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Most of the world knows Uruguay only for its soccer team, or its
vaunted title as the "Switzerland of South America," an enduring
moniker given to the country for its earlier social welfare
policies and relative stability. Even many scholarly narratives of
Latin America fail to integrate the country into historical
accounts, reducing the country to, as one historian has explained,
"a periphery within the periphery that is Latin America." This
volume challenges that characterization, taking one of the most
innovative small states in the region and analyzing its
transnational influence on the world. Uruguay in Transnational
Perspective takes a broad look at the country’s
three-hundred-year history, connecting imperial practices and
resistance, Afro-Latin movements, and feminist firebrands, among
others to understand how the country and its citizens have
influenced and shaped regional and global historical narratives in
a way that has thus far been overlooked. With a true collaboration
between scholars of the Global North and Global South, the volume
is both transnational in its scholarly focus and its production.
Its interdisciplinary nature offers a broad range of perspectives
from leading scholars in the field to re-evaluate Uruguay’s
impact on the global stage.
During the country's dictatorship from 1973 to 1985, Uruguayans
suffered under crushing repression, which included the highest rate
of political incarceration in the world. In Of Light and Struggle,
Debbie Sharnak explores how activists, transnational social
movements, and international policymakers collaborated and clashed
in response to this era and during the country's transition back to
democratic rule. At the heart of the book is an examination of how
the language and politics of human rights shifted over time as a
result of conflict and convergence between local, national, and
global dynamics. Sharnak examines the utility and limits of human
rights language used by international NGOs, such as Amnesty
International, and foreign governments, such as the Carter
administration. She does so by exploring tensions between their
responses to the dictatorship's violations and the grassroots
struggle for socioeconomic rights as well as new social movements
around issues of race, gender, religion, and sexuality in Uruguay.
Sharnak exposes how international activists used human rights
language to combat repression in foreign countries, how local
politicians, unionists, and students articulated more expansive
social justice visions, how the military attempted to coopt human
rights language for its own purposes, and how broader debates about
human rights transformed the fight over citizenship in renewed
democratic societies. By exploring the interplay between debates
taking place in activists' living rooms, presidential
administrations, and international halls of power, Sharnak uncovers
the messy and contingent process through which human rights became
a powerful discourse for social change, and thus contributes to a
new method for exploring the history of human rights. By looking at
this pivotal period in international history, Of Light and Struggle
suggests that discussions around the small country on the Rio de la
Plata had global implications for the possibilities and constraints
of human rights well beyond Uruguay's shores.
Legacies of State Violence and Transitional Justice in Latin
America presents a nuanced and evidence-based discussion of both
the acceptance and co-optation of the transitional justice
framework and its potential abuses in the context of the struggle
to keep the memory of the past alive and hold perpetrators
accountable within Latin America and beyond. The contributors argue
that "transitional justice"-understood as both a conceptual
framework shaping discourses and a set of political practices-is a
Janus-faced paradigm. Historically it has not always advanced but
often hindered attempts to achieve historical memory and seek truth
and justice. This raises the vital question: what other theoretical
frameworks can best capture legacies of human rights crimes?
Providing a historical view of current developments in Latin
America's reckoning processes, Legacies of State Violence and
Transitional Justice in Latin America reflects on the meaning of
the paradigm's reception: what are the broader political and social
consequences of supporting, appropriating, or rejecting the
transitional justice paradigm?
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