In 1991, the journal's article "Voices of the Voiceless in Testimonial Literature" first provided a scholarly debate surrounding the cultural acceptance of literature provided by overlooked social groups in Latin America.[4] Following a 1996 conference discussing race in Latin America, Helen Safa was sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation to stay one of their fellowship centers in Bellagio, Italy to edit "Race and National Identity in the Americas", a special issue of Latin American Perspectives.[5] In 1997, the journal published one of the first detailed works focusing on the media in Argentina during the Dirty War.[6]
^Chilcote, Ronald H. (November 1998). "LAP at 25: Retrospective and New Challenges". Latin American Perspectives. 25 (6): 5–22. doi:10.1177/0094582X9802500601.
^Safa, Helen I. (January 2012). "Class, Gender, and Race in the Caribbean: Reflections on an Intellectual Journey". Canadian Journal of Latin American & Caribbean Studies. 37 (74): 219–242. doi:10.1080/08263663.2012.11006009.
^Cassara, Catherine (2011). "Roots of Revolution: The Press and Social Change in Latin America". Journalism History. 37 (2): 125.