Journal articles on the topic 'Métropolisation – Argentine – Buenos Aires (Argentine)'

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1

Coloma, Germán. "Argentine Spanish." Journal of the International Phonetic Association 48, no. 2 (July 13, 2017): 243–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025100317000275.

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Although Spanish is a relatively unified language, in the sense that people from very distant locations manage to understand each other well, there are several phonetic phenomena that distinguish geographically separated varieties. The total number of native speakers of Spanish is above 400 million, and roughly 10% of them live in Argentina (Instituto Cervantes 2014). The accent described below corresponds to formal Spanish spoken in Buenos Aires, and the main allophones are indicated by parentheses in the Consonant Table. The recordings are from a 49-year-old college-educated male speaker, who has lived all his life in either the city of Buenos Aires or the province of Buenos Aires.
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2

Donzis, Liliana. "Alain Didier-Weill à Buenos Aires, Argentine." Insistance 14, no. 2 (2017): 89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/insi.014.0089.

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3

Chelala, César. "buenos aires Doctor accused in Argentine grandmothers' crusade." Lancet 349, no. 9046 (January 1997): 187. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(05)60994-4.

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4

Grosman, Lucas S. "Argentine Constitutional Law. An Overview." International Journal of Legal Information 43, no. 1 (2015): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0731126500012294.

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The Argentine Constitution was adopted in 1853 after years of domestic turmoil which ended with the defeat of Juan Manuel de Rosas, an authoritarian caudillo from the Province of Buenos Aires, by Justo José de Urquiza y García. This Constitution, with the amendments that will be explained below, still remains in force.
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5

Colmegna, Patricio, Fabricio Garelli, Emilia Fushimi, Marcela Moscoso-Vázquez, Nicolás Rosales, Demián García-Violini, Hernán De Battista, and Ricardo Sánchez-Peña. "Artificial Pancreas: The Argentine Experience." Science Reviews - from the end of the world 1, no. 1 (November 29, 2019): 37–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.52712/sciencereviews.v1i1.7.

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The objective of this work is to present a brief review on the international Artificial Pancreas project. In addition, the local project that led to the first Latin American clinical trials with an Artificial Pancreas will be described. These trials were performed in Buenos Aires during 2016 and 2017. The last trial used an algorithm developed in Argentina and defined as the ARG (Automatic Regulation of Glucose). This procedure and its in silico and clinical results will also be presented in this paper.
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6

Malacalza, Néstor H., Marta A. Caccavari, Guillermina Fagúndez, and Cecilia E. Lupano. "Unifloral honeys of the province of Buenos Aires, Argentine." Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 85, no. 8 (2005): 1389–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jsfa.2105.

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7

Bower, Stephanie. "Political and Socio-Economic Elites: The Encounter of Provincials with Porteños in Fin-de-Siêcle Buenos Aires." Americas 59, no. 3 (January 2003): 379–403. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tam.2003.0003.

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In 1880, following a two-generation-long civil war, Argentina embarked upon a critical period of nation-building, which culminated in the centennial celebrations of 1910. In The Argentine Generation of 1880: Ideology and Cultural Texts, David Foster has commented upon the inconclusiveness of national cultural formation as Argentina turned from the nineteenth to the twentieth century, the uncertainty of how much from the provinces would be incorporated into the elite-constructed culture emanating from the port city of Buenos Aires. The recently published work of Roy Hora, The Landowners of the Argentine Pampas: A Social and Political History 1860-1945, and the work of Tulio Halperin, “The Buenos Aires Landed Class and the Shape of Argentine Politics (1820-1930),” which preceded it, further heighten the significance of provincial-porteño interaction at this point in Argentine history. Halperin and Hora find that during these years, and beyond, the socio-economic and the political elite of Argentina was not a unified whole, but rather two distinctive groups. In the leadership of the socio-economic elite was a landed class based on the estancias of the Argentine pampa and overwhelmingly porteño in character. Provincials dominated the political elite, as the provinces ‘captured’ the federal government in the years following their reunification with the province of Buenos Aires in 1861. Participation in the federal government brought the provincial political elite into contact with the porteño estancieros who dominated the socio-economic elite, as these were almost universally resident in the federal capital. But Roy Hora has described the relationship between the two groups as “problematic.”
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8

Johns, Michael. "The Urbanisation of a Secondary City: The Case of Rosario, Argentina, 1870–1920." Journal of Latin American Studies 23, no. 3 (October 1991): 489–513. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x00015820.

