated by the 2006 census was divided into 49% Mestizo or of mixed European and Amerindian ancestry, and 37% White, mainly of Spanish lineage, but there is also a large population of Middle East descent; in some sectors of society there is a considerable input of German and Italian ancestry.[313][2]

Many of the Indigenous peoples experienced a reduction in population during the Spanish rule[314] and many others were absorbed into the mestizo population, but the remainder currently represents over eighty distinct cultures. Reserves (resguardos) established for indigenous peoples occupy 30,571,640 hectares (305,716.4 km2) (27% of the country's total) and are inhabited by more than 800,000 people.[315] Some of the largest indigenous groups are the Wayuu,[316] the Paez, the Pastos, the Emberá and the Zenú.[317] The departments of La Guajira, Cauca, Nariño, Córdoba and Sucre have the largest indigenous populations.[2]

The Organización Nacional Indígena de Colombia (ONIC), founded at the first National Indigenous Congress in 1982, is an organization representing the indigenous peoples of Colombia. In 1991, Colombia signed and ratified the current international law concerning indigenous peoples, Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention, 1989.[318]

Sub-Saharan Africans were brought as slaves, mostly to the coastal lowlands, beginning early in the 16th century and continuing into the 19th century. Large Afro-Colombian communities are found today on the Pacific Coast.[319] Numerous Jamaicans migrated mainly to the islands of San Andres and Providencia. A number of other Europeans and North Americans migrated to the country in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including people from the former USSR during and after the Second World War.[320][321]

Many immigrant communities have settled on the Caribbean coast, in particular recent immigrants from the Middle East and Europe. Barranquilla (the largest city of the Colombian Caribbean) and other Caribbean cities have the largest populations of Lebanese, Palestinian, and other Levantines.[322][323] There are also important communities of Romanis and Jews.[308] There is a major migration trend of Venezuelans, due to the political and economic situation in Venezuela.[324] In August 2019, Colombia offered citizenship to more than 24,000 children of Venezuelan refugees who were born in Colombia.[325]

Languages

[edit]

Around 99.2% of Colombians speak Spanish, also called Castilian; 65 Amerindian languages, two Creole languages, the Romani language and Colombian Sign Language are also used in the country. English has official status in the archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina.[11][326][327][328]

Including Spanish, a total of 101 languages are listed for Colombia in the Ethnologue database. The specific number of spoken languages varies slightly since some authors consider as different languages what others consider to be varieties or dialects of the same language. Best estimates recorded 71 languages that are spoken in-country today – most of which belong to the Chibchan, Tucanoan, Bora–Witoto, Guajiboan, Arawakan, Cariban, Barbacoan, and Saliban language families. There are currently more than 850,000 speakers of native languages.[329][330]

Religion

[edit]
The Las Lajas Sanctuary in the southern Colombian Department of Nariño

The National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE) does not collect religious statistics, and accurate reports are difficult to obtain. However, based on various studies and a survey, about 90% of the population adheres to Christianity, the majority of which (70.9%–79%) are Roman Catholic, while a significant minority (16.7%) adhere to Protestantism (primarily Evangelicalism). Some 4.7% of the population is atheist or agnostic, while 3.5% claim to believe in God but do not follow a specific religion. 1.8% of Colombians adhere to Jehovah's Witnesses and Adventism and less than 1% adhere to other religions, such as the Baháʼí Faith, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, Mormonism, Hinduism, Indigenous religions, Hare Krishna movement, Rastafari movement, Eastern Orthodoxy, and spiritual studies. The remaining people either did not respond or replied that they did not know. In addition to the above statistics, 35.9% of Colombians reported that they did not practice their faith actively.[331][332][333] 1,519,562 people in Colombia, or around 3% of the population reported following an Indigenous religion.

While Colombia remains a mostly Roman Catholic country by baptism numbers, the 1991 Colombian constitution guarantees freedom of religion and all religious faiths and churches are equally free before the law.[334]

Education

[edit]

The educational experience of many Colombian children begins with attendance at a preschool academy until age five (Educación preescolar). Basic education (Educación básica) is compulsory by law.[335] It has two stages: Primary basic education (Educación básica primaria) which goes from first to fifth grade – children from six to ten years old, and Secondary basic education (Educación básica secundaria), which goes from sixth to ninth grade. Basic education is followed by Middle vocational education (Educación media vocacional) that comprises the tenth and eleventh grades. It may have different vocational training modalities or specialties (academic, technical, business, and so on.) according to the curriculum adopted by each school.[336]

M5 building – National University of Colombia, designed by Pedro Nel Gómez

After the successful completion of all the basic and middle education years, a high-school diploma is awarded. The high-school graduate is known as a bachiller, because secondary basic school and middle education are traditionally considered together as a unit called bachillerato (sixth to eleventh grade). Students in their final year of middle education take the ICFES test (now renamed Saber 11) to gain access to higher education (Educación superior). This higher education includes undergraduate professional studies, technical, technological and intermediate professional education, and post-graduate studies. Technical professional institutions of Higher Education are also opened to students holder of a qualification in Arts and Business. This qualification is usually awarded by the SENA after a two years curriculum.[337]

Bachilleres (high-school graduates) may enter into a professional undergraduate career program offered by a university; these programs last up to five years (or less for technical, technological and intermediate professional education, and post-graduate studies), even as much to six to seven years for some careers, such as medicine. In Colombia, there is not an institution such as college; students go directly into a career program at a university or any other educational institution to obtain a professional, technical or technological title. Once graduated from the university, people are granted a (professional, technical or technological) diploma and licensed (if required) to practice the career they have chosen. For some professional career programs, students are required to take the Saber-Pro test, in their final year of undergraduate academic education.[336]

Public spending on education as a proportion of gross domestic product in 2015 was 4.49%. This represented 15.05% of total government expenditure. The primary and secondary gross enrolment ratios stood at 113.56% and 98.09% respectively. School-life expectancy was 14.42 years. A total of 94.58% of the population aged 15 and older were recorded as literate, including 98.66% of those aged 15–24.[304]

Health

[edit]
Colombia leads the annual América Economía ranking of the best clinics and hospitals in Latin America.[338]

The overall life expectancy in Colombia at birth is 79.3 years (76.7 years for males and 81.9 years for females).[302] Healthcare reforms have led to massive improvements in the healthcare systems of the country, with health standards in Colombia improving very much since the 1980s. The new system has widened population coverage by the social and health security system from 21% (pre-1993) to 96% in 2012.[339] In 2017, the government declared a cancer research and treatment center as a Project of National Strategic Interest.[340]

A 2016 study conducted by América Economía magazine ranked 21 Colombian health care institutions among the top 44 in Latin America, amounting to 48 percent of the total.[338] In 2022, 26 Colombian hospitals were among the 61 best in Latin America (42% total).[341] Also in 2023, two Colombian hospitals were among the top 75 of the world.[342][343]

Crime

[edit]
Colombian National Police Special Operations Command (COPES), displayed in Pereira. A subdivision of the National Police for the fight against organized crime and terrorist acts.

Colombia has a high crime rate due to being a center for the cultivation and trafficking of cocaine. The Colombian conflict began in the mid-1960s and is a low-intensity conflict between Colombian governments, paramilitary groups, crime syndicates, and left-wing guerrillas such as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), and the National Liberation Army (ELN), fighting each other to increase their influence in Colombian territory. Two of the most important international actors that have contributed to the Colombian conflict are multinational companies and the United States.[344][345][346]

Elements of all the armed groups have been involved in drug trafficking. In a country where state capacity has been weak in some regions, the result has been a grinding war on multiple fronts, with the civilian population caught in between and often deliberately targeted for "collaborating". Human rights advocates blame paramilitaries for massacres, "disappearances", and cases of torture and forced displacement. Rebel groups are behind assassinations, kidnapping and extortion.[347]

In 2011, President Juan Manuel Santos launched the "Borders for Prosperity" plan[348] to fight poverty and combat violence from illegal armed groups along Colombia's borders through social and economic development.[349] The plan received praise from the International Crisis Group.[350] Colombia registered a homicide rate of 24.4 per 100,000 in 2016, the lowest since 1974. The 40-year low in murders came the same year the government signed a peace agreement with the FARC.[351] The murder rate further decreased to 22.6 in 2020, though still among the highest in the world, it decreased 73% from 84 in 1991. In the 1980s and 1990s it regularly ranked as number one.

Since the beginning of the crisis in Venezuela and the mass emigration of Venezuelans during the Venezuelan refugee crisis, desperate Venezuelans have been recruited into gangs in order to survive by other Venezuelan gang members.[352] Venezuelan women have also resorted to prostitution in order to make a living in Colombia.[352] Also, many Venezuelan prisoners were released from Venezuelan prisons by Maduro. Gang groups from Venezuela have also migrated to Colombia and other countries.

Culture

[edit]

Colombia lies at the crossroads of Latin America and the broader region of the Americas, and as such has been hit by a wide range of cultural influences. Native American, Spanish and other European, African, American, Caribbean, and Middle Eastern influences, as well as other Latin American cultural influences, are all present in Colombia's modern culture. Urban migration, industrialization, globalization, and other political, social and economic changes have also left an impression.[citation needed]

Many national symbols, both objects and themes, have arisen from Colombia's diverse cultural traditions and aim to represent what Colombia, and the Colombian people, have in common. Cultural expressions in Colombia are promoted by the government through the Ministry of Culture.[353]

Visual arts

[edit]
Work by the painter and sculptor Fernando Botero
Colonial painting The Virgin of Chiquinquirá (1562) by Alonso de Narváez.[354][355] She is the Catholic Patroness of Colombia. The original canvas is located in the Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary of Chiquinquirá.

Colombian art has over 3,000 years of history. Colombian artists have captured the country's changing political and cultural backdrop using a range of styles and mediums. There is archeological evidence of ceramics being produced earlier in Colombia than anywhere else in the Americas, dating as early as 3,000 BCE.[356][357]

The earliest examples of gold craftsmanship have been attributed to the Tumaco people[358] of the Pacific coast and date to around 325 BCE. Roughly between 200 BCE and 800 CE, the San Agustín culture, masters of stonecutting, entered its "classical period". They erected raised ceremonial centers, sarcophagi, and large stone monoliths depicting anthropomorphic and zoomorphic forms out of stone.[357][359]

Colombian art has followed the trends of the time, so during the 16th to 18th centuries, Spanish Catholicism had a huge influence on Colombian art, and the popular baroque style was replaced with rococo when the Bourbons ascended to the Spanish crown.[360][361] During this era, in the Spanish colony, the most important Neogranadine (Colombian) painters were Gregorio Vásquez de Arce y Ceballos, Gaspar de Figueroa, Baltasar Vargas de Figueroa, Baltasar de Figueroa (the Elder), Antonio Acero de la Cruz and Joaquín Gutiérrez, of which their works are preserved. Also important was Alonso de Narváez who, although born in the province of Seville, spent most of his life in colonial Colombia, also the Italian Angelino Medoro, lived in Colombia and Peru, and left works of art preserved in several churches in Tunja city.

During the mid-19th century, one of the most remarkable painters was Ramón Torres Méndez, who produced a series of good quality paintings depicting the people and their customs of different Colombian regions. Also noteworthy in the 19th century were Andrés de Santa María, Pedro José Figueroa, Epifanio Garay, Mercedes Delgado Mallarino, José María Espinosa, Ricardo Acevedo Bernal, between many others.

More recently, Colombian artists Pedro Nel Gómez and Santiago Martínez Delgado started the Colombian Murial Movement in the 1940s, featuring the neoclassical features of Art Deco.[356][357][362][363] Since the 1950s, the Colombian art started to have a distinctive point of view, reinventing traditional elements under the concepts of the 20th century. Examples of this are the Greiff portraits by Ignacio Gómez Jaramillo, showing what the Colombian art could do with the new techniques applied to typical Colombian themes. Carlos Correa, with his paradigmatic "Naturaleza muerta en silencio" (silent dead nature), combines geometrical abstraction and cubism. Alejandro Obregón is often considered as the father of modern Colombian painting, and one of the most influential artist in this period, due to his originality, the painting of Colombian landscapes with symbolic and expressionist use of animals, (specially the Andean condor).[357][364][365] Fernando Botero, Omar Rayo, Enrique Grau, Édgar Negret, David Manzur, Rodrigo Arenas Betancourt, Oscar Murillo, Doris Salcedo and Oscar Muñoz are some of the Colombian artists featured at the international level.[356][366][367][368]

The Colombian sculpture from the sixteenth to 18th centuries was mostly devoted to religious depictions of ecclesiastic art, strongly influenced by the Spanish schools of sacred sculpture. During the early period of the Colombian republic, the national artists were focused in the production of sculptural portraits of politicians and public figures, in a plain neoclassicist trend.[369] During the 20th century, the Colombian sculpture began to develop a bold and innovative work with the aim of reaching a better understanding of national sensitivity.[357][370]

Colombian photography was marked by the arrival of the daguerreotype. Jean-Baptiste Louis Gros was who brought the daguerreotype process to Colombia in 1841. The Piloto public library has Latin America's largest archive of negatives, containing 1.7 million antique photographs covering Colombia 1848 until 2005.[371][372]

The Colombian press has promoted the work of the cartoonists. In recent decades, fanzines, internet and independent publishers have been fundamental to the growth of the comic in Colombia.[373][374][375]

Architecture

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Throughout the times, there have been a variety of architectural styles, from those of indigenous peoples to contemporary ones, passing through colonial (military and religious), Republican, transition and modern styles.[376]

Colonial balconies in the streets of Cartagena
Colonial Popayán main plaza, Cauca Department
Colonial Villa de Leyva, Boyacá Department

Ancient habitation areas, longhouses, crop terraces, roads as the Inca road system, cemeteries, hypogeums and necropolises are all part of the architectural heritage of indigenous peoples.[377] Some prominent indigenous structures are the preceramic and ceramic archaeological site of Tequendama,[378] Tierradentro (a park that contains the largest concentration of pre-Columbian monumental shaft tombs with side chambers),[379] the largest collection of religious monuments and megalithic sculptures in South America, located in San Agustín, Huila,[359][380] Lost city (an archaeological site with a series of terraces carved into the mountainside, a net of tiled roads, and several circular plazas), and the large villages mainly built with stone, wood, cane, and mud.[381] Architecture during the period of conquest and colonization is mainly derived of adapting European styles to local conditions, and Spanish influence, especially Andalusian and Extremaduran, can be easily seen.[382] When Europeans founded cities two things were making simultaneously: the dimensioning of geometrical space (town square, street), and the location of a tangible point of orientation.[383] The construction of forts was common throughout the Caribbean and in some cities of the interior, because of the dangers posed to Spanish colonial settlements from English, French and Dutch pirates and hostile indigenous groups.[384] Churches, chapels, schools, and hospitals belonging to religious orders have a great urban influence.[385] Baroque architecture is used in military buildings and public spaces.[386] Marcelino Arroyo, Francisco José de Caldas and Domingo de Petrés were great representatives of neo-classical architecture.[385]

The National Capitol is a great representative of romanticism.[387] Wood was extensively used in doors, windows, railings, and ceilings during the colonization of Antioquia. The Caribbean architecture acquires a strong Arabic influence.[388] The Teatro Colón in Bogotá is a lavish example of architecture from the 19th century.[389] The quintas houses with innovations in the volumetric conception are some of the best examples of the Republican architecture; the Republican action in the city focused on the design of three types of spaces: parks with forests, small urban parks and avenues and the Gothic style was most commonly used for the design of churches.[390]

Deco style, modern neoclassicism, eclecticism folklorist and art deco ornamental resources significantly influenced the architecture of Colombia, especially during the transition period.[391] Modernism contributed with new construction technologies and new materials (steel, reinforced concrete, glass and synthetic materials) and the topology architecture and lightened slabs system also have a great influence.[392] The most influential architects of the modern movement were Rogelio Salmona and Fernando Martínez Sanabria.[393]

The contemporary architecture of Colombia is designed to give greater importance to the materials, this architecture takes into account the specific natural and artificial geographies and is also an architecture that appeals to the senses.[394] The conservation of the architectural and urban heritage of Colombia has been promoted in recent years.[395]

Literature

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The Nobel literature prize winner Gabriel García Márquez[396]

Colombian literature dates back to pre-Columbian era; a notable example of the period is the epic poem known as the Legend of Yurupary.[397] In Spanish colonial times, notable writers include Juan de Castellanos (Elegías de varones ilustres de Indias), Hernando Domínguez Camargo and his epic poem to San Ignacio de Loyola, Pedro Simón and Juan Rodríguez Freyle.[398]

Post-independence literature linked to Romanticism highlighted Antonio Nariño, José Fernández Madrid, Camilo Torres Tenorio and Francisco Antonio Zea.[399][400] In the second half of the nineteenth century and early twentieth century the literary genre known as costumbrismo became popular; great writers of this period were Tomás Carrasquilla, Jorge Isaacs and Rafael Pombo (the latter of whom wrote notable works of children's literature).[401][402] Within that period, authors such as José Asunción Silva, José Eustasio Rivera, León de Greiff, Porfirio Barba-Jacob and José María Vargas Vila developed the modernist movement.[403][404][405] In 1872, Colombia established the Colombian Academy of Language, the first Spanish language academy in the Americas.[406] Candelario Obeso wrote the groundbreaking Cantos Populares de mi Tierra (1877), the first book of poetry by an Afro-Colombian author.[407][408]

Between 1939 and 1940 seven books of poetry were published under the name Stone and Sky in the city of Bogotá that significantly influenced the country; they were edited by the poet Jorge Rojas.[409] In the following decade, Gonzalo Arango founded the movement of "nothingness" in response to the violence of the time;[410] he was influenced by nihilism, existentialism, and the thought of another great Colombian writer: Fernando González Ochoa.[411] During the boom in Latin American literature, successful writers emerged, led by Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez and his magnum opus, One Hundred Years of Solitude, Eduardo Caballero Calderón, Manuel Mejía Vallejo, and Álvaro Mutis, a writer who was awarded the Cervantes Prize and the Prince of Asturias Award for Letters.[412][413]

Music

[edit]

Colombia has a vibrant collage of talent that touches a full spectrum of rhythms. It is known as the land of a thousand rhythms, at around 1,024 folk rhythms. Musicians, composers, music producers and singers from Colombia are recognized internationally such as Shakira, Juanes, Carlos Vives and others.[414] Colombian music blends European-influenced guitar and song structure with large gaita flutes and percussion instruments from the indigenous population, while its percussion structure and dance forms come from Africa. Colombia has a diverse and dynamic musical environment.[415]

Regions of Colombia by their traditional music

Guillermo Uribe Holguín, an important cultural figure in the National Symphony Orchestra of Colombia, Luis Antonio Calvo and Blas Emilio Atehortúa are some of the greatest exponents of the art music.[416] The Bogotá Philharmonic Orchestra is one of the most active orchestras in Colombia.[417]

Caribbean music has many vibrant rhythms, such as cumbia (it is played by the maracas, the drums, the gaitas and guacharaca), porro (it is a monotonous but joyful rhythm), mapalé (with its fast rhythm and constant clapping) and the "vallenato", which originated in the northern part of the Caribbean coast (the rhythm is mainly played by the caja, the guacharaca, and accordion).[418][419][420][421][422]

The music from the Pacific coast, such as the currulao, is characterized by its strong use of drums (instruments such as the native marimba, the conunos, the bass drum, the side drum, and the cuatro guasas or tubular rattle). An important rhythm of the south region of the Pacific coast is the contradanza (it is used in dance shows due to the striking colours of the costumes).[418][423][424] Marimba music, traditional chants and dances from the Colombia South Pacific region are on UNESCO's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.[425][426][427]

Jorge Celedón of the Binomio de Oro de América band. The Vallenato, along with Cumbia, are the two most popular Colombian folk music genres heard in Latin America.

