Achieving some form of justice for the horrific and brutal abuses that occurred during Argentina’s Dirty War has been a long and painful process. Decades after only seeing one another’s eyes through the slits of their prison cells, Rosa Gomez and Antonio Savone, both survivors of the secret prison called D2, reunited to testify at a war crime trial against their torturers. Antonio, a Canadian citizen, returned to Argentina after he realized that his testimony could help Rosa in her long fight to hold her torturers to account. In 2005 the Supreme Court of Argentina threw out the amnesty laws that shielded the military from punishment, allowing new prosecutions for decades-old crimes
During the military dictatorship in Argentina (1976--1983), 30,000 civilians disappeared. Most of th...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis considers the limits of the legal representationa...
In post-authoritarian Argentina, veterans who participated in the brutal counterinsurgency of the la...
The last Argentine dictatorship (1976–1983) left a legacy of an estimated 30,000 desaparecidos (disa...
While the call for ?national reconciliation? as a way to avoid criminal trials for human rights viol...
Inadequate laws and the impunity of those who are the perpetrators of gross violations of human righ...
The dictatorship of military junta inflicted on the Argentinian society many injures, which have bee...
The military regimes of the countries of the Southern Cone of South America cooperated under Operati...
In May 2016, an Argentine federal court concluded a momentous trial, convicting 15 defendants of ill...
The war criminals of World War II had speedy trials in the former socialist countries. Only those pe...
This thesis focuses on the importance of truth and memory in the process of transitional justice, wi...
Argentina es una comunidad asediada por experiencias indescriptibles de sufrimiento e injusticia que...
The Americas, home to perhaps the most concerted domestic court effort to prosecute past atrocity cr...
This thesis explores how survivors of Argentine state terrorism (1974-1983) deploy the Latin America...
Four decades after the Falklands/Malvinas War and Argentina’s return to democracy, this article expl...
During the military dictatorship in Argentina (1976--1983), 30,000 civilians disappeared. Most of th...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis considers the limits of the legal representationa...
In post-authoritarian Argentina, veterans who participated in the brutal counterinsurgency of the la...
The last Argentine dictatorship (1976–1983) left a legacy of an estimated 30,000 desaparecidos (disa...
While the call for ?national reconciliation? as a way to avoid criminal trials for human rights viol...
Inadequate laws and the impunity of those who are the perpetrators of gross violations of human righ...
The dictatorship of military junta inflicted on the Argentinian society many injures, which have bee...
The military regimes of the countries of the Southern Cone of South America cooperated under Operati...
In May 2016, an Argentine federal court concluded a momentous trial, convicting 15 defendants of ill...
The war criminals of World War II had speedy trials in the former socialist countries. Only those pe...
This thesis focuses on the importance of truth and memory in the process of transitional justice, wi...
Argentina es una comunidad asediada por experiencias indescriptibles de sufrimiento e injusticia que...
The Americas, home to perhaps the most concerted domestic court effort to prosecute past atrocity cr...
This thesis explores how survivors of Argentine state terrorism (1974-1983) deploy the Latin America...
Four decades after the Falklands/Malvinas War and Argentina’s return to democracy, this article expl...
During the military dictatorship in Argentina (1976--1983), 30,000 civilians disappeared. Most of th...
grantor: University of TorontoThe thesis considers the limits of the legal representationa...
In post-authoritarian Argentina, veterans who participated in the brutal counterinsurgency of the la...