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In 1845, Argentine statesman Domingo Sarmiento predicted that ‘what took 20 years to occur in North America, i.e. the emergence almost by magic of numerous cities, provinces and states in what was once uninhabited terrain, will occur in Argentina in the same span of time’. Forty years later, however, French writer Emile Daireaux observed that ‘the commercial development of Buenos Aires is that of a satellite which orbits Europe's sphere of attraction; Argentina's other cities and towns are in turn satellites of Buenos Aires’. A half-century later still, Ezequiel Martínez Estrada could complain that ‘the country's progress will come only when…we care for the health of the entire body and not only the euphoria of its decapitated head’. The imagery of Daireaux and Martínez Estrada portrays Buenos Aires' comprehensive domination of the Argentine city system, a city system quite unlike the replica of the US model envisaged by an optimistic Sarmiento.
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9

Alonso, Alberto José. "Celebration of the 208th Anniversary of May Revolution." Diplomatic Ukraine, no. XIX (2018): 242–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.37837/2707-7683-2018-13.

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The article is devoted to the May Revolution in Argentina and the 25th anniversary of the opening of the representation of the Argentine Republic in Ukraine. The May Revolution has its origins in the events of May 25, 1810. It was the day when the foundation act declaring the creation of the Argentine state was issued. Two hundred and eight years ago, the word “freedom” arose in the hearts of Argentines. Remembering the most significant moments of history, Argentines preserve and cherish their desire for peace and freedom. Ukraine and Argentina are negotiating bilateral agreements on social security, extradition, mutual assistance in criminal and civil cases, tourism, cinematographic production, intellectual property protection, environmental safety. More than 50 bilateral agreements have already been signed by the two countries in recent years. The enhancement of cooperation is to be reiterated at the meetings of the Joint Commission for Economic and Trade Affairs in Buenos Aires. It is expected that those meetings would result in visits of delegations of Ukrainian businessmen to Argentina and vice versa. The author draws attention to the unveiling of a commemorative sign dedicated to the father of the Argentine nation, General Don José de San Martín, in the garden square in front of the Embassy of the Argentine Republic to Ukraine. The article also focuses on active efforts to spread the culture of Argentina through the Argentine House in Kyiv that offers a wide range of activities, including Argentine literature workshops, tango and folk dance classes, tourism seminars, movie screenings. The author argues that nothing brings people closer together than culture and concludes that relations between Ukraine and the Argentine Republic are at a high level. Keywords. Argentine Republic, May Revolution, Ukraine, bilateral agreements, Argentine culture, economy, Buenos Aires.
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10

Tank-Storper, Sébastien. "L’attentat contre la AMIA à Buenos Aires. Une histoire argentine ?" Diasporas, no. 27 (October 27, 2016): 143–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/diasporas.457.

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11

Deutsch, Sandra McGee, and Richard J. Walter. "The Province of Buenos Aires and Argentine Politics, 1912-1943." Hispanic American Historical Review 66, no. 4 (November 1986): 815. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2515115.

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12

Svec, William R., and Richard J. Walter. "The Province of Buenos Aires and Argentine Politics, 1912-1943." History Teacher 20, no. 4 (August 1987): 600. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/493770.

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13

Jones, Charles, and Richard J. Walter. "The Province of Buenos Aires and Argentine Politics, 1912-1943." Bulletin of Latin American Research 6, no. 1 (1987): 106. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3338362.

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14

Dolkart, Ronald H., and Richard J. Walter. "The Province of Buenos Aires and Argentine Politics, 1912-1943." American Historical Review 92, no. 2 (April 1987): 517. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1866821.

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15

LEEN, CATHERINE. "City of Fear: Reimagining Buenos Aires in Contemporary Argentine Cinema." Bulletin of Latin American Research 27, no. 4 (October 2008): 465–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1470-9856.2008.00282.x.

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16

McGee Deutsch, Sandra. "The Province of Buenos Aires and Argentine Politics, 1912-2943." Hispanic American Historical Review 66, no. 4 (November 1, 1986): 815–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-66.4.815.

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17

Doti, Brenda L. "Three new paramunnids (Isopoda: Asellota: Paramunnidae) from the Argentine Sea, South-west Atlantic." Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 97, no. 8 (August 8, 2016): 1695–709. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025315416001016.