Important musical rhythms of the Andean Region are the danza (dance of Andean folklore arising from the transformation of the European contredance), the bambuco (it is played with guitar, tiple[428] and mandolin, the rhythm is danced by couples), the pasillo (a rhythm inspired by the Austrian waltz and the Colombian "danza", the lyrics have been composed by well-known poets), the guabina (the tiple, the bandola and the requinto are the basic instruments), the sanjuanero (it originated in Tolima and Huila Departments, the rhythm is joyful and fast).[429][430][431][432][433] Apart from these traditional rhythms, salsa music has spread throughout the country, and the city of Cali is considered by many salsa singers to be 'The New Salsa Capital of the World'.[418][434][435]

The instruments that distinguish the music of the Eastern Plains are the harp, the cuatro (a type of four-stringed guitar) and maracas. Important rhythms of this region are the joropo (a fast rhythm and there is also tapping as a result of its flamenco ancestry) and the galeron (it is heard a lot while cowboys are working).[418][436][437][438]

The music of the Amazon region is strongly influenced by the indigenous religious practices. Some of the musical instruments used are the manguaré (a musical instrument of ceremonial type, consisting of a pair of large cylindrical drums), the quena (melodic instrument), the rondador, the congas, bells, and different types of flutes.[439][440][441]

The music of the Archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina is usually accompanied by a mandolin, a tub-bass, a jawbone, a guitar and maracas. Some popular archipelago rhythms are the Schottische, the Calypso, the Polka and the Mento.[442][443]

[edit]
The Cartagena Film Festival is the oldest cinema event in Latin America. The central focus is on films from Ibero-America.[444]

Theater was introduced in Colombia during the Spanish colonization in 1550 through zarzuela companies. Colombian theater is supported by the Ministry of Culture and a number of private and state owned organizations. The Ibero-American Theater Festival of Bogotá is the cultural event of the highest importance in Colombia and one of the biggest theater festivals in the world.[445] Other important theater events are: The Festival of Puppet The Fanfare (Medellín), The Manizales Theater Festival, The Caribbean Theatre Festival (Santa Marta) and The Art Festival of Popular Culture "Cultural Invasion" (Bogotá).[446][447][448]

Although the Colombian cinema is young as an industry, more recently the film industry was growing with support from the Film Act passed in 2003.[449] Many film festivals take place in Colombia, but the two most important are the Cartagena Film Festival, which is the oldest film festival in Latin America, and the Bogotá Film Festival.[444][450][451]

Some important national circulation newspapers are El Tiempo and El Espectador. Television in Colombia has two privately owned TV networks and three state-owned TV networks with national coverage, as well as six regional TV networks and dozens of local TV stations. Private channels, RCN and Caracol are the highest-rated. The regional channels and regional newspapers cover a department or more and its content is made in these particular areas.[452][453][454]

Colombia has three major national radio networks: Radiodifusora Nacional de Colombia, a state-run national radio; Caracol Radio and RCN Radio, privately owned networks with hundreds of affiliates. There are other national networks, including Cadena Super, Todelar, and Colmundo. Many hundreds of radio stations are registered with the Ministry of Information Technologies and Communications.[455]

Cuisine

[edit]
Bandeja paisa (top) and Ajiaco (bottom) are two of the most traditional plates in the country.

Colombia's varied cuisine is influenced by its diverse fauna and flora as well as the cultural traditions of the ethnic groups. Colombian dishes and ingredients vary widely by region. Some of the most common ingredients are: cereals such as rice and maize; tubers such as potato and cassava; assorted legumes; meats, including beef, chicken, pork and goat; fish; and seafood.[456][457] Colombia cuisine also features a variety of tropical fruits such as cape gooseberry, feijoa, arazá, dragon fruit, mangostino, granadilla, papaya, guava, mora (blackberry), lulo, soursop and passionfruit.[458] Colombia is one of the world's largest consumers of fruit juices.[459]

Among the most representative appetizers and soups are patacones (fried green plantains), sancocho de gallina (chicken soup with root vegetables) and ajiaco (potato and corn soup). Representative snacks and breads are pandebono, arepas (corn cakes), aborrajados (fried sweet plantains with cheese), torta de choclo, empanadas and almojábanas. Representative main courses are bandeja paisa, lechona tolimense, mamona, tamales and fish dishes (such as arroz de lisa), especially in coastal regions where kibbeh, suero, costeño cheese and carimañolas are also eaten. Representative side dishes are papas chorreadas (potatoes with cheese), remolachas rellenas con huevo duro (beets stuffed with hard-boiled egg) and arroz con coco (coconut rice).[458][456] Organic food is a current trend in big cities, although in general across the country the fruits and veggies are very natural and fresh.[460][461]

Representative desserts are buñuelos, natillas, Maria Luisa cake, bocadillo made of guayaba (guava jelly), cocadas (coconut balls), casquitos de guayaba (candied guava peels), torta de natas, obleas, flan de mango, roscón, milhoja, manjar blanco, dulce de feijoa, dulce de papayuela, torta de mojicón, and esponjado de curuba. Typical sauces (salsas) are hogao (tomato and onion sauce) and Colombian-style ají.[458][456]

Some representative beverages are coffee (Tinto), champús, cholado, lulada, avena colombiana, sugarcane juice, aguapanela, aguardiente, hot chocolate and fresh fruit juices (often made with water or milk).[458][456]

Sports

[edit]
Mariana Pajón is a Colombian cyclist, two-time Olympic gold medalist and BMX World Champion.

Tejo is Colombia's national sport and is a team sport that involves launching projectiles to hit a target.[462] But of all sports in Colombia, football is the most popular. Colombia was the champion of the 2001 Copa América, in which they set a new record of being undefeated, conceding no goals and winning each match. Colombia has been awarded "mover of the year" twice.[463]

Colombia is a hub for roller skaters. The national team is a perennial powerhouse at the World Roller Speed Skating Championships.[464] Colombia has traditionally been very good in cycling and a large number of Colombian cyclists have triumphed in major competitions of cycling.[465]

Baseball is popular in cities like Cartagena and Barranquilla. Of those cities have come good players like: Orlando Cabrera, Édgar Rentería, who was champion of the World Series in 1997 and 2010[466] and others who have played in Major League Baseball. Colombia was world amateur champion in 1947 and 1965.[467]

Boxing is one of the sports that has produced more world champions for Colombia.[468][469] Motorsports also occupies an important place in the sporting preferences of Colombians; Juan Pablo Montoya is a race car driver known for winning 7 Formula One events. Colombia also has excelled in sports such as BMX, judo, shooting sport, taekwondo, wrestling, high diving and athletics, also has a long tradition in weightlifting and bowling.[470][471][472]

See also

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Notes

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Colombia, officially the Republic of Colombia, is a presidential republic located in northern South America, with coastlines along the Caribbean Sea to the north and the Pacific Ocean to the west, and land borders with Panama to the northwest, Venezuela to the northeast, Brazil to the east, Peru and Ecuador to the south.[1] Covering a land area of 1,138,910 square kilometers and possessing a population of approximately 53 million as of 2024, the country features diverse geography including the Andes Mountains, Amazonian rainforests, coastal plains, and the vast eastern Llanos, with Bogotá serving as its highland capital and largest city.[1][2] Independent from Spanish rule since 20 July 1810 and governed under a 1991 constitution that emphasizes a unitary decentralized state with strong executive powers, Colombia has historically grappled with internal divisions, exemplified by the mid-20th-century bipartisan violence known as La Violencia and a subsequent half-century armed conflict involving Marxist guerrillas like FARC, right-wing paramilitaries, and drug cartels.[1] Colombia is the world's second-most biodiverse nation, featuring ecosystems that support over 1,800 bird species. Economically, the country relies significantly on natural resources such as emeralds, coffee, and petroleum. Its nominal GDP reached $419 billion in 2024, though the country continues to grapple with income inequality.[3][1][4] In 2016, the government signed a peace accord leading to the demobilization of the FARC. However, the nation continues to face security challenges from dissident groups and drug trafficking organizations, with coca cultivation and potential cocaine production reaching record highs in 2023.[1][5] Under President Gustavo Petro, elected in 2022 as the first leftist head of state, efforts toward "total peace" have included negotiations with remaining armed actors, yet the country continues to face high homicide rates and challenges regarding territorial control. Analysts attribute these ongoing security issues to various factors, including state weakness, illicit economies, and continuing insurgencies.[6][1]

Etymology

Origin and historical usage of the name

The name Colombia derives from the surname of the Genoese explorer Christopher Columbus (Cristoforo Colombo in Italian, Cristóbal Colón in Spanish), adapted with the Latin suffix -ia commonly used in toponyms for regions or countries, evoking a sense of place analogous to Hispania or Germania.[7] This etymology honors Columbus as the European credited with initiating contact between the Old World and the Americas following his 1492 voyages, though he never set foot on the South American mainland.[8][9] The term's first documented political usage traces to Venezuelan revolutionary Francisco de Miranda, who envisioned a unified, independent federation spanning much of Spanish South America to supplant colonial rule. In April 1806, during a failed expedition backed by British interests, Miranda captured parts of western Venezuela and proclaimed the "Colombian Republic" (República Colombiana) as a provisional government, marking the name's inaugural application to a sovereign entity.[10] This usage symbolized pan-American aspirations detached from specific colonial viceroyalties like New Granada, drawing on neoclassical ideals of a "New World" polity named for its ostensible discoverer.[8] Following Miranda's capture and the broader wars of independence, the name gained formal traction under Simón Bolívar's leadership. The Congress of Cúcuta in 1821 established the Republic of Colombia—commonly known as Gran Colombia—encompassing modern-day Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama, with Bogotá as its capital; this confederation lasted until its dissolution amid regional schisms by 1831.[8] The surviving core territory, initially reorganized as the Republic of New Granada in 1831, adopted the name United States of Colombia (Estados Unidos de Colombia) via the Rionegro Constitution of 1863 to evoke federalism, before reverting to the Republic of Colombia in 1886 under the presidency of Rafael Núñez, a designation retained thereafter despite territorial losses like Panama's secession in 1903.[11] Throughout these shifts, the name persisted as a nod to independence-era republicanism rather than direct ties to Columbus's explorations, which focused on the Caribbean.[10]

History

Pre-Columbian civilizations

The territory comprising modern Colombia hosted diverse indigenous societies prior to European contact, with archaeological evidence indicating human occupation dating back to at least 12,500 BCE in sites like El Abra cave. These groups developed independently across varied ecosystems, from Andean highlands to Caribbean coasts and Amazonian lowlands, exhibiting advanced metallurgy, agriculture, and monumental architecture without centralized empires akin to those in Mesoamerica. Over 80 distinct cultures are documented, though many remain poorly understood due to limited excavations and colonial disruptions.[12] In the central Andean highlands of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense, the Muisca (also known as Chibcha) formed a confederation of chiefdoms that flourished from approximately 600 to 1600 CE, centered around modern Bogotá (Bacatá). They practiced intensive agriculture with crops like maize, potatoes, and quinoa on terraced fields, supported a population estimated at 500,000 to 2 million, and renowned for sophisticated goldworking using depletion gilding techniques to create tumbaga alloys. Muisca society featured a dual chieftainship system, with the zipa in Bacatá and zaque in Hunza, and their ritual raft ceremony on Lake Guatavita inspired the El Dorado legend.[13] Along the northern Caribbean coast in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, the Tairona culture developed hierarchical chiefdoms from around 200 CE until Spanish conquest in the 16th century. They constructed extensive stone-paved roads, terraced platforms, and circular houses in sites like Ciudad Perdida (built circa 800 CE), facilitating trade and agriculture in a steep mountainous terrain. Tairona artisans produced fine cotton textiles, ceramics, and gold ornaments, maintaining a population of tens of thousands organized into allied villages under mamas (priest-leaders).[14] In the Cauca River Valley of western Colombia, the Quimbaya people, active from roughly 500 BCE to 1000 CE, excelled in lost-wax casting and hammered goldwork, producing anthropomorphic figures and ceremonial objects from tumbaga that exemplify advanced depletion gilding. Their artifacts, often from elite tombs, reveal a society engaged in agriculture, weaving, and regional exchange networks, with over 100 gold pieces from sites like those in Antioquia highlighting ritual and status symbolism.[15] Southern Colombia's San Agustín region features the earliest known monumental complex in the Americas, with the San Agustín Archaeological Park encompassing tombs, dolmens, and over 600 monolithic anthropomorphic statues carved from volcanic tuff, dating primarily from 1000 BCE to 500 CE. Attributed to an unidentified culture, these megaliths depict deities, warriors, and animals, surrounding burial mounds that suggest a theocratic society focused on ancestor veneration and funerary rituals across a vast necropolis spanning multiple valleys.[12]

Spanish conquest and colonial era (1499–1810)

The initial European contact with the northern coast of present-day Colombia occurred in 1499 during an expedition led by Alonso de Ojeda, accompanied by Amerigo Vespucci, who sighted Cabo de la Vela but did not establish settlements.[16] Subsequent explorations in the early 1500s focused on the Caribbean littoral, with Rodrigo de Bastidas circumnavigating the Gulf of Urabá in 1501 and founding Santa María la Antigua del Darién in 1510 near the Panama-Colombia border, serving as a base for further incursions.[17] Vasco Núñez de Balboa, departing from Darién in 1513, crossed the Isthmus of Panama and reached the Pacific Ocean, claiming it for Spain and intensifying interest in the mainland's interior resources.[18] The conquest of the Andean highlands commenced in 1536 under Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada, who led approximately 800 men up the Magdalena River from Santa Marta, enduring harsh terrain, diseases, and conflicts with indigenous groups to reach Muisca territories by March 1537.[19] Quesada's forces defeated the Muisca Confederation, a loose alliance of Chibcha-speaking chiefdoms centered around Bacatá (modern Bogotá), culminating in the battle of Tocarema on August 18, 1538, after which the Spanish extracted significant gold tributes, including the famous Muisca raft artifact symbolizing El Dorado legends.[20] Concurrent expeditions, such as Pedro de Heredia's founding of Cartagena in 1533 and Sebastián de Belalcázar's push from the south, fragmented indigenous resistance but sparked rivalries among conquistadors, resolved partially by royal intervention in the 1540s.[17] Colonial administration initially fell under the Governorate of Castilla del Oro and later the Viceroyalty of Peru, with the New Kingdom of Granada formally established in 1549 as an audiencia centered in Santa Fe de Bogotá to oversee northern territories.[18] The encomienda system granted Spanish settlers indigenous labor for tribute and services, facilitating gold mining in regions like the Chocó and Antioquia, emerald extraction from Muzo since the 1530s, and the development of haciendas for cattle and crops, though it accelerated indigenous population declines through overwork, violence, and introduced epidemics like smallpox.[17] By the late 16th century, the indigenous population had plummeted from an estimated 1-2 million to under 200,000, prompting Crown reforms like the 1601 audiencias to curb abuses, while African slave imports began augmenting labor for coastal plantations and mines.[21] The Viceroyalty of New Granada was created on May 27, 1717, by King Philip V to improve governance and revenue collection from provinces including modern Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama, with Bogotá as capital.[22] Financial strains led to its suspension in 1723, but it was reestablished in 1739, introducing Bourbon reforms such as intendancies for fiscal efficiency, botanical expeditions under José Celestino Mutis from 1783, and fortifications at Cartagena against pirate raids, exemplified by the 1741 defense led by Blas de Lezo.[23] Throughout the era, the Catholic Church expanded via missions among frontier groups like the Guajira, while creole elites grew in influence, fostering tensions over trade monopolies with Spain that presaged independence movements by 1810.[22]

Wars of independence and early republic (1810–1850)

