This work studies the development of bilateral relations in two
pairs of states (dyads); Argentina-Brazil and Argentina-Chile. It
takes on a moderate constructivist approach that incorporates into
the analysis of international relations that role of identities,
ideas and perceptions as well as of material forces, and
understands that the former are affected and change during
interaction. It also resorts to securitization theory to explain
how issues come or cease to be considered security matters through
social constructions. br br Using this framework, the thesis
analyses how states within the dyads have gradually stopped viewing
each other as threats to their security. For most of their history,
they have defined their relationships in terms of rivalry, and have
perceived one another accordingly. In turn, this has resulted in a
situation of negative regional peace in Southern Cone of Latin
America. Since the late 1970s, however, mutual images have shifted
and the Southern Cone has evolved, alongside the dyads, toward a
situation of positive peace.
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