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Three new species of paramunnid isopods are described:Pentaceration pleonarietissp. nov.,Neasellus argentinensissp. nov. andN. bicarinatussp. nov. The three species were collected off Buenos Aires province, the last one was also collected off Chubut province, Argentine Sea. The species belonging toPentacerationrepresents the first record of this genus in the Argentine Sea. The diagnostic characters of the genusNeasellusare revised and besides the inclusion of the two new species herein described, a new combination for the speciesPelagogonium oculatumSchultz, 1977 is proposed.
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18

Denis, Paul-Yves. "La structure urbaine en république Argentine : le cas de Buenos Aires." Cahiers de géographie du Québec 11, no. 22 (April 12, 2005): 43–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/020680ar.

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Approximately one half of Argentina’s population is found along an axis extending between the cities of Rosario and La Plata, and which includes only 3 per cent of the national territory. Because of this striking concentration, Buenos Aires's metropolitan function is of ever-increasing importance ; with its seven million inhabitants, it bas a virtual monopoly of the secondary and tertiary activities of the country. But this lack of equilibrium, and the city's off-centre location, have made necessary the decentralization of both industry and government. The development of five large centres — Córdoba, Mendoza, Tucumán, Santa Fe — Paraná, and Resis-tencia — Corrientes — have permitted the establishment of a better balanced urban structure and national economy.
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19

ESPINOSA, ANDREA SHAHEEN. "On Diasporic Generation and Syrian-Argentine Musicking in Buenos Aires, Argentina." Yearbook for Traditional Music 51 (November 2019): 139–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ytm.2019.9.

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الملخصتتمتع بوينس آيرس، عاصمة الأرجنتين، حاليًا بمشهد موسيقي عربي مفعم بالحيوية حيث يؤدي الموسيقيون والراقصون عروضاً أصيلة من الأساليب التقليدية. وأصبحت هذه العروض أيضًا مواقع شائعة لإثبات الهوية والتضامن والمطالبة بحق الفرد في أداء التقليد العربي. وفي الوقت الذي يُعْتَبر فيه الموسيقيون البارزون محكمين في الموسيقى الكلاسيكية السورية، إلا أنّ أداء كل منهم يختلف اختلافًا كبيرًا. وتُظهِر مفاهيمهم المتنوعة للتقاليد، وبوضوح، جذورًا في تجربة شتات معينة يمكن أن تبدأ في مراعاة الاختلاف والانحراف. يستكشف هذا المقال إذاً الطرق التي يهيمن بها الطابع الزماني المؤقت، بدلاً منه المكاني، على ممارسات الشتات لفناني الأداء السوريين الأرجنتينيين.
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20

Podalsky, Laura. "Cityscapes and Alienation: Buenos Aires in the Argentine Cinema, 1950-1960." Nuevo Texto Crítico 11, no. 21-22 (1998): 77–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ntc.1998.0009.

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21

Poppe∗, Nicolas. "Siteseeing Buenos Aires in the early Argentine sound filmLos tres berretines." Journal of Cultural Geography 26, no. 1 (February 2009): 49–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08873630802617150.

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22

Withington, Frank. "On the Birds of Lomas de Zamora, Buenos Aires, Argentine Republic." Ibis 30, no. 4 (June 28, 2008): 461–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1888.tb08504.x.

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23

Whigham, Thomas. "Cattle Raising in the Argentine Northeast: Corrientes,c.1750–1870." Journal of Latin American Studies 20, no. 2 (November 1988): 313–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x00003011.

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Though Argentina has long been synonymous with trackless pampas and teeming livestock herds, this common image requires some qualification. Before the late nineteenth century, when refrigerated transport made possible a large international market for Argentine beef, cattle played a less important role in the economy of the Río de la Plata than is usually assumed. Except for Buenos Aires province, where stockraising was predominant even in the colonial period, ranchers often had to struggle hard and insistently to find their niche in the overall commerce of the region. Grazing conditions were excellent in many areas of the Río de la Plata, but because the port of Buenos Aires always enjoyed a near-exclusive control over external trade, theporteñoseffectively blunted the development of any stockraising that threatened to compete with their own exports. In the northeastern provinces, this resulted in a cattle industry marked by technological backwardness and erratic growth. The chaotic politics of the post-independence era reinforced these conditions, though reform-minded ranchers and government officials consistently tried to improve provincial standards of stockraising.
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24

Taylor, Julie. "Death Dressed As a Dancer: The Grotesque, Violence, and the Argentine Tango." TDR/The Drama Review 57, no. 3 (September 2013): 117–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/dram_a_00282.

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Tango dancers in Buenos Aires milongas (dance clubs) create a mise-en-scène where intimacy and anonymity clash. Their tango and the rules of etiquette they practice share dissonant experiences of violence, exclusion, and trauma with an Argentine grotesque, the grotesco criollo.
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25

Ferns, H. S. "The Baring Crisis Revisited." Journal of Latin American Studies 24, no. 2 (May 1992): 241–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x00023385.