The independence movement in New Granada began on July 20, 1810, when criollo elites in Bogotá formed the Supreme Junta of Government in response to news of Napoleon's invasion of Spain and the deposition of Ferdinand VII, initially pledging loyalty to the Spanish king while asserting local autonomy.[24] This event, triggered by a public dispute over a borrowed vase from a Spanish merchant, marked the first open challenge to viceregal authority and inspired similar juntas in other cities like Cartagena and Tunja.[24] However, the period from 1810 to 1816, known as the Patria Boba, devolved into civil conflict between federalist provinces favoring loose alliances and centralists seeking unified control under Bogotá, weakening the patriot cause and enabling Spanish royalist forces under Pablo Morillo to reconquer much of the territory by 1816.[25] The tide turned with Simón Bolívar's Admirable Campaign in 1819, launched from Venezuela, which crossed the Andes and culminated in the Battle of Boyacá on August 7, 1819, where Bolívar's 2,850 troops decisively defeated a larger Spanish force of about 2,670 at the Boyacá River bridge, capturing Viceroy Juan de Sámano and opening the path to Bogotá. [26] This victory, achieved through tactical surprise and llanero cavalry charges despite harsh terrain and altitude sickness, secured New Granada's liberation and led to the Congress of Angostura in February 1819, where delegates from Venezuela, New Granada, and Panama ratified Bolívar as president of the unified Republic of Colombia, later termed Gran Colombia.[25] By 1822, Ecuador joined after Bolívar's southern campaigns, completing the federation encompassing modern Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama.[25] Gran Colombia's Congress of Cúcuta, convened from May to October 1821, promulgated a centralized constitution on August 30, establishing a bicameral legislature, a strong executive presidency, and a supreme court, while abolishing slavery gradually and promoting public education, though it preserved significant church influence and limited suffrage to property owners.[25] Bolívar, as president, and Vice President Francisco de Paula Santander clashed ideologically—Bolívar advocating authoritarian centralism to maintain unity amid regional separatisms, while Santander emphasized constitutional rule and civilian governance—exacerbating tensions fueled by economic stagnation from war debts exceeding 30 million pesos and unequal regional burdens.[25] A failed assassination attempt on Bolívar in September 1828 prompted him to assume dictatorial powers, but revolts like José Antonio Páez's in Venezuela (1826) and the Ocaña Convention's collapse (1828) due to factionalism eroded cohesion.[25] Gran Colombia dissolved in 1830 following Bolívar's resignation in January and the secession of Venezuela and Ecuador, leaving the remnant as the Republic of New Granada under a new constitution in 1832 that emphasized federalism and reduced central authority.[25] Santander, elected president in 1832, pursued liberal reforms including secularizing education and reducing clerical privileges, but faced conservative backlash over fiscal austerity and land reforms, sparking chronic instability.[27] Civil strife intensified with the War of the Supremes (1839–1842), a federalist uprising against Bogotá's dominance led by figures like José María Obando, resulting in over 10,000 deaths and temporary regional autonomies before centralist victory restored order under Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera.[27] By 1850, recurring elite factionalism between Liberals favoring free trade and church-state separation and Conservatives defending tradition had entrenched caudillo politics, hindering infrastructure development and export growth beyond tobacco and gold, with public debt lingering from independence wars.[27]

19th-century civil wars and state formation

Following the dissolution of Gran Colombia in 1830 and the establishment of the Republic of New Granada under the centralist Constitution of 1832, Colombia experienced recurrent civil conflicts driven by tensions between centralizing elites favoring strong executive authority and regional leaders seeking greater autonomy, often aligned with emerging Liberal and Conservative factions.[28] These disputes, rooted in control over patronage, land, and ecclesiastical privileges rather than broad ideological divides, escalated into armed rebellions as local gamonales (caudillos) challenged Bogotá's dominance, exacerbating economic stagnation from export dependencies like tobacco and nascent coffee production.[29] The War of the Supremes (1839–1842) marked the first major post-independence upheaval, ignited in Pasto by opposition to a federal law closing minor convents, which symbolized central encroachment on regional and church interests.[30] Ambitious provincial leaders, dubbed "Supremes," mobilized irregular forces against President José Ignacio de Márquez's administration, leading to widespread provincial uprisings that briefly fragmented the republic into autonomous zones before centralist loyalists restored order.[31] The conflict, involving thousands of combatants but limited formal battles, resulted in a conservative backlash, culminating in the more centralized Constitution of 1843, which reinforced executive powers and deepened partisan polarization between Conservatives (pro-church, pro-order) and Liberals (pro-federalism, pro-secularism).[32] Subsequent wars intensified these divides. The Colombian Civil War of 1860–1862 pitted radical Liberals, led by Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera, against Conservative President Mariano Ospina Rodríguez's government, with Liberals capturing Bogotá on July 18, 1861, after initial conservative resistance collapsed.[33] This Liberal victory imposed the federalist Rionegro Constitution of 1863, creating the United States of Colombia with sovereign states, separation of church and state, and expanded freedoms, though implementation fueled administrative chaos and fiscal insolvency from war debts exceeding state revenues.[34] The War of the Schools (1876–1877), sparked by Liberal President Aquileo Parra's secular education reforms clashing with Conservative clerical influence, saw intense fighting in regions like Tolima, Cauca, and Antioquia, involving armies of several thousand; it ended inconclusively but highlighted elite factionalism within Liberalism, paving the way for Conservative resurgence.[35][36] The era culminated in the Thousand Days' War (1899–1902), a cataclysmic Liberal uprising against the Conservative-dominated National Party government of Manuel Antonio Sanclemente and José Manuel Marroquín, triggered by electoral fraud and economic crisis following the 1886 centralist Constitution's authoritarian tilt after decades of Liberal federalism.[28] Beginning October 17, 1899, with Liberal revolts in Santander and Tolima, the conflict engulfed the nation, claiming 100,000 to 120,000 lives through combat, disease, and starvation, while destroying infrastructure and halting exports.[18] Conservative forces, bolstered by regular army units, prevailed by November 21, 1902, via the Treaty of Neerlandia, but the devastation—coupled with Panama's secession in 1903 amid U.S. canal interests—exposed the fragility of state cohesion, prompting post-war centralization reforms under the hegemonic Conservative Regeneration (1886–1930) to prioritize fiscal recovery and elite power-sharing over federal experiments.[29] These wars, totaling over 150,000 deaths across the century, forged Colombia's modern state through cycles of decentralization and re-centralization, embedding partisan clientelism that prioritized elite stability over institutional resilience.[28][18]

La Violencia and political instability (1948–1958)

La Violencia erupted on April 9, 1948, following the assassination of Liberal Party leader Jorge Eliécer Gaitán in downtown Bogotá, where he was shot three times by Juan Roa Sierra, a 20-year-old assailant who fled the scene.[37] [38] The killing triggered the Bogotazo, a massive riot that destroyed much of central Bogotá, with mobs torching buildings, clashing with police, and causing thousands of deaths in the capital alone over several days.[37] [39] This urban upheaval marked the onset of widespread partisan conflict between Liberals and Conservatives, fueled by longstanding elite rivalries rather than primarily economic grievances or ideological divides.[40] Under President Mariano Ospina Pérez (Conservative, 1946–1950), violence escalated from urban riots to rural guerrilla warfare, as Liberal self-defense groups formed in response to Conservative police repression, leading to banditry and reprisal killings in departments like Tolima and Sumapaz.[29] Laureano Gómez assumed the presidency in August 1950 amid fraudulent elections boycotted by Liberals, implementing authoritarian measures including press censorship and state terror against perceived Liberal insurgents, which intensified the cycle of atrocities.[41] [40] Gómez's regime, marked by his ultraconservative ideology and temporary delegation of power due to illness in 1951, saw the death toll rise as military units aligned with Conservatives targeted Liberal peasants, displacing thousands.[42] General Gustavo Rojas Pinilla seized power in a bloodless coup on June 13, 1953, ousting Gómez with initial bipartisan support and promises to end the strife through amnesties and rural pacification efforts like Plan Lazo, which involved military sweeps against armed bands.[43] [44] However, Rojas's military dictatorship (1953–1957) devolved into corruption, suppression of opposition, and failure to curb violence, as guerrilla groups persisted and urban protests grew, culminating in his ouster by a civic-military coalition on May 10, 1957.[43] [45] Despite amnesties, La Violencia claimed an estimated 200,000 to 300,000 lives, mostly rural civilians caught in partisan massacres and forced displacements.[46] The period concluded with the National Front pact in 1957–1958, where Liberal and Conservative elites agreed to alternate the presidency and equally divide congressional seats and cabinet posts for 16 years starting in 1958, aiming to institutionalize power-sharing and demobilize fighters through negotiated truces.[47] [48] This arrangement, formalized under interim leader Alberto Lleras Camargo, reduced large-scale bipartisan clashes but excluded other political forces, sowing seeds for future insurgencies.[47]

Rise of guerrilla groups and narcotraffic (1960s–1980s)

The period following the National Front power-sharing agreement of 1958, which marginalized communist and independent peasant groups by institutionalizing bipartisan rule between Liberals and Conservatives, saw the persistence of rural self-defense militias rooted in La Violencia (1948–1958), a bipartisan conflict that killed an estimated 200,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands.[49] Government military operations, such as Operation Marquetalia in May 1964 targeting communist enclaves in Quindío department, prompted survivors to formalize armed resistance, culminating in the founding of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in 1966 under Manuel Marulanda Vélez (also known as Tirofijo).[50] The FARC adopted a Marxist-Leninist framework, envisioning a protracted rural insurgency to seize power, redistribute land, and establish a socialist state, drawing on Maoist strategies of encircling cities from the countryside; by 1982, its forces had expanded from around 500 combatants in 1970 to approximately 3,000, sustained through extortion, kidnappings for ransom, and selective attacks on security forces.[49][51] Parallel to the FARC's agrarian focus, the National Liberation Army (ELN) formed in January 1965 in Santander department, initiated by urban intellectuals and radical priests influenced by liberation theology and the Cuban Revolution, including Fabio Vásquez Castaño, who trained in Cuba.[51] Espousing a blend of Marxism and Christian socialism, the ELN prioritized sabotage of infrastructure like oil pipelines—destroying over 1,000 by the 1980s—and ideological recruitment among students and peasants, growing to rival the FARC in influence despite internal schisms.[49] Smaller Marxist factions emerged, such as the Maoist Popular Liberation Army (EPL) in 1967, emphasizing proletarian internationalism, and the urban-oriented April 19 Movement (M-19) in 1974, which protested alleged 1970 election fraud and conducted high-profile actions like the 1980 Dominican Republic embassy siege and the 1985 Palace of Justice assault, where over 100 died amid urban combat.[50] These groups collectively controlled swaths of remote territory by the late 1970s, exploiting state absence in rural areas marked by land inequality—where 3% of landowners held 70% of arable land—and weak governance, though their fragmented operations limited coordinated advances against the military.[49] Concurrently, narcotraffic escalated from marginal marijuana cultivation in the 1960s—exporting an estimated 10,000 tons annually to the U.S. by 1975—to dominance in cocaine processing by the late 1970s, as Peruvian and Bolivian growers shifted refining to Colombia's jungles to evade interdiction.[52] Syndicates coalesced into cartels, with the Medellín Cartel under Pablo Escobar formalizing around 1976, controlling 80% of U.S. cocaine supply by 1980 and generating $1.5 billion in revenue that year, rising to nearly $3 billion by 1985 through violence including the murders of over 500 police officers and judicial figures.[52][53] The Cali Cartel, more discreet, handled logistics and money laundering, but Medellín's "narcoterrorism"—bombings killing hundreds of civilians and the 1989 Avianca Flight 203 downing (110 deaths)—directly challenged state sovereignty, prompting Colombia's first extraditions to the U.S. in 1985 amid U.S. pressure.[53] Guerrilla involvement in narcotrafficking began pragmatically in the 1970s, as FARC and ELN units in coca-growing frontiers like Caquetá and Putumayo initially suppressed cultivation to avoid "imperialist" corruption but shifted to imposing 10–30% "taxes" on growers, processors, and traffickers by the early 1980s, yielding FARC an estimated $100 million annually by decade's end and enabling force expansion to 6,000–8,000 fighters.[54] This economic symbiosis, while not transforming guerrillas into primary traffickers—cartels handled export—the provided safe havens and intelligence exchanges, such as M-19's short-lived alliance with Escobar for arms funding, though ideological clashes (e.g., FARC's suspicion of narcos as bourgeois) led to ruptures, including FARC killing cartel scouts; overall, drug revenues supplanted earlier subsistence funding, prolonging the insurgency amid government corruption and uneven counterinsurgency efforts that displaced 1 million by 1988.[54][50]

Democratic security policies and counterinsurgency (1990s–2010)

In the 1990s, Colombia faced escalating internal conflict as guerrilla groups like the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) expanded territorial control, reaching an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 fighters organized into over 70 fronts by the decade's start, while paramilitary forces such as the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) emerged to counter insurgent influence in drug-producing regions.[55] Homicide rates soared, averaging over 70 per 100,000 inhabitants annually, driven by clashes between insurgents, paramilitaries, and state forces amid narcotrafficking violence following the dismantling of major cartels like Cali.[56] The administration of President Ernesto Samper (1994–1998) struggled with governance amid scandals linking his campaign to narcofunding, contributing to state weakness that allowed FARC to intensify kidnappings and extortion, with over 3,000 reported annually by 1999.[57] President Andrés Pastrana (1998–2002) pursued negotiations, establishing a 40,000-square-kilometer demilitarized zone in El Caguán for talks with FARC from 1998 to 2002, but the process collapsed after FARC exploited the area for recruitment and operations, including high-profile kidnappings like that of Governor Andrés Pastrana's father, without concessions on ceasefires or disarmament. The failure, marked by over 2,000 terrorist attacks in 1999 alone, underscored insurgents' tactical use of talks to consolidate power while violence metrics worsened.[57] Concurrently, Plan Colombia, launched in 2000 with U.S. aid exceeding $1.3 billion initially, shifted focus from pure counternarcotics to bolstering military capacity against insurgents, enabling equipment upgrades and training that laid groundwork for later offensives, though immediate impacts on violence were limited under Pastrana.[58] The election of Álvaro Uribe in 2002 marked a pivot to the Democratic Security Policy (DSP), emphasizing state monopoly on force through military expansion to over 300,000 personnel, rural troop deployments, and integrated civil-military actions to reclaim territory from FARC, ELN guerrillas, and AUC paramilitaries.[59] DSP principles included prioritizing citizen security, professionalizing the armed forces, and combining coercion with socioeconomic outreach, such as farmer subsidies to undermine insurgent recruitment in coca zones.[60] Key initiatives involved offensive operations like Plan Patriota (2004), which targeted FARC strongholds in southern plains, reducing guerrilla fronts from over 60 to fewer than 30 by 2010 through sustained pressure that halved FARC's estimated fighters and territorial sway.[61][62] Paramilitary demobilization advanced via the 2003 Justice and Peace Law, leading to the collective surrender of approximately 30,000 AUC members by 2006, with reduced sentences for confessions and reintegration programs, though implementation faced criticism for incomplete asset forfeiture and the emergence of splinter criminal bands (BACRIM) controlling residual drug routes.[63] Uribe's strategy integrated U.S.-backed intelligence and air mobility, culminating in successes like Operation Jaque (2008), which rescued 15 high-profile hostages including Ingrid Betancourt without casualties, exposing FARC vulnerabilities.[59] Empirical outcomes included sharp violence declines: intentional homicide rates fell from 67.1 per 100,000 in 2002 to 33.0 by 2010, alongside a 50% drop in kidnappings and massacres, correlating with regained state presence in 80% of municipalities previously under insurgent dominance.[56] These gains stemmed from causal factors like increased defense spending (rising to 3.5% of GDP) and targeted killings of mid-level commanders, though DSP faced scrutiny over extrajudicial executions—later termed "false positives"—where soldiers killed civilians to inflate success metrics, prompting internal reforms by 2008.[59] Overall, the policy restored basic security, enabling economic growth averaging 4.5% annually, but persistent challenges included paramilitary reconfigurations and uneven rural governance.[58]

FARC peace accord and implementation challenges (2011–2018)

Secret exploratory talks between the Colombian government under President Juan Manuel Santos and FARC leadership began in 2011, leading to formal negotiations in Oslo in February 2012 before relocating to Havana, Cuba.[64] Over four years, the parties addressed six agenda points: rural reform, political participation, resolution of the illicit drug problem, victims' rights, implementation mechanisms, and a bilateral ceasefire. A definitive bilateral ceasefire was agreed on June 23, 2016, followed by the announcement of a final accord on August 24, 2016.[65] [18] The initial accord faced a setback on October 2, 2016, when a national referendum rejected it by a narrow margin of 50.21% "no" votes to 49.78% "yes," with turnout at approximately 37.4% of eligible voters, reflecting divisions over provisions like amnesty for FARC leaders and lenient penalties for human rights abuses.[66] A revised version incorporating some critics' concerns was signed in Havana on November 24, 2016, and ratified by Congress shortly thereafter, bypassing another referendum. The formal signing ceremony occurred in Bogotá's Colón Theater on December 1, 2016, marking the official end to over five decades of armed conflict.[67] [65] Implementation commenced with FARC combatants—numbering around 7,000 active members—concentrating in 23 rural zones and five urban camps for verification and disarmament overseen by a UN mission. By June 27, 2017, the UN verified the handover of more than 7,000 weapons and the demobilization of over 13,000 individuals, including non-combatants, enabling FARC's transformation into the political party Fuerza Alternativa Revolucionaria del Común (later renamed Comunes), which secured 10 guaranteed congressional seats for 2018–2022 despite electoral underperformance.[68] However, reintegration faced immediate hurdles, including inadequate security guarantees, as dissident factions rejecting the accord—estimated at 1,500 to 2,000 fighters—retained control over cocaine production areas, exacerbating territorial vacuums filled by groups like the ELN and Clan del Golfo.[69] Persistent challenges by 2018 included slow progress on rural land redistribution, with only a fraction of the pledged 3 million hectares titled or adjudicated, undermining commitments to address inequality fueling the insurgency.[70] The Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP), tasked with adjudicating conflict-era crimes, encountered delays in setup and faced criticism for perceived leniency, processing over 10,000 confessions but struggling with resource shortages and political opposition. Security deteriorated for ex-combatants, with at least 71 former FARC members killed between late 2016 and mid-2018, primarily by paramilitary remnants and dissidents, prompting UN concerns over state protection failures despite a national protection program.[71] These issues, compounded by ongoing coca cultivation—reaching record highs of 209,000 hectares in 2017 due to unmet crop substitution goals—highlighted causal gaps between accord promises and on-ground realities, where economic incentives from narcotics persisted amid weak institutional reach in remote areas.[70]

