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State Terrorism in Latin America - Chile, Argentina, and International Human Rights (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,119
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State Terrorism in Latin America - Chile, Argentina, and International Human Rights (Paperback)
Series: Latin American Silhouettes
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Set in the larger context of the evolution of international human
rights, this cogent book examines the tragic development and
ultimate resolution of Latin America's human rights crisis of the
1970s and 1980s. Thomas Wright focuses especially on state
terrorism in Chile under General Augusto Pinochet (1973 1990) and
in Argentina during the Dirty War (1976 1983). The author probes
the background of these regimes, the methodology of state
terrorism, and the human rights movements that emerged in urgent
response to the brutality of institutionalized torture, murder, and
disappearance. He also discusses the legacies of state terrorism in
the post-dictatorial period, particularly the bitter battle between
demands for justice and the military's claim of impunity. Central
to this struggle was the politics of memory as two radically
different versions of the countries' recent history clashed: had
the militaries conducted legitimate wars against subversion or had
they exercised terrorism based on a misguided concept of national
security? The book offers a nuanced exploration of the reciprocal
relationship between state terrorism and its legacies, on one hand,
and international human rights on the other. When the Chilean and
Argentine militaries seized power, the international human rights
lobby was too weak to prevent the massive toll of state terrorism.
But the powerful worldwide response to these regimes ultimately
strengthened international human rights treaties, institutions, and
jurisprudence, paving the way for the Rwanda and Yugoslavia
genocide tribunals and the International Criminal Court. Indeed,
Chile and Argentina today routinely try and convict former
repressors in their own courts. This compelling history
demonstrates that the experiences of Chile and Argentina
contributed to strengthening the international human rights
movement, which in turn gave it the influence to affect the outcome
in these two South American countries. Ironically, the brutal
regimes of Chile and Argentina played the major role in
transforming a largely dormant international lobby into a powerful
force that today is capable of bringing major repressors from
anywhere in the world to justice. These intertwined themes make
this book important reading not only for Latin Americanists but for
students of human rights and of international relations as well."
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