Peronism


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Related to Peronism: Juan Peron

Peronism

justicialism.
See also: Government
-Ologies & -Isms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Translations
péronisme
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References in periodicals archive ?
Macri, a proponent of free markets, is the only president in Argentina's modern history to not follow Peronism, a populist ideology that combines both left and right wing policies that are named after former Argentinian President Juan Peron and his wife, Eva.
Prieto contrasts the playful immaturity of Borges to the seriousness and commitment of younger writers who came of age against the backdrop of the emergence of Peronism in national politics, and of Sartrean existentialism in theoretical discourse.
Institutionalization and Peronism: the Concept, the Case and the Case for Unpacking the Concept.
(25) Ronaldo Munck, Ricardo Falcon, and Bernardo Galitelli, Argentina: From Anarchism to Peranum: workers, unions, and politics, 1855-1985 (London: Zed Books, 1987); Daniel James, Resistance and Integration: Peronism and the Argentine Working Class, 1946-1976 (Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press, 1988).
"Peronism and Anti-peronism in the Argentine Press: 'Braden or Peron' was also "Peron is Roosevelt'." Journal of Latin American Studies 30, no.
Peronism and Kirchnerism [as formulated under presidents Nestor and Cristina Kirchner from 2003 to 2015] took Argentina towards an immense, dramatic failure.
Juan Peron's lasting imprint on Argentinian politics makes Ernesto Seman's new book, Ambassadors of the Working Class: Argentina's International Labor Activists & Cold War Democracy in the Americas, less a historical read and more a lens through which to probe the durability of Peronism. Seman provides a remarkably fresh and well-researched look at Peronism and Cold War rivalry in the Western Hemisphere by uncovering details about an obscure worker attache program implemented by Peron shortly after his election.
But the electoral defeat of the kirchnerista variety of Peronism seemed to mark a turning point in Argentina.
Part three reveals the New Man outside Europe on Peronism in Argentinauan often misunderstood political ideology and regime.
In his essay, Acton Institute scholar Samuel Gregg writes that Pope Francis reflects the "us versus them" politics of Peronism and adds that Argentina's miserable attempts at economic liberalization in the 1990s no doubt further soured him on pro-market thinking.