Gustavo Petro administration and policy reversals (2018–present)

Gustavo Petro, a former member of the M-19 guerrilla group, was elected president of Colombia on June 19, 2022, defeating Rodolfo Hernández in the runoff with 50.44% of the vote, marking the first victory for a left-wing candidate in the country's history.[72] He assumed office on August 7, 2022, pledging transformative changes including "total peace" negotiations with armed groups, social reforms in health, labor, and pensions, and a transition away from fossil fuel dependency.[73] Petro's administration initially enjoyed 56% approval, but faced immediate congressional opposition as his Historic Pact coalition held fewer than one-third of seats.[74] The "total peace" policy aimed to negotiate ceasefires and demobilization with over two dozen armed organizations, including ELN guerrillas and Clan del Golfo dissidents, building on prior FARC accords but extending to criminal groups.[75] By mid-2024, partial ceasefires were secured, yet violence escalated, with January 2025 marking the deadliest month since Petro's inauguration, driven by clashes between ELN and EMC dissidents, displacing thousands and exposing 26.7 million Colombians to organized violence in his first 30 months—a 24% increase over the prior period.[76] Critics argue the approach empowered criminal economies without dismantling them, reversing prior security gains post-FARC peace, as homicide rates rose slightly to 26.1 per 100,000 in 2022 and continued upward trends in rural areas.[77] [78] Social reforms encountered significant reversals due to legislative gridlock. The health reform, seeking to shift from private insurers to state oversight, was rejected multiple times by Congress in 2023-2024 amid accusations of politicizing care and risking corruption; Petro withdrew it in April 2024 after failing to override vetoes.[79] Labor reform, proposing extended contracts and higher severance, stalled in committees despite Petro's March 2025 call for a special election assembly, with opponents citing potential job losses.[80] Pensions and education reforms similarly languished, though minimum wage hikes—16% in 2023—contributed to multidimensional poverty falling 10 percentage points to 33% by 2023.[81] These setbacks prompted Petro to pivot toward constituent assemblies for peace implementation and living standards, announced in August 2024.[73] Economically, growth averaged under 2% annually through 2024, with 1.7% expansion amid high inflation and 10% unemployment projected for 2025, lagging regional peers and attributing to stalled investments and policy uncertainty.[82] Petro's environmental push included halting new oil exploration and promoting renewables, but coal and oil exports—60% of U.S. trade—persisted, clashing with fiscal needs.[83] [84] In drug policy, Petro reversed traditional eradication emphases, favoring crop substitution and decriminalization rhetoric, leading to U.S. decertification in September 2025 for non-cooperation—the first such action—and suspended aid, exacerbating tensions with threats of tariffs under President Trump.[85] [86] Amnesties for FARC splinters, granted to 19 leaders in March 2023, drew criticism for inverting justice priorities.[87] By October 2025, approval hovered low amid these reversals, with Petro seeking U.S. dialogue to mitigate crises.[88] Regional elections in October 2023 saw his allies suffer wide losses, signaling public disillusionment.[89]

Geography

Physical features and regional divisions

Colombia spans 1,141,748 square kilometers in northwestern South America, encompassing diverse physical landscapes from Andean highlands to lowland plains and coastal zones.[90] The terrain features flat coastal lowlands, central highlands, the high Andes Mountains occupying about one-quarter of the land area, and eastern lowland plains.[90] This variation arises from tectonic forces forming the Andes and sedimentary basins in the east and south.[91] The Andes dominate the western interior, dividing into three north-south cordilleras: the Western Cordillera (reaching elevations up to 3,800 meters), the Central Cordillera (with peaks exceeding 5,000 meters), and the Eastern Cordillera.[92] These ranges are separated by the fertile valleys of the Magdalena River (1,540 kilometers long, the principal waterway) and Cauca River, which facilitate transportation and agriculture.[92] Volcanic features punctuate the cordilleras, including active stratovolcanoes such as Nevado del Ruiz (5,321 meters), which erupted catastrophically in 1985, and Galeras.[93] Colombia hosts at least 14 Holocene volcanoes, reflecting ongoing subduction along the Pacific margin.[93] The isolated Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta in the north features Colombia's highest peaks, Pico Cristóbal Colón and Pico Simón Bolívar, both at 5,775 meters elevation, rising abruptly from sea level.[94] Eastern plains extend into the Orinoquía, while southern basins connect to the Amazon and Orinoco river systems; major rivers like the Meta and Guaviare drain these areas into the Orinoco.[91] Coastal regions include the Caribbean lowlands (approximately 1,600 kilometers of shoreline) and Pacific coast (about 1,300 kilometers), characterized by mangroves, estuaries, and heavy rainfall.[92] Colombia's natural regions are delineated by topography, hydrology, and ecosystems into six primary divisions: the Andean, Caribbean, Pacific, Orinoquía, Amazon, and Insular regions.[92] The Andean region, comprising highlands and intermontane valleys, covers roughly 25% of the territory and hosts over 80% of the population due to milder climates and arable land.[92] The Caribbean region features arid to humid lowlands, savannas, and cays along the northern coast. The Pacific region consists of narrow coastal plains backed by the Western Cordillera, with extreme precipitation exceeding 10,000 millimeters annually in some areas.[91] The Orinoquía encompasses vast eastern grasslands and wetlands, suited for cattle ranching. The Amazon region occupies the southern triangle, dominated by dense rainforest and tributaries of the Amazon River. The Insular region includes the San Andrés, Providencia, and Uraba archipelagos, with coral formations and tropical islands.[92] These divisions influence settlement patterns, resource distribution, and environmental management challenges.[91]

Climate variations and natural hazards

Colombia's equatorial location combined with its rugged topography—spanning Andean highlands, Pacific and Caribbean coasts, Orinoco plains, and Amazon lowlands—produces marked climate variations within a predominantly tropical framework. Lowland regions (tierra caliente, below 1,000 m elevation) feature hot, humid conditions with average temperatures of 24–28 °C (75–82 °F) and high humidity, while mid-elevation Andean zones (tierra templada, 1,000–2,000 m) cool to 17–24 °C (63–75 °F), and high plateaus like Bogotá average 14 °C (57 °F) year-round. Páramos above 3,000 m exhibit cold, alpine tundra-like climates with temperatures often below 10 °C (50 °F) and frequent frosts.[95] [96] [97] Köppen-Geiger classification delineates Colombia primarily as tropical rainforest (Af) in humid Pacific and Amazon basins, tropical savanna (Aw) in eastern llanos, and monsoon (Am) subtypes along coasts, transitioning to temperate oceanic (Cfb) in Andean intermontane valleys and tundra (ET) in high-altitude páramos. Annual precipitation varies dramatically: the Chocó department on the Pacific coast averages over 10,000 mm (390 in), ranking among the world's wettest lowlands, driven by intertropical convergence and orographic lift, whereas Caribbean and eastern areas receive 500–2,000 mm with pronounced dry seasons. Central regions exhibit bimodal rainfall peaks in April–May and October–November, influenced by equatorial convection, though Pacific slopes experience near-continuous downpours.[98] [99] [96] The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) amplifies these variations, with El Niño phases suppressing convection and reducing precipitation by up to 40% in core regions, fostering droughts, reduced river flows, and heightened wildfire risk, as seen in the 2015–2016 event that strained urban water supplies. Conversely, La Niña enhances moisture influx, boosting rainfall and intensifying wet-season extremes, contributing to floods and landslides; the 2023–2024 transition from El Niño drought to La Niña deluge exemplifies this shift's socioeconomic disruptions.[100] [101] Natural hazards arise from tectonic activity at the Nazca-Caribbean plate subduction zone and climatic extremes. Seismic events pose severe threats, with over 80% of the population in high-risk areas; the January 25, 1999, Quindío earthquake (Mw 6.2) caused ~1,200 deaths, 5,000 injuries, and displaced 200,000 amid poor building standards in the coffee-growing region. Volcanism affects Andean cordilleras, where ~50 potentially active volcanoes exist; the November 13, 1985, Nevado del Ruiz eruption melted glacial ice, generating lahars that buried Armero and killed ~23,000.[102] [103] [104] Hydrometeorological hazards dominate, with floods and landslides accounting for ~66% of disasters; La Niña-driven 2010–2011 rains affected 2.1 million, destroyed 3,000 homes, and killed 279, while recurring events cost hundreds of millions USD annually in damages. Approximately 84.7% of Colombians reside in zones exposed to two or more hazards, including coastal tsunamis and urban flooding, compounded by deforestation and informal settlements that heighten vulnerability.[105] [106][104]

Biodiversity hotspots and environmental degradation

Colombia encompasses portions of two globally recognized biodiversity hotspots: the Tropical Andes, the world's richest in species diversity, and the Tumbes-Chocó-Magdalena, spanning the Pacific coast and extending into neighboring regions.[107] These areas feature high endemism due to varied topography, including the Andes mountains, Amazon rainforest, and coastal ecosystems, supporting ecosystems like páramos that constitute 43% of the global total.[108] The country's megadiverse status arises from its position at the convergence of multiple biomes, hosting approximately 10% of global species despite covering less than 1% of Earth's land surface.[109] Colombia ranks second worldwide in total known species with over 63,000 documented, including first-place rankings in bird species (nearly 2,000), orchids, and butterflies, and second in plants and amphibians.[110] About 14% of its species are endemic, with over 8,500 unique taxa recorded as of 2025, including 1,148 endemic tree species concentrated in hotspot regions.[111][112] These figures underscore concentrations in forests, wetlands, and highlands, where species like the Andean condor and numerous hummingbirds thrive amid diverse habitats.[113] Environmental degradation poses severe risks, primarily through deforestation, which has claimed 1.99 million hectares of primary forest from 2002 to 2023 and 198,000 hectares of natural forest in 2024 alone.[114][115] Rates spiked post-2016 FARC peace accord as state control waned in remote areas, enabling expanded cattle ranching, soy cultivation, and illegal coca plantations, though a 29% decline occurred in 2022 to the decade's lowest level.[116] Over 60% of recent losses have targeted the Amazon region, fragmenting habitats and exacerbating species loss, particularly for forest-dependent birds now increasingly threatened in formerly intact areas.[117][118] Additional pressures include illegal gold mining, which pollutes rivers with mercury and destroys riparian zones; agricultural expansion; and post-conflict influxes of settlers into protected lands.[119][120] Narcotraffic sustains coca eradication-resistant cultivation in biodiversity-rich zones, while water/soil pollution and overfishing further erode aquatic and coastal diversity.[110] These anthropogenic drivers, compounded by climate variability, have heightened extinction risks for endemics, with habitat loss as the dominant causal factor over invasive species or direct harvesting.[121] Conservation efforts, including 31 million hectares of protected areas covering 15% of territory, mitigate some impacts but face enforcement challenges amid policy incoherence and rising environmental crime.[122][114]

Government and politics

Constitutional framework and institutions

The Constitution of Colombia, promulgated on July 5, 1991, following the election of a Constituent Assembly in December 1990, establishes the country as a unitary, presidential, representative, and democratic republic with separation of powers.[123][124] It replaced the 1886 Constitution, introducing mechanisms for greater citizen participation, such as the acción de tutela for immediate protection of fundamental rights, decentralization of administrative authority to territorial entities, and recognition of indigenous and Afro-Colombian collective rights, while maintaining a centralized state structure.[124] The document comprises 380 articles across 13 titles, emphasizing the protection of life, honor, property, and freedoms, with public authorities instituted to safeguard these for all residents.[124] Subsequent reforms, including those in 2005 and 2015, have adjusted provisions on presidential re-election and electoral processes but preserved the core framework.[124] Public power is divided into three branches—legislative, executive, and judicial—supplemented by independent organs such as the National Electoral Council, the Comptroller General, and the Attorney General's Office, which exercise control and oversight functions.[123][125] The executive branch is headed by the President, elected by popular vote for a four-year term, who serves as head of state, head of government, and supreme administrative authority, with powers to appoint ministers, direct foreign policy, and command the armed forces.[123][125] The legislative branch consists of a bicameral Congress: the Senate with 108 members (including two elected by indigenous communities) and the House of Representatives with 188 members, both elected every four years through proportional representation, responsible for enacting laws, approving budgets, and overseeing the executive.[125][123] The judicial branch operates independently, with the Supreme Court of Justice handling civil, criminal, and labor appeals; the Council of State adjudicating administrative disputes and serving as the government's legal advisor; and the Constitutional Court reviewing the constitutionality of laws and protecting fundamental rights via mechanisms like tutela writs, which must be resolved within 10 days.[123][124] The Superior Council of the Judiciary administers judicial discipline and selection, comprising 13 members elected from magistrates and lawyers.[126] Additional institutions include the National Electoral Council, which organizes elections and political party registrations under Article 265, and the Central Bank (Banco de la República), an autonomous entity managing monetary policy since 1923 but constitutionally reinforced in 1991 for independence from executive interference.[123] This framework has faced implementation challenges, including judicial backlog—over 3 million pending cases as of 2020—and accusations of politicization in appointments, though empirical data from judicial output shows the Constitutional Court resolving over 500,000 tutela cases annually by the mid-2010s.[126]

Executive power and presidential elections

The executive branch of Colombia's government is headed by the President, who serves as both head of state and head of government, as well as commander-in-chief of the armed forces.[127] Under the 1991 Constitution, the President holds significant authority, including directing foreign policy, administering national finances, issuing decrees with force of law under certain conditions, and appointing key officials such as ministers and ambassadors.[124] The President can veto legislation passed by Congress and convene extraordinary sessions of the legislative body when necessary.[6] A Vice President, elected on the same ticket as the President, assumes executive duties in cases of temporary or permanent absence.[124] Presidential elections occur every four years and employ a two-round system to ensure majority support.[128] Eligible candidates must be Colombian citizens by birth, at least 30 years old, and have full political rights.[124] In the first round, voters select from multiple candidates via universal suffrage for those over 18; if no candidate secures more than 50% of the vote, a runoff pits the top two contenders against each other approximately one month later.[129] The President serves a single four-year term but may seek immediate re-election once, following a 2015 constitutional amendment that reinstated consecutive terms after a prior ban. The 2022 election exemplified this process, with Gustavo Petro, a former member of the M-19 guerrilla group turned senator, advancing to the runoff after securing 40.32% in the first round on May 29.[129] Petro defeated Rodolfo Hernández, a former mayor and businessman, in the June 19 runoff with 50.44% of the vote, marking the first victory for a candidate from the political left in Colombia's history.[130] Voter turnout reached about 58% in the runoff, amid reports of orderly proceedings despite regional security challenges.[129] Petro's win reflected discontent with entrenched corruption and inequality, though his administration has faced criticism for policy implementation delays and coalition fractures.[131] The next election is set for May 31, 2026, with Petro ineligible to run again.[132]

Legislative and judicial systems

The legislative branch of Colombia operates as a bicameral Congress consisting of the Senate and the Chamber of Representatives, established under the 1991 Constitution to exercise legislative authority, including enacting laws, approving the national budget, ratifying international treaties, and overseeing the executive through political control mechanisms such as interpellation and censure of ministers.[133] The Senate comprises 108 members elected nationwide for four-year terms via proportional representation, with 100 seats allocated by party lists, two reserved for indigenous communities, and additional seats including one for the most-voted candidate from a previous presidential runner-up and five peace curules introduced post-2016 accord for conflict-affected regions.[134] The Chamber of Representatives holds 188 members, also elected for four-year terms through proportional representation in multi-member departmental districts, with seats distributed by population and including special allocations such as five peace curules and indigenous quotas to ensure minority representation.[133] Legislative procedures require bills to originate in either chamber—except tax bills in the Chamber and international affairs bills in the Senate—and pass both houses in identical form before presidential approval or veto override by a two-thirds majority; Congress convenes in two ordinary annual sessions from July 20 to December 16 and March 16 to June 20, with the president able to convoke extraordinary sessions for urgent matters.[135] Congress holds joint sessions for inaugurating the president, trying impeachments, and electing high officials like the attorney general, while maintaining committees for specialized review, though clientelism and fragmentation among over 20 parties have historically hindered efficiency, as evidenced by low bill passage rates in recent terms.[134] The judicial system is headed by three coequal high courts without hierarchical superiority: the Supreme Court of Justice, which handles cassation appeals in civil, criminal, agrarian, labor, and penal military matters and oversees prosecutorial discipline; the Council of State, the highest administrative court adjudicating disputes involving public entities and serving as the government's consultative body; and the Constitutional Court, tasked with guardianship actions to protect fundamental rights, abstract judicial review of laws, and ensuring constitutional supremacy since its creation in 1991. Magistrates for these courts, numbering nine each, are appointed for eight-year terms without reelection: Supreme Court justices elected by the full court from a list of three nominees by lower courts; Council of State by its own members similarly; and Constitutional Court justices selected by the Senate from trios proposed by the Supreme Court, Council of State, and presidency, respectively, aiming to balance branch influences but raising concerns over politicization.[136] Lower courts include regional circuits for appeals, municipal judges for first instance, and specialized tribunals for family, labor, and constitutional tutela actions, with the Judicial Council administering careers and discipline amid persistent challenges like case backlogs exceeding 3 million in 2023 and corruption scandals, such as the 2018 "cartel of the robe" involving Supreme Court justices soliciting bribes for favorable rulings.[137] Judicial independence faces ongoing pressures, including public criticisms from executive officials under the Petro administration and legislative proposals for reforms that critics argue could undermine autonomy, as monitored by international bodies noting patterns of intimidation against judges in 2024.[138][139] Despite these issues, the system's tutela mechanism has enabled over 1 million individual rights protections annually, contributing to expanded jurisprudence on social guarantees post-1991.[137]

