During the late 1950's, an anti-communist offensive took place in Uruguay promoted by several social actors, all of them with heterogeneous backgrounds and characteristics. Its implementation coincided with new local, regional and global scenarios and implied the continuation and deepening of certain practices displayed at the beginning of the Cold War, as well as the incorporation of new leaders and conflict arenas. Based on the comparison and collation of primary sources produced by local actors, this article examines the anticommunist offensive drawing attention to its promoters and main topics. In this work-frame the question of the beginnings and decline of this anti-communist offensive incited by liberalconseréatives (self-identified ...
This article aims at analyzing the implementation of mechanisms to preserve internal order through e...
During the first half of XX century, the right-wings of Argentina and Uruguay shared features and co...
The Uruguayan dictatorship (1973-1985) forced nearly 380,000 people, almost 14% of the population, i...
During the late 1950's, an anti-communist offensive took place in Uruguay promoted by several social...
A boundaryless struggle: the “democrat” right-wing and the anti-communist offensive in Uruguay at th...
Scholar historiography has studied many aspects of Argentina and Uruguay political life in the fifti...
The Democratic Parents Organization (ORPADE) of Uruguay was created in 1962, although concerns about...
In the 1940s and 50s, the Federation of Uruguayan University Students (Federación de Estudiantes Uni...
The purpose of this paper is to analyze the political formulation and the social and cultural effect...
This work investigates the participation of the “Juventud Uruguaya de Pie” (JUP) in the scene of vio...
Violence emerges as an objective fact in the analysis of the social and political crisis in Uruguay ...
In Uruguay, the year 1968 was marked by deep changes at the economic, political, occupational and ed...
This article, mainly based on documents from the Archives of National Burcau of Information and Inte...
This paper analyzes a barely studied phenomenon: the international relations of the Latin American g...
For a long time, Latin America has been considered a hopelessly populist land. This very essentializ...
This article aims at analyzing the implementation of mechanisms to preserve internal order through e...
During the first half of XX century, the right-wings of Argentina and Uruguay shared features and co...
The Uruguayan dictatorship (1973-1985) forced nearly 380,000 people, almost 14% of the population, i...
During the late 1950's, an anti-communist offensive took place in Uruguay promoted by several social...
A boundaryless struggle: the “democrat” right-wing and the anti-communist offensive in Uruguay at th...
Scholar historiography has studied many aspects of Argentina and Uruguay political life in the fifti...
The Democratic Parents Organization (ORPADE) of Uruguay was created in 1962, although concerns about...
In the 1940s and 50s, the Federation of Uruguayan University Students (Federación de Estudiantes Uni...
The purpose of this paper is to analyze the political formulation and the social and cultural effect...
This work investigates the participation of the “Juventud Uruguaya de Pie” (JUP) in the scene of vio...
Violence emerges as an objective fact in the analysis of the social and political crisis in Uruguay ...
In Uruguay, the year 1968 was marked by deep changes at the economic, political, occupational and ed...
This article, mainly based on documents from the Archives of National Burcau of Information and Inte...
This paper analyzes a barely studied phenomenon: the international relations of the Latin American g...
For a long time, Latin America has been considered a hopelessly populist land. This very essentializ...
This article aims at analyzing the implementation of mechanisms to preserve internal order through e...
During the first half of XX century, the right-wings of Argentina and Uruguay shared features and co...
The Uruguayan dictatorship (1973-1985) forced nearly 380,000 people, almost 14% of the population, i...