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argentina
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2018) 35 (1): 16–22.
Published: 01 March 2018
.... Macri had started analysis in 1991 when, as a young entrepreneur and a member of one of Argentina’s wealthiest industrialist families, he was kidnapped. Traumatized by this experience, Macri started twice-a-week “ultra-Freudian” psychoanalytic therapy, an approach that focuses on sexuality...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2012) 29 (3): 90–99.
Published: 01 September 2012
...Presidency of Argentina ...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2014) 31 (2): 22–30.
Published: 01 June 2014
... in January, Ande Wanderer rang up her money dealer—a former official in Argentina’s national government. She’d sold off her stocks, cashed in her American savings, and wired him the money. Now she rushed to his office, a ninth floor room in downtown Buenos Aires. The official exchange rate was 8 pesos...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 19 (3): 29–42.
Published: 01 September 2002
...Javier Corrales Copyright © 2002 World Policy Institute 2002 Javier Corrales is assistant professor of political science at Amherst College. He is the author »/Presidents Without
Parties (Penn State Press, 2002).
The Politics of Argentina’s Meltdown
Javier Corrales...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2003) 19 (4): 49–58.
Published: 01 December 2003
...Michele Wucker Copyright © 2003 World Policy Institute 2003 Michele Wucker is a senior fellow at the World Policy Institute, specializing in immigration and Latin American finance
and politics.
Searching for Argentina’s Silver Lining
Michele Wucker
Shortly...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2016) 33 (1): 96–103.
Published: 01 March 2016
...Jonathan Power With his focus on economic justice, Pope Francis is still riding a wave of adulation three years into his job. And perhaps it’s deserved, but as leader of the Jesuits and then as bishop and archbishop in Argentina, he failed to publicly denounce the abuses of the military junta...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2016) 33 (3): 32–38.
Published: 01 September 2016
...Robin Kirk When the president of Colombia shook hands with the leader of FARC, the longest-running conflict in the Western Hemisphere was over, but ensuring peace after the official end of the fighting is never straightforward. Using examples from Northern Ireland, Argentina, and Chile, author...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2012) 29 (3): 97.
Published: 01 September 2012
...Emily Schmall © World Policy Institute 2012 2012 World Policy Institute Buenos Aires—Only in Argentina. Porsche exports olives and Malbec wines. Mitsubishi has a hand in peanuts, and BMW, after an eight-month hiatus from Argentina, agreed last October to swap rice, leather, and auto parts...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2011) 28 (4): 34–41.
Published: 01 December 2011
..., same-sex marriage is now legal in Mexico City and Argentina. Abortions are also legal in Mexico’s capital. Such progressive legislation speaks to an accelerating secularization, although the cultural shift is far from universal. In many parts of the region, conservative Catholic views on social issues...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2004) 21 (1): 32–40.
Published: 01 March 2004
...
and the Free Trade Area of the Americas when he attended presidential inaugurals in
( f t a a ) and denied participation in the Orga Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, and Paraguay.
nization of American States (OAS), Cuba ap He has developed a close personal and po
peared to have been permanently relegated...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2003) 19 (4): 59–64.
Published: 01 December 2003
... crisis that began Africa could continue to service their bor
in 1997, and Argentina’s current economic rowings. The immediate response of credi
crisis. tors was to reschedule the debt and advance
new money...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2001) 18 (2): 10–20.
Published: 01 June 2001
.... And it underscores the sad
Argentina, and Turkey have threatened to reality that there still is no set of interna
do so. tional bankruptcy rules— no Chapter 11 for
The troubled cases point out the alarm nations— that will stave off creditors and
ing reality that the international...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2004) 20 (4): 30–40.
Published: 01 December 2004
... on New York and Washing racy was the most remarkable aspect of the
ton, a remarkable economic and political economic crash in Argentina and a hopeful
story began to unfold in the southern cone sign of “democratic consolidation.”2
of South America. That month, Argentina’s Notwithstanding...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2016) 33 (4): 24–25.
Published: 01 December 2016
.... XXXIII, No. 4, Winter 2016 / 2017 © 2016 World Policy Institute DOI: 10.1215/07402775-3812870
ARGENTINA’S
LEGAL TRANSITIONS
World Policy Journal examines four countries that are ahead of the curve...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2016) 33 (4): 96–100.
Published: 01 December 2016
... that never punished a public servant—civil or military. Argentina, Paraguay, Chile, and Uruguay all held military officials accountable for their crimes. In Argentina, TV shows, newspapers, and graffiti regularly refer to the military junta that ruled the country from 1976 to 1983. After the country...
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Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2003) 19 (4): 92.
Published: 01 December 2003
...)
Chace, James; “Imperial America and the Common Interest” Malkin, Lawrence, and Yuval Elizur; "Terrorism’s Money Trail”
(XIX: 1) (XIX: 1)
Corrales, Javier; “The Politics of Argentina’s Meltdown” (XIX:3) Mason...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2015) 32 (3): 3–8.
Published: 01 September 2015
... security. The rise in production of genetically modified soybeans is paradoxically the largest problem for Argentine food security. Since the late 1990s, Argentina has experienced an agricultural boom after the introduction of genetically modified soybeans. While this genetic modification does...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2014) 31 (1): 39–47.
Published: 01 March 2014
... today in this region. In 2007, Cristina Fernández became the first elected female president of Argentina, coasting to a 22 percent victory over her closest rival, Elisa Carrió. Women’s issues played little role in the campaign. Argentina had already made substantial progress during the previous...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2017) 34 (1): 82–91.
Published: 01 March 2017
... of any country was a Latin American woman, Isabel Martínez de Perón, who in 1974 became the president of Argentina, following the death of her husband, President Juan Domingo Perón. Since then, Latin America has had eight women presidents—four of them since 2006. Moreover, according to the U.N.’s Women...
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