Political parties and ideological divides

Colombia's multi-party system has become highly fragmented since the 1991 Constitution, which lowered barriers to entry and promoted pluralism, leading to deinstitutionalization, electoral volatility, and weakened ideological coherence among parties. Traditionally dominated by the centrist Colombian Liberal Party and center-right Colombian Conservative Party for over a century, the system now features over a dozen registered parties, many sustained by clientelism rather than programmatic platforms. This fragmentation, evident in the 2022 congressional elections where no single party secured more than 15% of seats, complicates governance and fosters ad hoc coalitions.[140][141][142]
PartyIdeologyKey Characteristics
Democratic Center (Centro Democrático)Right-wingFounded by Álvaro Uribe in 2013; emphasizes robust security measures against guerrilla remnants, market-oriented economics, and resistance to policies seen as conciliatory toward armed groups; holds significant opposition role post-2022.[143][144]
Historic Pact (Pacto Histórico)Left-wingCoalition backing President Gustavo Petro since 2022; prioritizes social reforms, environmentalism, pension and health system overhauls, and "total peace" negotiations with non-state armed actors; draws from former guerrilla networks and progressive urban bases.[145][144]
Colombian Liberal Party (Partido Liberal Colombiano)CentristHistoric powerhouse with broad ideological tent; focuses on pragmatic governance, social welfare within market frameworks, and regional influence; faces internal divisions amid declining national vote shares.[146][147]
Colombian Conservative Party (Partido Conservador Colombiano)Center-rightTraditional rival to Liberals; stresses family values, fiscal conservatism, and anti-communist stances rooted in conflict history; exhibits fragmentation with rebellious factions challenging leadership.[146][147]
Green Alliance (Alianza Verde)Center-leftEnvironmentalist-oriented; advocates sustainable development, anti-corruption, and moderate social policies; positioned as a bridge between extremes but weakened by internal splits.[144][148]
Ideological divides in Colombian politics revolve around security versus social equity, exacerbated by the legacy of over 50 years of guerrilla insurgency, paramilitary violence, and narcotrafficking, which killed an estimated 450,000 people since 1985. Right-wing factions, including Democratic Center, prioritize military strength and judicial rigor against dissident groups like ELN and Clan del Golfo dissidents, viewing left-wing overtures as naive or ideologically driven risks to state sovereignty, as evidenced by stalled "total peace" talks amid ongoing violence in 2023–2025. Left-wing groups, via Historic Pact, attribute conflict persistence to inequality and historical exclusion, pushing redistributive policies and amnesty expansions, though empirical data shows limited demobilization success, with over 100 active fronts reported in 2024.[149][150][151] Traditional centrist parties mediate these poles through transactional alliances, but urban-rural cleavages deepen divides: coastal and rural areas favor security-focused platforms due to direct victimization (e.g., 80% of conflict deaths outside major cities), while Bogotá and Medellín voters split on reformist versus stability appeals. Polarization surged post-2016 FARC accord, with 2022 elections reflecting a leftward shift via Petro's 50.44% runoff win, yet congressional gridlock persists, as veto-proof majorities elude his coalition amid corruption scandals and policy reversals. Surveys indicate 60–70% of Colombians perceive heightened societal division, correlating with trust erosion in institutions amid elite capture critiques.[144][152][153]

Gustavo Petro's reforms: Achievements and criticisms

Gustavo Petro, inaugurated as Colombia's president on August 7, 2022, pursued an ambitious agenda of social, economic, and environmental reforms aimed at reducing inequality, expanding public services, and transitioning away from extractive industries. Key initiatives included overhauls of health, pensions, labor, and taxation systems, alongside a "Total Peace" strategy to negotiate with armed groups and policies restricting fossil fuel exploration. While some measures, such as tax and labor reforms, advanced through Congress, others faced repeated blocks from opposition lawmakers and judicial reviews, resulting in partial implementations or failures by late 2025. Supporters credit Petro with increasing social spending and challenging entrenched interests, but critics argue the reforms have contributed to economic stagnation, with GDP growth averaging under 2% annually from 2023 to 2025, heightened insecurity, and investor uncertainty.[154][155][156] The 2022 tax reform, enacted in November, raised approximately 1.7% of GDP through higher corporate taxes, a wealth tax on high earners, and levies on hydrocarbons, enabling deficit reduction from 5.3% of GDP in 2022 to projected lower levels by 2024. Proponents, including government officials, hailed it as progressive for funding social programs without broad consumption hikes, collecting over COP 20 trillion (about $5 billion USD) in its first year. However, subsequent proposals in 2025 for an additional COP 26.3 trillion ($6.5 billion) via expanded alcohol taxes and business levies drew criticism for risking economic contraction, as business groups warned of reduced investment amid already sluggish growth and inflation peaking at 13.1% in 2023. Empirical data shows mixed fiscal outcomes: revenue increased, but compliance evasion and capital flight offset gains, with foreign direct investment dropping 20% in 2023.[157][158][159] Pension reform, approved by the lower house in June 2025 after multiple iterations, expanded coverage to low-income and informal workers—estimated at 60% of the workforce—by mandating state-managed funds for those unable to contribute privately, potentially benefiting 2.5 million elderly without pensions. This addressed systemic gaps where only 20% of seniors previously received benefits, per government data. Critics, including economists, contend the hybrid model retaining private pillars dilutes universality and strains public finances, projecting a COP 10 trillion annual shortfall by 2030 without corresponding productivity boosts. Judicial hurdles persist, with Constitutional Court review pending as of July 2025, highlighting tensions between equity goals and fiscal sustainability.[160][161][162] Labor reform, signed as Law 2466 on June 25, 2025, after two congressional failures, strengthened worker rights by raising overtime pay to 100% on Sundays/holidays, limiting fixed-term contracts to four years, and mandating indefinite hiring as default, aiming to curb precarious employment affecting 40% of workers. Advocates from unions praised it for enhancing dignity and reducing exploitation in informal sectors. Detractors, including business chambers, argue it will inflate labor costs by up to 25%, deterring hiring and formalization; early 2025 polls showed 57% disapproval amid fears of unemployment rising from 10% baseline. Implementation challenges emerged immediately, with companies adapting via subcontracting loopholes.[163][164][165] Health reform efforts stalled repeatedly; initial 2023 bills to centralize services under public entities failed in Senate votes, prompting a July 2025 decree for state oversight that the Council of State suspended on October 24, 2025, citing procedural flaws. Petro's push sought universal access in underserved areas, where private insurers cover 50 million but face fraud allegations exceeding COP 10 trillion yearly. Achievements were limited to pilot expansions in rural care, but critics from medical guilds decry politicization risking service disruptions, as evidenced by 2024 strikes. Private sector resistance, often framed by left-leaning outlets as profiteering, aligns with data showing insurer profits at 5-7% margins amid coverage gaps.[166][167][168] The "Total Peace" initiative, launched in 2022, negotiated ceasefires with groups like ELN and Clan del Golfo, initially cutting homicides by 15% in 2023 via talks covering 90% of armed actors. Yet, by 2025, violence surged with 200+ massacres and armed group expansions into vacated territories, as ceasefires fractured—e.g., ELN attacks resuming in January 2025. Over 50 military generals were dismissed, weakening defenses per security analysts, while 66% of Colombians viewed progress negatively in mid-2024 surveys. Petro's demobilization incentives yielded few surrenders (under 10,000 combatants), criticized for emboldening criminals without enforcement, contrasting prior administrations' territorial control gains.[169][170][155] Environmental policies, including a fracking ban and halt on new oil/gas contracts since 2022, positioned Colombia as a green leader, avoiding 3 million barrels of untapped reserves and piloting renewables to 14% of energy mix by 2024. This aligned with Petro's fossil fuel phase-out rhetoric, reducing exploration permits by 100%. However, oil still accounts for 50% of exports and 20% of GDP; the bans exacerbated fuel shortages in 2024-2025, hiking prices 30% and risking blackouts, as reserves fell below 7 months' supply. Critics, including energy economists, warn of stranded assets and lost revenues (COP 40 trillion annually), undermining transition funding without viable alternatives scaled yet.[171][172][173]

Foreign policy and international alliances

Colombia's foreign policy is grounded in principles of sovereignty, non-intervention, and multilateral engagement, as outlined by its Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which emphasizes expanding diplomatic presence to influence global decisions affecting national development.[174] The country maintains membership in key international organizations, including the United Nations (since 1945), the World Trade Organization (since 1995), the Organization of American States, the International Labour Organization (since 1919), and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.[175] These affiliations support Colombia's advocacy for democratic governance, human rights, and economic integration, though participation has occasionally been critiqued for aligning too closely with Western institutions amid domestic leftist shifts. Historically, the United States has been Colombia's primary security and economic partner, with bilateral trade exceeding $39 billion in goods and services in 2022 and extensive cooperation on counter-narcotics through initiatives like Plan Colombia, which provided over $10 billion in U.S. aid from 2000 to 2016 to combat drug trafficking and insurgencies.[176] Colombia holds Major Non-NATO Ally status, granted in 2022, facilitating military interoperability and arms access, and became a NATO global partner in 2017 to enhance defense capabilities against transnational threats.[175] The U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement, implemented in 2012, has boosted exports and investment, positioning the U.S. as Colombia's largest trading partner.[174] Regional alliances include the Pacific Alliance (with Chile, Mexico, and Peru, established 2011 for trade liberalization) and the Andean Community (with Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru, focused on economic integration since 1969).[162] Under President Gustavo Petro, inaugurated in August 2022, foreign policy has shifted toward diversification and reduced reliance on traditional Western partners, including announcements in July 2025 to exit NATO's global partnership framework, citing misalignment with regional autonomy goals.[177] Petro has pursued normalization with Venezuela, reopening borders in 2022 after prior closures under predecessor Iván Duque, though relations deteriorated following Venezuela's disputed 2024 elections, exacerbating migration pressures with over 2.5 million Venezuelan refugees in Colombia by 2023.[134] Ties with the European Union remain strong via the 2013 trade agreement covering tariffs and labor standards, while emerging partnerships with China have expanded through a 2023 trade deal emphasizing infrastructure and commodities.[178] Petro severed diplomatic relations with Israel in May 2024 over Gaza conflicts, aligning with broader Global South critiques of Western foreign policy.[155] These shifts have strained U.S. relations, particularly after Donald Trump's 2025 inauguration, with the U.S. revoking Petro's visa in September 2025 and imposing sanctions on October 24, 2025, accusing his administration of enabling cartel activity by deprioritizing eradication efforts—cocaine production rose 52% from 2022 to 2023 under Petro's harm-reduction approach.[179][134] U.S. foreign assistance totaled $377 million in fiscal 2024, primarily for security, but future cuts loom amid disputes over Petro's "total peace" negotiations with armed groups, which critics argue have empowered traffickers.[180] This tension underscores a pivot toward Latin American and African alliances, as Petro vowed in September 2025 to reformulate policy for multipolar engagement, potentially risking economic isolation given the U.S. and EU's dominance in trade (over 40% combined).[181][182]

Military structure and defense strategy

The Colombian Armed Forces operate under the Ministry of National Defense, encompassing the National Army, Colombian Navy (including marines and coast guard functions), and Colombian Aerospace Force, with the National Police integrated into the defense portfolio for internal security coordination but maintaining operational autonomy.[183] The Army constitutes the largest branch, structured into seven joint commands aligned with geographic districts, each overseen by a division headquarters that deploys brigades for ground operations, special forces units, and logistics support tailored to counterinsurgency and territorial control.[184] The Navy focuses on maritime interdiction, riverine patrols along the extensive waterways, and coastal defense, operating from four naval forces districts, while the Aerospace Force provides air mobility, reconnaissance, and close air support, with squadrons based at key air bases for rapid deployment.[185] As of 2025, the forces maintain approximately 293,200 active personnel, supplemented by 35,000 reserves and 150,000 paramilitary elements, reflecting a professionalized force emphasizing mobility over heavy armor—evidenced by zero main battle tanks but over 3,400 armored vehicles and limited artillery assets.[185] Defense spending reached $10.5 billion in 2025, equivalent to nearly 4% of GDP, the highest proportional allocation in South America, directed predominantly toward sustainment, intelligence, and counter-narcotics operations rather than conventional external deterrence.[185][186] Colombia's defense strategy prioritizes internal threats over external invasion risks, rooted in decades of counterinsurgency against Marxist guerrillas like the FARC and ELN, as well as drug-funded criminal organizations such as the Clan del Golfo, with operations emphasizing intelligence-led targeting, territorial dominance, and eradication of illicit crops.[59] The Democratic Security and Defense Policy, initiated in 2002, shifted from reactive postures to proactive offensives that dismantled much of the FARC's command structure by 2016, enabling the peace accord, though implementation failures have allowed dissident factions to regroup, contributing to over 320 drone attacks by armed groups since April 2024.[77][187] Under President Gustavo Petro's "total peace" initiative since 2022, strategy has incorporated negotiations with remaining insurgents, but critics attribute rising violence—including territorial gains by non-state actors—to perceived military restraint, underscoring causal links between incomplete demobilization and security vacuums.[188][77] International cooperation, particularly U.S. assistance via Plan Colombia and subsequent programs, has bolstered capabilities in aerial interdiction, training, and equipment, with joint exercises enhancing interoperability against transnational threats like narcotics trafficking.[175] Absent a formal defense white paper, strategic directives integrate whole-of-government approaches, including enhanced interagency coordination and technological innovation to counter asymmetric tactics, though persistent challenges from fragmented armed groups highlight the limits of negotiation without robust enforcement.[59][189]

Administrative divisions

Departments, municipalities, and special districts

Colombia is divided into 32 departments and 1 capital district, forming the primary level of territorial administration under the 1991 Constitution, which emphasizes decentralization while maintaining unitary state control. Departments are led by governors elected every four years and departmental assemblies with legislative powers over regional budgets, planning, and services; they vary widely in size, population, and economy, from densely populated Antioquia to sparsely inhabited Amazonian territories. The Capital District of Bogotá, encompassing the national capital and adjacent municipalities, holds special status equivalent to a department but with enhanced fiscal autonomy for urban infrastructure, public transport, and metropolitan coordination, directly elected mayor, and a council focused on city-specific governance.[1][190][191] Departments are subdivided into 1,102 municipalities as of 2023, the basic units of local government responsible for essential services like water supply, waste management, education, and health at the community level; each municipality elects a mayor and council every four years, with smaller rural cabildos (village councils) handling indigenous or traditional authority areas. This structure supports localized decision-making, though capacity varies, with urban municipalities like Medellín managing complex budgets exceeding rural counterparts. Non-municipalized areas, numbering nine and primarily indigenous resguardos or frontier zones, operate under collective territorial regimes with semi-autonomous governance tied to ethnic communities rather than standard municipal frameworks.[191][192] Special administrative features include five Amazonian departments—Amazonas, Guainía, Guaviare, Vaupés, and Vichada—with adapted regimes for low-density regions covering over 40% of national territory but less than 1% of population; these allow centralized national intervention in security, infrastructure, and environmental management due to isolation and vulnerability to illicit activities. The Archipiélago de San Andrés, Providencia y Santa Catalina department, an outlier as Colombia's only insular division, spans Caribbean keys with a population of about 80,000, featuring bilingual (Spanish-English) official status, Raizal cultural protections, and specialized regulations for marine resources and tourism to preserve its distinct Creole heritage amid sovereignty disputes resolved by the 2012 ICJ ruling favoring Colombia over Nicaragua. No additional special districts exist beyond these; prior frontier intendancies and commissaries were reclassified as departments by 1991 to integrate remote areas into the national framework.[1][190]

Decentralization and regional governance challenges

The 1991 Colombian Constitution marked a pivotal shift toward decentralization by establishing 32 departments with directly elected governors and over 1,100 municipalities led by elected mayors, devolving administrative, fiscal, and political powers to subnational entities to address historical centralism and regional neglect. This reform accelerated transfers of resources, with the situado fiscal mechanism allocating a formula-based share of national revenues—reaching approximately 40% of the central government's current expenditures by the early 2000s—to departments and municipalities for services like education and health.[193][194] However, implementation has revealed structural limitations, as subnational governments often lack sufficient own-source revenues, relying heavily on central transfers that constitute up to 80% of departmental budgets in poorer regions, fostering fiscal dependency and disincentives for local tax collection.[195][196] Governance challenges at the regional level stem from uneven institutional capacity and persistent corruption, with local administrations in remote departments like Chocó or Guaviare exhibiting weak technical expertise and accountability mechanisms, leading to inefficient service delivery and frequent scandals involving embezzlement of transfer funds.[141][197] For instance, audits by Colombia's Comptroller General have uncovered irregularities in over 20% of municipal contracts annually, exacerbating public distrust and hindering effective policy execution.[198] Security threats compound these issues, as armed groups such as dissident FARC factions and ELN control territories in peripheral departments, undermining local authority through intimidation of officials and diversion of resources, which has delayed infrastructure projects and perpetuated cycles of violence despite national peace accords.[141][199] Regional disparities in development remain stark, with GDP per capita in Bogotá exceeding $15,000 USD annually while departments like Amazonas lag below $3,000, reflecting inadequate decentralization of productive investments and human capital formation.[200][201] This unevenness arises from centralized control over major revenue sources like oil and mining royalties, which, despite allocation formulas, fail to bridge gaps due to local elite capture and insufficient administrative decentralization, resulting in unbalanced multilevel governance where fiscal transfers outpace capacity building.[202][203] Recent proposals under President Gustavo Petro to further devolve resources risk amplifying these vulnerabilities without accompanying reforms in transparency and oversight, potentially worsening fiscal imbalances amid Colombia's $100 billion public debt as of 2023.[197][204]

Economy

Colombia's economy is classified as upper-middle-income, with a nominal GDP of approximately 418.5 billion USD in 2024 and a per capita GDP of 6,873 USD, reflecting steady but uneven expansion driven by services, which account for over 56% of GDP and employ about 65% of the workforce.[4][205][206] Industry, including oil and mining, contributes around 30%, while agriculture adds roughly 7%, underscoring the economy's reliance on extractive sectors for export revenues despite diversification attempts.[207] Macroeconomic stability has been supported by post-1990s liberalization policies that reduced inflation from triple digits to single digits and fostered foreign investment, though vulnerability to global commodity cycles persists.[208] Historical growth trends show volatility tied to oil prices and external shocks, with annual real GDP expansion averaging about 3.5% from 2000 to 2019, peaking above 6% in mid-2010s oil booms before contracting sharply by 7% in 2020 due to COVID-19 lockdowns.[209] Post-pandemic recovery was robust, reaching 10.6% in 2021 and 7.5% in 2022 amid stimulus and commodity rebounds, but slowed to 1.6% in 2024 amid high inflation peaking at 13% in 2022, tight monetary policy, and fiscal pressures from increased public spending.[210][211] Oil dependence exacerbates these swings, as energy exports comprise over 50% of total exports and fluctuations in prices directly impact fiscal revenues, which historically averaged 5% of GDP from oil-related taxes.[212] Efforts to diversify via manufacturing and services have yielded modest gains, but structural rigidities like high informality (over 50% of employment) limit sustained acceleration.[213] Projections for 2025 indicate modest 2.5% growth per IMF estimates, supported by private consumption and easing inflation to around 4.9%, though risks from elevated public debt (over 60% of GDP), unemployment near 10%, and policy uncertainty under recent administrations could constrain potential.[214][210][207] Causal factors include commodity price sensitivity, where oil price hikes boost investment and wages but also widen trade deficits through import growth, highlighting the need for export diversification to mitigate boom-bust cycles.[215] Regional disparities further challenge uniform growth, with urban centers like Bogotá driving over half of expansions while rural areas lag due to infrastructure gaps.[216]

Extractive industries: Oil, mining, and emeralds

Colombia's extractive industries, encompassing oil, mining, and gemstones like emeralds, contribute approximately 5.3% to the national GDP and account for 37.9% of total exports, underscoring their pivotal role in fiscal revenues (10.9%) despite employing only 0.08% of the workforce.[217] Oil and coal dominate, with petroleum and mining products comprising over 55% of goods exports in recent years, though policy shifts under President Gustavo Petro have introduced uncertainty by restricting new exploration contracts, potentially accelerating production declines and undermining energy security.[212][218] Oil production, managed primarily by the state-owned Ecopetrol—which handles 62% of output and meets 66% of domestic gas demand—averaged around 750,000 barrels per day in 2024, with crude exports valued at $13 billion in 2023, positioning Colombia as the 24th largest global exporter.[219][220][221] Ecopetrol's integrated operations span exploration, refining, and transport, generating 19.6% of national export sales in 2023, though reserves are depleting without new investments, exacerbated by Petro's 2022 ban on fresh licensing, which critics argue risks economic instability as oil still underpins 10% of GDP.[222][223][224] In mining, coal remains a cornerstone, alongside metals such as gold (70 tons exported in 2023, valued at $3 billion), nickel (leading South American production at ~41,000 tons in 2022), and emerging copper-gold projects like Alacrán, projected to yield 417,300 tons of copper and 724,500 ounces of gold annually.[225][226][227] The sector's GDP share stood at 1.24% in 2023, with exports of major products dipping 12% in January-November 2024 amid regulatory freezes and a push for state-controlled mining, which has stalled private investment.[228][229] Security threats from guerrillas like the ELN and environmental disputes, including pollution in coal and gold areas, compound operational risks, though formalization efforts target artisanal operations.[230][188][231] Emerald mining, centered in the Muzo district (alongside Chivor and Coscuez), supplies about 90% of global emeralds, with high-value stones fetching $10,000 to $25,000 per carat for top-grade specimens due to their vivid green hue and clarity.[232][233] Production from these black-shale hosted deposits has historically generated millions annually, though artisanal and cooperative methods prevail amid territorial disputes involving armed groups, limiting scaled output and formal economic tracking.[234][235] Petro's emphasis on ecological transitions has heightened scrutiny on gem extraction's environmental footprint, yet emeralds persist as a niche, high-margin export unregulated by the broader fossil fuel bans.[236]

Agriculture, coffee, and export commodities

Agriculture accounts for approximately 8.7% of Colombia's GDP in 2023, employing around 17% of the labor force, with much of the activity concentrated in smallholder farming in rural and mountainous regions.[237] The sector's output includes diverse crops suited to Colombia's varied climates, from tropical lowlands to high-altitude plateaus, but faces vulnerabilities from weather variability, soil erosion, and limited mechanization, which constrain productivity despite fertile volcanic soils.[238] Agricultural exports totaled about $8.2 billion in 2023, representing a critical source of foreign exchange and rural income, though they constitute less than 20% of total merchandise exports dominated by minerals and fuels.[239] Coffee remains Colombia's premier agricultural export and cultural icon, with production centered on washed Arabica beans grown between 1,200 and 2,000 meters elevation in departments like Antioquia, Huila, and Cauca. In 2023, output reached 11.3 million 60-kg bags, down slightly from prior years due to erratic rainfall and roya fungus pressures, yet sufficient to maintain Colombia's position as the world's third-largest coffee producer after Brazil and Vietnam.[240] Exports of green coffee beans totaled $3.19 billion that year, primarily to the United States, Europe, and Japan, supported by the state-backed Federación Nacional de Cafeteros de Colombia, which regulates quality standards, provides technical assistance to over 500,000 small producers, and promotes the "Juan Valdez" branding for premium mild arabicas fetching higher prices.[241] This export value reflects coffee's 40% share of agricultural shipments, underscoring its role in stabilizing rural economies despite price volatility tied to global supply fluctuations and climate impacts.[242] Beyond coffee, cut flowers—primarily carnations, roses, and chrysanthemums cultivated in the Sabana de Bogotá and Cauca Valley—position Colombia as the global leader in shipments to North America, with exports exceeding $1.6 billion in recent years and capturing over 70% of the U.S. market through efficient air freight from Bogotá's El Dorado Airport.[243] Bananas, grown in the Urabá and Magdalena regions, added approximately $1 billion in export revenue in 2023, with Colombia ranking as the fourth-largest global supplier, shipping over 2 million tons annually to Europe and the U.S., though susceptible to Fusarium wilt disease and logistical bottlenecks at ports like Turbo.[244] Palm oil production, expanded since the 1980s in Meta and Cesar departments via large plantations, yielded exports valued at over $800 million in 2023, driven by demand for biofuels and food processing, yet raising environmental concerns over deforestation in former conflict zones now repurposed for monoculture.[245] These commodities collectively highlight agriculture's export orientation, bolstered by free trade agreements like the 2012 U.S.-Colombia pact, which reduced tariffs and boosted volumes, though small farmers often receive limited benefits amid market concentration and input cost pressures.[246]

Manufacturing, services, and tourism

Colombia's manufacturing sector contributed approximately 10.9% to GDP in 2023, reflecting a slight decline from prior years amid broader economic pressures.[247] Key industries include textiles and apparel, which remain significant for employment; chemicals and chemical products; plastics; food processing; and automotive parts assembly, with hubs like Medellín driving innovation in textiles and vehicle components.[248] Pharmaceutical production has also expanded, supported by foreign direct investment in export-oriented facilities. However, the sector faces persistent challenges from high informality rates, which amplify GDP volatility and limit access to formal credit and technology upgrades, alongside bureaucratic hurdles and regulatory instability that deter sustained investment.[249][250] The services sector dominates Colombia's economy, accounting for roughly 62% of GDP as of recent estimates, and employs about 65% of the workforce, underscoring its role in urban centers like Bogotá and Medellín. Subsectors such as commerce (17% of GDP), finance, and information technology have shown resilience, with private consumption in services driving 1.6% growth in 2024 despite overall GDP expansion of only 1.7%.[251] Retail and wholesale trade, bolstered by domestic demand, contrast with vulnerabilities in professional services tied to fluctuating foreign investment. Informality permeates services as well, with non-compliance to labor regulations contributing to precarious conditions and reduced productivity, particularly in smaller enterprises.[252] Tourism, a key growth driver within services, generated US$15.5 billion in revenue in 2023, equivalent to 4.8% of GDP, fueled by 5.86 million non-resident visitors—a 24.3% increase from 2022.[253] International arrivals continued rising into 2025, reaching 1.9 million from January to May, up 6.6% year-over-year, with attractions like Cartagena's colonial sites, the Amazon rainforest, and coffee region plantations drawing ecotourists and cultural visitors.[254] Despite security improvements post-2016 peace accords, persistent risks from residual armed groups and infrastructure gaps constrain potential, though projected sector revenue of US$4.11 billion by end-2025 signals ongoing recovery.[255]

Fiscal policy, debt, and economic liberalization successes

In 1990, under President César Gaviria, Colombia initiated comprehensive economic liberalization reforms known as the Apertura, which included drastic tariff reductions from an average of over 30% to around 11%, elimination of nontariff barriers, and privatization of state-owned enterprises such as telecommunications and electricity sectors.[256] These measures shifted the economy from import substitution toward export-led growth, fostering private sector expansion and attracting foreign direct investment, which rose significantly in the early 1990s alongside a 66% increase in foreign exchange reserves from $3.9 billion to $6.4 billion between 1990 and 1992.[257] The reforms contributed to sustained GDP growth averaging approximately 3.5% annually from 1991 to 1997, enhancing macroeconomic stability by integrating Colombia into global markets and reducing reliance on protectionist policies.[258] Fiscal policy evolved with the adoption of a structural fiscal rule in 2011, mandating balanced budgets adjusted for the economic cycle and requiring debt sustainability targets, which aimed to curb procyclical spending and build resilience against commodity price shocks.[259] Implementation of the rule effectively reduced operating expenditures and current deficits without compromising public goods provision, while empirical analysis shows it lowered sovereign risk premiums and amplified positive output responses to government spending.[260][261] This discipline supported fiscal consolidation during downturns, such as post-2014 oil price declines, by enforcing countercyclical adjustments that stabilized revenues tied to extractives. Public debt management has demonstrated prudence through diversified issuance, risk mitigation strategies, and periodic swaps, maintaining central government debt-to-GDP ratios averaging 43% from 1996 to 2024, with a peak of 65.3% in 2020 due to pandemic response before declining to around 62% by mid-2024.[262][263] Reforms including the 2011 fiscal framework and enhanced debt operations, such as the record 43.4 trillion peso ($11.2 billion) domestic swap in October 2025, extended maturities and reduced rollover risks, bolstering investor confidence and keeping spreads manageable relative to regional peers.[264][265] Overall, these policies have anchored long-term sustainability, with nonlinear analyses confirming debt trajectories remained viable from 1980 to 2021 under varying regimes, enabling Colombia to weather external shocks better than many Latin American counterparts.[266]

Inequality, informal sector, and policy-induced challenges

Colombia exhibits one of the highest levels of income inequality in Latin America, with a Gini coefficient of 51.5 in 2022 according to World Bank estimates, reflecting persistent disparities driven by unequal access to quality education, formal employment, and land ownership.[267] This metric, which measures income distribution on a scale from 0 (perfect equality) to 100 (perfect inequality), places Colombia above regional peers like Peru (40.1 in 2024) but below extremes such as Brazil (51.6).[268] Historical factors, including concentrated land holdings from colonial eras and ongoing rural violence disrupting property rights, exacerbate urban-rural divides, where departments like La Guajira and Chocó report poverty rates exceeding 60%.[269] Inequality in job access further perpetuates this, as high-skilled urban positions yield returns far exceeding those in informal or agricultural work, limiting intergenerational mobility.[270] The informal sector dominates Colombia's labor market, accounting for 56% of employment in 2023 per the national household survey, with rates exceeding 60% in rural areas and among youth. Informal workers, often in low-productivity activities like street vending or small-scale services, lack social security coverage beyond basic health insurance, contributing to vulnerability during economic shocks and constraining tax revenues for public investment.[271] While comprising around 30% of GDP, the sector's size correlates inversely with formal growth, amplifying macroeconomic volatility in consumption and investment as informal firms evade regulations but face credit constraints.[272] Gender dynamics show slightly lower informality for women (53%) than men (58%), though both groups suffer reduced bargaining power and productivity traps due to limited skill-matching.[273] Policy-induced challenges perpetuate informality and inequality through rigid labor regulations and high non-wage costs, including payroll taxes exceeding 30% of wages and a minimum wage set at levels misaligned with rural productivity, deterring formal hiring in low-margin sectors.[252] Complex registration processes and fixed formalization fees act as barriers for micro-enterprises, with 33% of informal businesses unaware of simplification options despite reforms like the 2010 cost reductions that boosted registrations but failed to sustain long-term shifts.[274] Enforcement gaps, coupled with weak contract protections, encourage evasion, while recent proposals under the Petro administration for expanded social contributions risk further disincentivizing formalization without addressing underlying productivity deficits from inadequate vocational training.[275] These frictions, rooted in overregulation rather than market failures alone, hinder inclusive growth, as evidenced by stalled formalization post-2019 OECD-aligned reforms amid rising unemployment.[276]

Demographics

Population size, growth, and projections

As of 2024, Colombia's population totaled approximately 52.7 million inhabitants, according to estimates from the National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE).[277] This figure reflects a combination of natural increase and net migration, particularly inflows from Venezuela exceeding 2.5 million since 2015, which have partially offset domestic emigration and declining birth rates.[277] The country's population growth rate has decelerated significantly since the mid-20th century, when annual rates exceeded 3%, driven by high fertility and post-World War II baby booms.[278] By 2023, the rate stood at 1.12%, influenced by a total fertility rate below replacement level (around 1.7 children per woman) and rising mortality from aging demographics, though immigration has sustained positive growth.[279] Preliminary DANE data indicate a further moderation to about 0.7% from 2024 to 2025.[280] DANE projections, updated post-COVID-19 to account for disrupted fertility patterns, forecast the population peaking near 57 million by 2050 before entering negative growth around 2051 due to sustained sub-replacement fertility and net emigration.[281] United Nations estimates, which incorporate medium-variant assumptions on migration and fertility convergence, project a higher trajectory, reaching 59.4 million by 2050.[282] These divergences stem from differing treatments of irregular migration data, with DANE relying more on national censuses and administrative records.[281]
YearDANE Projection (millions)UN Projection (millions, medium variant)
2030~55.055.7
2040~56.558.6
205057.059.4
[281][283][282]

Ethnic groups and mestizo majority

Colombia's ethnic composition reflects extensive admixture from Spanish colonization, indigenous populations, and African slavery, resulting in a mestizo majority defined by mixed European and Amerindian ancestry. The 2018 census by the Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadística (DANE) recorded that 87.6% of the population—approximately 42 million people out of a total of 49.6 million—did not self-identify as belonging to recognized ethnic minorities, categorizing them as mestizo or of primarily European descent.[284][285] This group predominates in the Andean interior, major cities like Bogotá and Medellín, and forms the basis of national cultural norms, including language, cuisine, and social structures shaped by colonial-era intermixing.[286] Afro-Colombians, descendants of some 200,000 to 300,000 African slaves imported between the 16th and 19th centuries for labor in mines and plantations, constitute 6.8% of the population per the 2018 DANE census, though adjusted post-census surveys estimate up to 9.34% when accounting for underreporting in remote areas.[284][287] Concentrated in coastal departments such as Chocó (up to 80% Afro-descendant) and Valle del Cauca, they exhibit higher poverty rates—often exceeding 60% in these regions—and preserve cultural elements like cumbia music and Santería-influenced practices, amid ongoing challenges from displacement due to conflict and land disputes.[288] Indigenous groups, numbering over 115 distinct peoples with a total population of about 2.2 million or 4.3% as of 2018, include the Wayuu (largest at around 400,000), Nasa, and Emberá, residing in resguardos covering roughly 28% of national territory despite low population density.[284][289] These communities, which predate European arrival and once numbered in the millions before colonial depopulation from disease and violence reduced them to under 5%, maintain autonomous governance under the 1991 Constitution but face assimilation pressures and territorial encroachments from mining and agriculture.[285] Romani populations remain marginal at 0.01% (about 2,600 individuals), primarily urban and integrated into mestizo society.[284] Overall, self-identification in censuses understates admixture, as genetic analyses of urban samples indicate average Colombians possess 40-50% European, 40-50% Amerindian, and 10-15% African ancestry, underscoring the mestizo demographic's hybrid reality over rigid categories.[288]

Immigration waves, especially from Venezuela

Colombia has experienced several historical immigration waves, primarily from Europe and the Middle East. European settlement increased from the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries, including two waves of Jewish immigrants fleeing persecution in Europe.[290] Middle Eastern immigration, mainly Lebanese and Syrian Arabs, began around 1880 and peaked in the early 20th century, contributing to commercial networks in urban areas.[291] These inflows were modest compared to Colombia's overall population and were driven by economic opportunities and escape from regional conflicts, but they did not fundamentally alter demographics until recent decades. The most significant contemporary immigration wave stems from Venezuela, triggered by the economic collapse, hyperinflation, and political instability following the implementation of socialist policies under the Chávez and Maduro regimes, which led to widespread shortages and authoritarian crackdowns.[292] This exodus accelerated after 2015, with Colombia receiving the largest share of Venezuelan refugees and migrants in Latin America. As of January 2024, Colombian authorities registered 2.86 million Venezuelans, though the actual number, including irregular migrants, likely exceeds 3 million.[293] By mid-2025 estimates, the figure remained around 2.8 million documented, concentrated in border regions like Norte de Santander and major cities such as Bogotá and Cúcuta.[294] Over 96% of these migrants intend to remain long-term, viewing Colombia as a primary destination due to shared language, culture, and the 2,200-kilometer border facilitating entry.[295] In response, the Colombian government under President Iván Duque launched the Temporary Protection Status (ETPV) in 2021, offering a two-year renewable permit to Venezuelans arriving before January 31, 2021, which provides legal residency, work authorization, and access to health, education, and financial services.[296] Over 1.8 million had registered by 2024, enabling formal employment and reducing irregular status.[297] The Petro administration extended similar protections but faced criticism for inconsistent enforcement amid fiscal constraints. This regularization contrasts with more restrictive approaches in neighboring countries and aims to integrate migrants into the labor market, where Venezuelans often fill low-skill roles in construction, domestic work, and informal trade.[298] Economically, Venezuelan migrants contributed an estimated $529 million to Colombia's GDP in 2022 through consumption, remittances, and labor, boosting sectors like retail and services despite initial displacement of low-wage Colombian workers.[299] However, the influx strained public services, with government spending on migrants averaging 0.4-0.5% of GDP annually for education, healthcare, and housing, exacerbating overcrowding in border hospitals and schools.[300] On crime, aggregate data indicate Venezuelan immigrants commit crimes at rates lower than native Colombians, but localized studies show spikes in reported offenses by migrants, including sexual violence against women and involvement of transnational groups like Tren de Aragua in extortion and trafficking along migration routes.[301][297] Transit flows through Colombia toward the U.S. have correlated with elevated homicide rates in Darién Gap municipalities, linked to smuggling networks rather than settled populations.[302] Public sentiment reflects unease, with surveys showing Colombian concerns over job competition, rising informality, and social tensions, though support for humanitarian access persists.[292] These dynamics highlight the trade-offs of rapid, unmanaged inflows in a country still recovering from internal displacement.

Linguistic diversity and Spanish dominance

Colombia recognizes Spanish as its official language, spoken natively by approximately 99% of the population, reflecting centuries of colonial imposition and subsequent national unification efforts.[303][304] Indigenous languages number around 65 to 83, belonging to diverse families such as Chibchan, Tucanoan, and Arawakan, with an estimated 750,000 to 850,000 speakers representing less than 2% of the total populace.[305][289][306] These tongues persist primarily in rural and Amazonian regions among ethnic minorities, though many face extinction risks, with 19 in serious danger and five lacking revitalization potential per indigenous organizations.[289][307] The 1991 Constitution grants official status to indigenous languages within their territories, permitting bilingual education and legal proceedings in them, yet practical dominance of Spanish stems from its role as the medium of public administration, primary schooling, and mass media.[288][308] Urban migration and economic incentives further erode non-Spanish usage, as proficiency in Spanish correlates with access to employment and social mobility.[309][310] Among non-indigenous minorities, San Andrés-Providencia Creole (an English-based creole) serves about 30,000 residents on those islands, while Palenquero, an African-derived creole, endures among roughly 3,000 in San Basilio de Palenque; Romani claims fewer than 1,000 speakers nationwide.[288][311] Bilingualism rates vary: indigenous groups often acquire Spanish as a second language for interethnic interaction, but reverse fluency—Spanish monolinguals learning indigenous tongues—remains negligible outside targeted revitalization programs.[312][309] Government initiatives, including technology-aided preservation efforts since 2022, aim to document and teach endangered languages, yet funding constraints and Spanish's entrenched hegemony limit efficacy.[307] Media output overwhelmingly favors Spanish, with indigenous-language broadcasting confined to sporadic community radio, underscoring linguistic assimilation driven by modernization rather than coercive policy alone.[310][313]

Religious composition and declining secular influences

Colombia remains predominantly Christian, with Roman Catholicism historically dominant but experiencing a relative decline in affiliation. According to a 2023 Latinobarometer survey cited in the U.S. State Department's International Religious Freedom Report, 64 percent of Colombians identify as Roman Catholic, 17 percent as Protestant (primarily Evangelical or Pentecostal), 2 percent as atheist or agnostic, and the remainder adhering to other faiths or unspecified beliefs.[314] The Colombian Evangelical Council estimates Protestants at approximately 15 percent, reflecting rapid growth in non-Catholic Christian denominations since the 1991 Constitution decoupled the state from obligatory Catholicism while preserving religious freedom.[315] Smaller minorities include around 85,000 to 100,000 Muslims (per a 2018 Pew Research study) and negligible numbers of Jews, Baha'is, and indigenous spiritual practitioners.[314] Evangelical Protestantism has expanded significantly, driven by grassroots conversion, urban migration, and social services provided by churches in underserved areas, comprising up to 10-15 percent of the population by the early 2020s.[315] This growth offsets some erosion in Catholic identification, which fell from near-universal levels in the mid-20th century to the current 64 percent, partly due to scandals, doctrinal shifts, and competition from Pentecostalism's emphasis on personal experience and prosperity theology.[316] Pew Research data from 2010-2020 indicate Colombia's Christian population at about 43.7 million out of roughly 51 million total, underscoring sustained overall religiosity despite denominational flux.[317] Secular influences, while present in urban elites and policy debates, have not substantially eroded religious adherence or societal impact. World Values Survey trends from 1998 to 2018 show a modest decrease in the perceived importance of Catholicism but persistent high levels of supernatural belief, with 80 percent of Colombians affirming miracles—including 65 percent of the religiously unaffiliated—contrasting with steeper secularization in Europe or parts of North America.[318][319] Among youth, 26 percent of those aged 18-34 raised Christian report disaffiliating entirely, yet religiosity correlates with social conservatism, influencing opposition to measures like expanded abortion access (legalized only in 2022 after decades of Church-led resistance) and same-sex marriage (approved in 2016 amid clerical protests).[320] Religious leaders maintain informal sway in politics and reconciliation efforts post-FARC peace accords, with Evangelicals gaining electoral clout in conservative regions.[321] This resilience stems from religion's role in community cohesion amid violence and inequality, rather than institutional dominance alone, limiting secularism's penetration compared to more affluent Latin American peers like Uruguay or Chile.[322]

Society

Education attainment and quality disparities

Colombia's adult literacy rate stands at 96% as of recent estimates, reflecting broad access to basic education but masking persistent gaps in higher attainment levels. Primary net enrollment reaches 91%, with gross completion rates exceeding 100% due to age-over-age enrollment, yet transition to secondary education reveals strains, as only about 62% of 15- to 19-year-olds are enrolled nationally. Tertiary educational attainment among 25- to 34-year-olds is 40% for women and 30% for men, though bachelor's degree completion remains low, with just 16% finishing on time and 44% within three years.[323][324][325][326] Attainment disparities are pronounced between urban and rural areas, driven by geographic isolation, infrastructure deficits, and socioeconomic factors rather than solely policy failures. Rural primary completion and enrollment lag urban counterparts, with pre-primary attendance below 80% in rural zones compared to over 90% in urban ones; in remote departments like Vichada, enrollment for 15- to 19-year-olds drops to 33% versus the 62% national average. Wealth exacerbates these gaps, as primary or lower secondary completion rates reach 98% among the richest quintile but only 72% for the poorest. Rural students, often from indigenous or Afro-Colombian communities, face higher dropout risks due to limited school access and family labor demands, perpetuating cycles of low human capital accumulation.[327][325][328][329] Educational quality disparities compound attainment issues, with Colombia's public spending at 4.5% of GDP in 2018 falling short of regional needs for quality inputs like teacher training and facilities. In PISA 2022 assessments, Colombian 15-year-olds averaged 383 points across mathematics, reading, and science—below the OECD mean of 472 and ranking near the bottom globally—indicating deficiencies in foundational skills, particularly mathematics where only 29% achieved proficiency level 2 or higher. Urban-rural performance gaps persist, as rural students score lower due to smaller, under-resourced schools and teacher shortages, with geographic factors like terrain hindering consistent instruction; urban schools benefit from better infrastructure and peer effects, widening the divide. These outcomes stem from causal realities such as uneven resource allocation and conflict legacies disrupting rural learning, rather than uniform systemic equity efforts.[330][331][332][333]

Healthcare system and public health outcomes

Colombia's healthcare system operates under the Sistema General de Seguridad Social en Salud (SGSSS), established by the 1993 health reform to provide mandatory universal coverage through a mix of public and private entities.[334] The system divides affiliates into contributory (formal workers paying premiums) and subsidized regimes (for low-income populations funded by government transfers), with Entidades Promotoras de Salud (EPS) as insurers managing funds and contracting Instituciones Prestadoras de Servicios de Salud (IPS) for delivery.[335] By 2022, affiliation reached 99.6% of the population, including 738,349 migrants, marking one of Latin America's highest coverage rates, though out-of-pocket spending remains low at 15%.[336] Health expenditure constituted 7.69% of GDP in 2023, steady from prior years but below the global average of 8.63%.[337] Public health outcomes have improved steadily, with life expectancy at birth rising to 78.04 years in 2024 from 77.73 in 2023, reflecting gains in sanitation, nutrition, and medical access post-reform.[338] Infant mortality declined from 25.8 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2000 to 10.94 in 2021, a 57.6% reduction attributed to expanded immunization and maternal care programs.[339] However, Colombia's infant mortality rate of approximately 11 per 1,000 in recent estimates lags behind OECD peers, comparable to Mexico's 12.7, amid persistent non-communicable disease burdens like hypertension (19.1% prevalence in COVID-vulnerable adults) and obesity (10.8%).[340] [341] Challenges persist in equitable access, particularly in rural areas where infrastructure shortages, human resource deficits, and geographic isolation hinder service delivery, exacerbating urban-rural disparities in expenditure and outcomes.[342] [343] Financial sustainability strains the system, with EPS debts and funding gaps prompting reform debates, while the COVID-19 pandemic exposed vulnerabilities: full vaccination reached 80.47% by early 2022, averting severe cases but disrupting routine childhood immunizations, especially in rural zones.[344] [345] Violence and migration further burden capacity, though empirical data from sources like PAHO underscore reform-driven progress over pre-1993 fragmentation.[346] Colombia's urbanization has accelerated markedly since the mid-20th century, with the proportion of the population residing in urban areas rising from 46.3% in 1960 to 82.4% in 2023.[347] This shift reflects annual urban population growth rates averaging around 1.5% in recent years, including 1.49% in 2023, driven primarily by rural-to-urban migration amid armed conflict, agricultural stagnation, and perceived economic opportunities in cities.[348] Internal displacement from violence in rural regions, particularly during the height of guerrilla and paramilitary activities in the 1980s–2000s, funneled millions into urban peripheries, exacerbating housing shortages and informal development.[349] Major metropolitan areas have absorbed much of this influx, with Bogotá's population exceeding 7.4 million by 2023 and cities like Medellín and Cali also doubling in spatial extent over the past decade due to unchecked peripheral expansion.[350] Projections indicate that urban dwellers could comprise over 85% of Colombia's total population by 2050, straining infrastructure, water supply, and sanitation systems amid limited formal planning.[351] Economic pull factors, including informal sector jobs in construction and services, have sustained this trend, though formal employment absorption remains low, perpetuating cycles of poverty in expanding urban fringes. The rapid pace of urbanization has fueled the proliferation of informal settlements, known locally as barrios de invasión or asentamientos informales, where approximately 14.5% of the urban population resided as of 2020.[352] These areas, often lacking secure tenure, basic utilities, and formal infrastructure, emerged as migrants occupied marginal lands on hillsides or flood-prone zones, bypassing regulatory hurdles and high land costs in core cities. In Bogotá alone, such settlements house over 1 million residents, with similar patterns in Medellín's comunas and Cali's outskirts, where construction of substandard housing—frequently prone to landslides—has outpaced government regularization efforts.[353] Policy-induced barriers, including zoning restrictions and titling delays, have compounded slum growth by restricting affordable formal housing supply, while corruption in land allocation and narcotraffic control over peripheral territories deter investment in upgrades.[354] Despite initiatives like the 2016 peace accord aiming to reduce rural displacement, ongoing violence and a surge in Venezuelan migrants—adding over 2 million to urban informal economies since 2015—have intensified pressure, with informal settlements expanding by 20–30% in key cities between 2010 and 2020.[355] Health and environmental risks persist, including elevated exposure to contaminants and inadequate waste management, underscoring causal links between unchecked migration, regulatory failures, and degraded living conditions.[356]

Family structures and social conservatism

Colombian family structures are characterized by a mix of nuclear and extended households, with the latter more prevalent in rural and indigenous communities where multigenerational living supports economic and social resilience. Urbanization and female labor force participation, rising from 47% in 1984 to 65% in 2006, have shifted norms toward smaller nuclear units, though kinship ties remain strong for childcare and remittances. Cohabitation predominates over formal marriage, with 30% of reproductive-age adults in consensual unions and 84% of children born out of wedlock as of 2016, reflecting a pragmatic adaptation to economic pressures rather than rejection of partnership ideals. Single-parent families, often female-headed, account for a notable share, particularly in cities like Cali, where extended female single-parent arrangements mitigate poverty risks.[357][358][359] Fertility has declined sharply to 1.65 children per woman in 2023 from over 6 in the 1960s, driven by improved education, contraception access, and urban costs, yielding average household sizes around 3 persons. Marriage rates exceed divorces, with the crude divorce rate at approximately 0.7 per 1,000 in recent years, though filings rose in 2023 amid post-pandemic strains, indicating enduring cultural valuation of marital stability despite legal ease since 1992 reforms. These patterns align with Latin American trends where family remains a core institution, but economic migration and violence disrupt traditional roles, elevating female breadwinners.[360][361][362] Social conservatism, anchored in Catholicism—under which 92% of adults were raised—privileges heterosexual marriage, procreation, and patriarchal gender norms, with surveys showing majorities endorsing men as primary providers. A 2014 Pew Research Center study revealed 56% of Colombians view abortion as immoral in most cases and oppose its legalization, a stance persisting despite 2022 court rulings decriminalizing it up to 24 weeks, as evidenced by uneven implementation and rural resistance. Acceptance of homosexuality lags, with only 46% deeming it societally acceptable in the same Pew poll, and support for same-sex marriage at 34% per 2017 AmericasBarometer data, even after 2016 legalization, highlighting a gap between elite-driven laws and popular mores favoring biological family models. Evangelical growth amplifies opposition to LGBT rights, framing them as erosive to child-rearing norms, while machismo persists in attitudes linking family honor to male authority.[363][364][316][365][366]

Crime statistics, homicide rates, and gang violence

Colombia maintains one of the highest homicide rates in South America, with a national rate of 25.4 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2024, reflecting 13,393 total homicides—the lowest annual figure in the past four years and a 1.9% decline from 2023's 13,515 cases.[367] [368] This continues a long-term downward trend from peaks exceeding 70 per 100,000 in the early 1990s, attributable to reduced guerrilla activity post-2016 peace accord and intensified policing, though rates remain over four times the global average of approximately 6 per 100,000.[369] Firearms accounted for the majority of homicides in 2024, underscoring the role of organized armed confrontations over interpersonal disputes.[370] Regional disparities are stark, with Pacific departments like Cauca, Valle del Cauca, Nariño, and Chocó experiencing the most intense violence, where homicide rates often surpass 40 per 100,000 due to territorial disputes among criminal networks.[371] Urban centers vary: Bogotá reported 14 homicides per 100,000 in 2023, while cities like Cali and Sincelejo averaged 44.4 per 100,000 in recent assessments.[368] [372] Broader crime indicators, including assaults (up 19.1% in Bogotá through mid-2024), sexual offenses (up 58.8%), and extortion (up over 70%), signal persistent insecurity despite homicide reductions.[373] Gang violence, primarily from groups such as Clan del Golfo, FARC dissident factions like the EMC, and ELN remnants, drives much of the lethality, involving territorial control, extortion rackets, and micro-trafficking in rural and peri-urban zones.[374] [371] These actors, often numbering in the thousands, have escalated clashes in 2024, particularly in southwestern departments, displacing over 5 million internally by late 2023 amid ongoing feuds.[375] Events targeting civilians fell 20% year-on-year under the Petro administration, yet pervasive threats like forced recruitment and reprisal killings persist, with armed groups exploiting state presence gaps.[376] [141] Police resource shortages and corruption vulnerabilities exacerbate enforcement challenges, though targeted operations yielded a 3.9% homicide drop through mid-2024.[377][374]

Narcotraffic's societal impact and corruption ties

Drug trafficking has profoundly shaped Colombian society through pervasive violence perpetrated by cartels and armed groups vying for control of coca production and smuggling routes. Homicide rates, heavily influenced by narcoviolence, reached 25.4 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2024, with approximately 25,850 murders recorded in 2022 alone at a rate of 26.1 per 100,000, particularly in rural areas dominated by groups like the Clan del Golfo.[378][78] This violence manifests in targeted killings, massacres, and territorial disputes, exacerbating social fragmentation and eroding community trust, as armed actors fueled by illegal drug economies commit abuses against civilians.[379] Internal displacement represents another core societal toll, with narcotraffic-linked conflicts displacing millions over decades; in January 2024, clashes in drug hotspots like Catatumbo alone forced around 52,000 people from their homes, contributing to broader waves of intra-urban migration and heightened vulnerability to further violence in informal settlements.[376] Economically, the narco-fueled conflict has stifled growth, reducing per capita GDP by an estimated 20% in affected regions through disrupted investment, extortion of businesses, and diversion of resources to security, though short-term influxes from drug revenues have masked deeper distortions like money laundering and weakened legitimate sectors.[380][381] Corruption ties stem from the immense profits of narcotraffic—Colombia being a top global coca producer—which enable systematic bribery and intimidation of public officials, infiltrating police, judiciary, politics, and even defense institutions.[382][199] Drug lords have historically bribed or coerced officials to facilitate operations, as seen in the 1970s-1990s era when Medellín and Cali cartels corrupted swaths of the state apparatus, leading to assassinations of judges and politicians; more recently, in 2012, high-level Colombian officials faced implication in a bribery scheme with extradited trafficker alias "Chupeta," while in 2018, the national anti-corruption chief admitted to accepting bribes from drug traffickers.[383][384] These practices perpetuate impunity, undermine rule of law, and sustain the cycle of violence, as corrupt enablers shield traffickers from eradication efforts and extradition.[385][386]

Culture

Pre-Columbian and colonial influences

Colombia's pre-Columbian era featured a mosaic of indigenous societies across diverse ecosystems, from Andean highlands to Caribbean coasts and Amazon rainforests. The Muisca, also known as Chibcha, dominated the central highlands around modern Bogotá, forming a loose confederation of chiefdoms centered on Lake Guatavita, renowned for their advanced goldworking techniques that produced intricate artifacts symbolizing religious and social hierarchies. Other notable groups included the Tairona in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, who engineered sophisticated terraced agriculture and stone pathways; the Quimbaya in the Cauca Valley, celebrated for tumbaga alloy craftsmanship; and the Zenú in the northern lowlands, experts in hydraulic engineering with extensive canal systems for drainage and irrigation. These cultures sustained economies based on maize cultivation, trade networks exchanging emeralds, gold, and salt, and polities governed by caciques with ritual authority.[387] Spanish colonization commenced with exploratory voyages in 1499 led by Alonso de Ojeda along the Guajira Peninsula, followed by Vasco Núñez de Balboa's sighting of the Pacific from Panama in 1513. The decisive conquest unfolded from 1536 to 1538 under Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada, who led an expedition from Santa Marta inland, subduing Muisca territories through superior weaponry and alliances with rival indigenous groups, culminating in the founding of Santa Fe de Bogotá on August 6, 1538. This campaign, involving roughly 800 Spaniards, decimated indigenous populations via warfare, enslavement under the encomienda system, and introduced diseases, reducing Muisca numbers from estimated hundreds of thousands to tens of thousands within decades. Coastal settlements like Cartagena de Indias, established in 1533, served as key ports for exporting gold and importing African slaves, whose labor fueled plantations and mining.[388][18][17] The Viceroyalty of New Granada, erected in 1717 with Bogotá as capital to streamline administration from Lima's distant oversight, encompassed modern Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama until its dissolution in 1810. Colonial governance imposed Spanish as the administrative language, marginalizing indigenous tongues, while Catholic missions evangelized populations, blending European saints with native deities in syncretic practices like the Muisca's continued veneration of Bochica alongside Christian icons. Architectural legacies include baroque churches and grid-planned pueblos, as in Popayán and Tunja, reflecting Habsburg urban ideals adapted to topography. Economically, the extraction of emeralds from Muzo mines and gold from Antioquia veins enriched Spain but entrenched inequalities, fostering a creole elite whose cultural output—such as colonial painting and literature—emulated European models while incorporating indigenous motifs. African influences from over 100,000 imported slaves manifested in music, dance, and cuisine, layering onto the indigenous-Spanish substrate to form Colombia's mestizo cultural foundation.[22][17]

Literature, journalism, and magical realism

Colombian literature emerged during the colonial period with works focused on religious, historical, and scientific themes, exemplified by Felipe de Vergara Azcárate's over 42 publications in the late 18th century, including Elements of Natural Philosophy.[389] The 19th century introduced costumbrismo, portraying everyday regional customs and peasant life through authors like Tomás Carrasquilla, whose novels such as Frutos de mi tierra (1896) critiqued social hierarchies, and Jorge Isaacs's romantic María (1867), which romanticized Antioquian landscapes and interracial love amid slavery's decline.[390] The 20th century's nadaísmo movement rejected establishment norms with experimental, irreverent prose by figures like Gonzalo Arango, while the Latin American Boom elevated Colombian voices internationally. Journalism in Colombia has intertwined with literature, often serving as a training ground for writers amid political turbulence and censorship risks. Gabriel García Márquez began his career as a reporter for El Espectador in the 1950s, covering events like the 1955 naval massacre in El Ubérrima, which honed his narrative style blending fact and narrative flair; he later reflected that journalism taught him "the responsibility of a writer" toward truth.[391] Outlets like El Espectador, founded in 1887, employed influential figures such as Alberto Lleras Camargo, who contributed editorials shaping public discourse before entering politics. However, the profession faces empirical hazards: Colombia ranks among the deadliest countries for journalists, with over 50 murders since 2000 linked to narcotraffic exposure and corruption probes, per Committee to Protect Journalists data, underscoring causal ties between investigative reporting and organized crime retaliation.[392] Magical realism, a genre integrating fantastical elements into realistic narratives without explanation, gained prominence through Colombian contributions, though the term originated with Cuban Alejo Carpentier in 1949 to describe Latin America's "marvelous reality."[393] Gabriel García Márquez epitomized it in One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967), a chronicle of the Buendía family in the fictional Macondo—modeled on his Aracataca birthplace—where events like raining yellow flowers over a death or insomnia plagues interweave with Banana Massacre (1928) historical echoes, selling over 50 million copies worldwide.[394] This earned him the 1982 Nobel Prize in Literature for seamlessly fusing the fantastic and realistic in evoking Colombia's turbulent history of civil strife and folklore.[395] Earlier influences include Arturo Uslar Pietri's Venezuelan formulations, but Márquez's causal embedding of myth into empirical events like colonial exploitation and la violencia (1948–1958) violence distinguished Colombian magical realism, influencing global literature while rooted in verifiable regional oral traditions rather than pure invention.[396]

Visual arts, architecture, and urban development

Colombian visual arts trace back to pre-Columbian eras, where indigenous groups like the Quimbaya and Muisca produced sophisticated goldwork using lost-wax casting techniques from approximately 500 BCE to the 16th century.[397] These artifacts, including intricate pendants and figurines depicting lords and warriors, highlighted advanced metallurgy and symbolic representations of power and trance states.[15] Colonial influences introduced Spanish Baroque devotional painting, blending European techniques with local motifs in religious art for churches and missions.[398] In the 20th century, Fernando Botero emerged as Colombia's most prominent artist, developing "Boterismo"—a style of exaggerated, voluminous figures in vibrant scenes of daily life, satire, and sensuality—born in Medellín on April 19, 1932, and active until his death on September 15, 2023.[399] Botero's works, often critiquing social norms through inflated forms, significantly boosted Colombian art's global recognition, with his donations establishing major collections in Bogotá and elsewhere.[400] Contemporary artists like Doris Salcedo explore identity and violence through installations, while Olga de Amaral innovates with textile abstractions incorporating gold, reflecting ongoing fusion of tradition and modernity.[401][402] Colombian architecture prominently features Spanish colonial styles, evident in Cartagena's UNESCO-listed walled historic center with stone facades, iron balconies, spacious courtyards, and defensive walls built from the 16th to 18th centuries to repel invasions.[403] Similar elements appear in Popayán's colonial churches like San Francisco, showcasing whitewashed walls, cobblestone streets, and robust foundations adapted to seismic activity.[404] Republican-era buildings in Bogotá's La Candelaria district mix neoclassical and baroque traits, while modern examples include the Torre Colpatria skyscraper (1978, 56 stories) and Torres del Parque (completed 1970s), representing brutalist and international styles amid rapid postwar urbanization.[405][406] Urban development in Colombia has accelerated with population growth, concentrating over 80% in cities by 2023, leading to infrastructure innovations particularly in Medellín, which implemented the Metrocable aerial tramway system starting in 2004 to connect informal hillside settlements to the metro, reducing travel times and fostering social integration.[407] Medellín's "integrated urban projects" under mayors like Sergio Fajardo (2004–2007) included public escalators in Comuna 13 (2013) and elevated libraries, transforming violence-plagued areas into connected urban hubs with high public utility coverage.[408][409] Bogotá pursues metro expansion, with Line 1 construction beginning in 2020 to alleviate congestion in a metropolis of over 8 million, though challenges persist in slum integration and road quality outside major centers.[410][411]

Music genres: Cumbia, vallenato, and salsa

Cumbia originated on Colombia's Caribbean coast as a fusion of Indigenous gaita flute traditions from groups like the Kogui, African percussion rhythms introduced via enslaved populations, and Spanish melodic elements during the colonial period, evolving into a courtship dance by the late 19th century.[412][413] The genre's core rhythm features a 2/4 beat with syncopated accents, accompanied by instruments such as the gaita (a cane flute), tambora (double-headed drum played with sticks), guacharaca (scraped percussion idiophone), and maracas, emphasizing circular couple dances that symbolized Indigenous women's millstone grinding motions adapted into festive courtship.[414][415] In the 1940s, clarinetist and composer Lucho Bermúdez modernized cumbia by integrating big band orchestration, brass sections, and urban appeal, recording hits like "Cumbia Cienaguera" in 1947 that propelled it beyond rural coastal regions to national and international stages.[416] Subsequent artists such as Aniceto Molina and groups like Los Corraleros de Majagual further diversified it into substyles like cumbia sabanera (plains variant with accordion) by the 1960s, while maintaining its role as a symbol of mestizo cultural synthesis and coastal identity.[417] Today, cumbia's adaptability has influenced global variants, but its Colombian form remains tied to festivals and social gatherings reinforcing communal bonds and regional pride.[418] Vallenato emerged in the northeastern Caribbean region around Valledupar in the Greater Magdalena area, deriving its name from "valley-born" and rooted in 16th-century Indigenous Chimila and Tairona chants, Spanish décima poetry, and African rhythmic influences among cattle herders and traveling minstrels known as gaitas or juglares.[419][420] The genre's defining instrument, the diatonic accordion introduced from Germany in the late 19th century, drives its narrative-driven songs in four merengue styles—puya (fast and playful), paseo (narrative), merengue (romantic), and bolero (slow ballad)—accompanied by the caja vallenata (small hand-played drum) and guacharaca for percussive texture. Recognized by UNESCO as an Intangible Cultural Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding on December 1, 2015, due to risks from commercialization and generational loss, vallenato preserves oral histories of love, hardship, and local lore through parranda gatherings and the annual Festival de la Leyenda Vallenata established in 1968.[420][421] Pioneers like Emiliano Zuleta (composer of over 500 songs) and Leandro Díaz shaped its poetic essence in the early 20th century, with later figures such as Diomedes Díaz popularizing electrified versions from the 1970s onward, embedding it deeply in Colombian identity as a vehicle for regional storytelling and social commentary.[422] Salsa gained prominence in Colombia during the 1970s, particularly in Cali, where it supplanted local genres amid urbanization and exposure to Cuban son, Puerto Rican bomba, and New York-style orchestras via radio, vinyl imports, and Mexican films featuring mambo, evolving into "salsa caleña" characterized by rapid, intricate footwork and boogie-like hip isolations distinct from Caribbean linear steps.[423][424] Standard salsa instrumentation—congas, timbales, piano montuno, bass, trumpets, and trombones—supports call-and-response vocals and clave rhythms, with Cali's scene boasting over 1,000 salsa academies and events drawing millions annually, cementing the city as the "world salsa capital" by the 1980s.[425][426] Locally adapted by bands like Grupo Niche (founded 1979, hits including "Cali Pachanguero" in 1984) and Guayacán, salsa in Colombia reflects Afro-Colombian and mestizo demographics, serving as a social outlet in working-class barrios amid economic migration, though its dominance has sometimes overshadowed indigenous rhythms.[427] This genre's cultural weight lies in fostering community resilience and dance proficiency, with Cali's per capita dancers outpacing even Havana, underscoring salsa's role in urban identity formation.[424]

Cuisine, festivals, and regional variations

Colombian cuisine relies on staple ingredients such as corn, cassava, potatoes, plantains, rice, and various cheeses, reflecting indigenous agricultural traditions supplemented by Spanish introductions like beef and dairy.[428] Common preparations include arepas—griddled cornmeal patties often filled with cheese or meats—and sancocho, a hearty soup featuring meats, root vegetables, and corn, with variations incorporating local proteins like fish on coasts or pork in interiors.[429] Street foods such as empanadas (fried pastries with spiced meat and potatoes) and buñuelos (cheese fritters) are ubiquitous, while bandeja paisa from the Andean Antioquia region exemplifies abundance with beans, rice, fried eggs, avocado, plantains, chorizo, and ground beef.[430] Regional dishes highlight geographic diversity: Caribbean coastal areas favor coconut-infused seafood like arroz con coco (coconut rice with shrimp) and fried fish, influenced by African-descended populations, whereas Andean highlands emphasize potato-based stews like ajiaco bogotano with chicken, corn, and guascas herb.[431] Pacific regions incorporate tropical fruits and tubers in encocados (coconut stews with seafood), while Amazonian fare uses exotic elements like chontaduro palm fruit and wild game, though urbanization has standardized many preparations nationwide.[432] These variations stem from topography and historical migrations, with coastal cuisines lighter and spice-forward due to trade routes, contrasting denser, meat-heavy inland meals adapted to cooler elevations.[433] Festivals underscore regional identities through syncretic celebrations blending Catholic saints' days with pre-Columbian and African rhythms. The Carnival of Barranquilla, held in late February or early March and recognized by UNESCO since 2003, features cumbia and mapalé dances, elaborate costumes, and street parades drawing over 1 million attendees, rooted in Caribbean mestizo traditions.[434] Medellín's Feria de las Flores in August showcases Andean floral silleteros—farmers carrying flower arrangements in parades—commemorating rural heritage with over 500,000 participants and emphasizing Antioquia's agricultural prowess.[435] Cali's Feria de Cali in December highlights salsa dancing in bullfighting rings and venues, attracting 1.5 million visitors and reflecting Valle del Cauca's urban, Afro-influenced vibrancy.[436] Other events include Pasto's Blacks and Whites' Carnival in January, using talcum powder and foam in symbolic rituals derived from indigenous and colonial customs, and the Vallenato Legend Festival in Valledupar during April, centered on accordion music competitions from the Caribbean interior.[437] These gatherings vary by region: coastal ones prioritize rhythmic percussion and improvisation, Andean festivals incorporate formal parades and Catholic processions, and Amazonian or Orinoco events remain smaller, focusing on indigenous chants and cattle ranching motifs, illustrating how terrain isolates communities and preserves distinct ethnic expressions.[438]

Sports achievements, especially soccer and cycling

Colombia’s national soccer team, Los Cafeteros, achieved its greatest success by winning the Copa América in 2001 as hosts, defeating Mexico 1–0 in the final after an undefeated run that included six victories and no goals conceded. The team reached the quarter-finals of the FIFA World Cup in 2014, their best performance in the tournament, highlighted by James Rodríguez’s six goals, earning him the Golden Boot as top scorer. Rodríguez, who debuted internationally in 2011, also contributed to Colombia’s strong showings in subsequent Copa Américas, including third-place finishes in 2016 and 2024. Radamel Falcao, Colombia’s all-time leading scorer with over 30 international goals since his 2007 debut, formed a potent partnership with Rodríguez, helping the team qualify consistently for World Cups in 2018 and 2022 despite Falcao’s injury setbacks. Domestic leagues like Categoría Primera A have produced talents exported to Europe, but national achievements remain modest compared to South American powerhouses like Brazil or Argentina, with no additional major international titles. In cycling, Colombia has emerged as a global powerhouse, particularly in Grand Tours, leveraging high-altitude training in the Andes to produce climbers excelling on mountainous stages. Egan Bernal became the first Colombian and Latin American to win the Tour de France in 2019 at age 22, the youngest victor since 1909, followed by his Giro d’Italia triumph in 2021. Nairo Quintana secured the Giro d’Italia in 2014 and Vuelta a España in 2016, with multiple Tour de France podiums, including second place in 2013 and 2016. Other riders like Rigoberto Urán earned Olympic silver in road time trial at London 2012, marking Colombia’s first cycling medal there, while the nation has amassed dozens of stage wins across Grand Tours since the 1980s breakthrough by riders like Fabio Parra. This success has elevated cycling’s popularity domestically, with events like the Vuelta a Colombia drawing massive participation, though it contrasts with soccer’s cultural dominance despite fewer elite results.[439]

Role of Catholicism in moral and cultural norms

Catholicism, introduced by Spanish colonizers in the 16th century, has profoundly shaped Colombia's moral framework and cultural identity, embedding principles of traditional family structures, sexual ethics, and communal rituals into societal norms.[440] Historically, the Church operated under the Spanish patronage system, granting it extensive influence over education, law, and social regulation, formalized in the 1887 concordat with the Holy See that privileged Catholicism until the 1991 constitution separated church and state.[441][442] This legacy persists in moral teachings emphasizing marital fidelity, procreation within heterosexual unions, and opposition to practices deemed contrary to natural law, such as abortion and euthanasia, which the Colombian Episcopal Conference has consistently condemned as violations of human dignity from conception.[443] In contemporary Colombia, where approximately 64% of the population identifies as Roman Catholic according to a 2023 Latinobarómetro survey, the faith reinforces conservative social norms, particularly in rural and traditional communities where adherence remains higher.[314] The Church's doctrine promotes strong nuclear family units, with cultural reverence for the Virgin Mary fostering ideals of maternal devotion and female chastity, influencing attitudes toward premarital sex and divorce—legalized only in 1992 after decades of ecclesiastical resistance.[444] This moral conservatism manifests in public life through Catholic-led campaigns against abortion liberalization; despite the 2022 Constitutional Court ruling decriminalizing the procedure up to 24 weeks, bishops like Archbishop José Luis Rueda affirmed the Church's commitment to defending life "from gestation until natural death," mobilizing opposition alongside evangelical allies.[445] Such stances reflect causal ties between religious doctrine and policy debates, countering secular trends amid declining sacramental participation. Culturally, Catholicism permeates festivals like Semana Santa processions and Día de las Madres, which blend liturgical rites with indigenous elements, while parochial schools—historically dominant—instill ethical formation aligned with papal encyclicals on social justice and subsidiarity.[446] The Church's role in moral education extends to critiques of materialism and violence, advocating forgiveness and reconciliation rooted in Christian anthropology, though surveys indicate growing nominalism, with only a fraction attending Mass regularly, suggesting a tension between inherited norms and modern individualism.[447] Despite secularization pressures, Catholicism's enduring imprint sustains a societal ethic prioritizing communal solidarity over individualistic autonomy, evident in lower acceptance rates for euthanasia and same-sex marriage compared to more secular Latin American peers.[314]

References

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