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Several accounts of the Baring crisis, 1890–7, are available.1 Among these is my own, chapter xiv of Britain and Argentina in the Nineteenth Century (Oxford, 1960), based upon the Foreign Office papers in the Public Record Office, contemporary periodical literature and secondary works such as the now little-noticed classic, J. H. Williams, Argentine International Trade under Inconvertible Paper Money, 1880–1900 (Cambridge, Mass., 1920). My first purpose in exploring beyond the sources used forty years ago, in the archives of the Bank of England, Baring Brothers & Co., N. M. Rothschild, W. H. Smith and the Marquis of Salisbury, is to correct at least one error in my original work, and this unfortunately repeated by others. My second is to discover whether or not further study of archival material confirms, modifies or denies any of my first conclusions about the role of the Argentine government in the solution of the Baring crisis.The principal error corrected concerns the form of Barings' involvement in Argentine affairs in the late 1880s. They did not get into difficulties because they underwrote a large loan to the Argentine government for the purpose of expanding the water supply and sewage system of Buenos Aires. The fact is that they promoted a private enterprise which took over the water and sewage system of Buenos Aires, and this failed for a number of reasons set out below.As to my original conclusions about the Baring crisis, they have been confirmed by the archival material considered. The solution of the Baring crisis was made possible by the policies devised and enforced by the Argentine government.
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Rodrigues, João Paulo Coelho de Souza. "Diplomacia cultural y circulación literaria: dos escritores brasileños en Buenos Aires entre los centenarios." Catedral Tomada. Revista de crítica literaria latinoamericana 6, no. 11 (January 3, 2019): 74–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/ct/2018.336.

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This paper analyses the travels of two writers, Paulo Barreto (1915) and Julia Lopes de Almeida (1922), to Argentina in the context of the cultural diplomacy developed by Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro newspapers, trying to understand the possible impact they had in the penetration of Brazilian literature in Argentine reviews and magazines. The article focuses the press and these writers rhetoric about journalism, and their travels, and discusses the role played by Buenos Aires market for readers to the formation of the Brazilian literary field.
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27

Selcher, Wayne A. "Brazilian-Argentine Relations in the 1980s: From Wary Rivalry to Friendly Competition." Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 27, no. 2 (1985): 25–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/165717.

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Events Since 1979 have steadily softened the long-dominant tone of rivalry in Brazilian-Argentine relations; and the two countries have established mutual levels of confidence, and institutional mechanisms, sufficient to support increased degrees of cooperation. The mutual understanding, formally confirmed during a landmark visit, in May 1980, by Brazilian President Joâo Figueiredo to Argentine President Jorge Videla, in Buenos Aires, is attributable to the pragmatic perception, in both capitals, that accumulated, but unaddressed, small grievances could mount into major, unnecessary points of attrition capable of sapping more important efforts.
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28

Heras, Raúl Garcia. "Foreign Business-Host Government Relations: The Anglo Argentine Tramways Co. Ltd. of Buenos Aires, 1930–1966." Itinerario 19, no. 1 (March 1995): 85–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0165115300021197.

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From 1880 to 1930, Argentina received hundreds of millions of pounds of British investments, making it in an economic sense a British dominion. The world economic crisis of the 1930s forced both Britain and Argentina t o reconsider many of these economic ties. The changing Anglo-Argentine relationship is reflected in the complex relations between a British tramway company, the Anglo Argentine Tramways Co. Ltd., that operated in Buenos Aires and the Argentine national government between the onset of the Great Depression and the early 1960s. The Anglo, as the company was popularly known, was the main tramway concern diat offered public transportation and contributed to the urban development of a cosmopolitan Latin American metropolis until 1914. Second, the history of the company illustrates political and economic problems that plagued the links between foreign public utilities and the host government from the 1930s onwards. Third, since the Anglo belonged to SOFINA, a transnational holding company with worldwide investments in public transportation and electric power stations, our case study shows the limitations of Sofina's political power in Britain and Argentina.
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29

Foster, David William, and Edna Aizenberg. "Books and Bombs in Buenos Aires: Borges, Gerchunoff, and Argentine-Jewish Writing." World Literature Today 77, no. 1 (2003): 156. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40157948.

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30

Zulawski, A. "Madness in Buenos Aires: Patients, Psychiatrists, and the Argentine State, 1880-1983." Social History of Medicine 22, no. 1 (October 4, 2008): 209–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkn116.

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31

Armus, Diego. "Madness in Buenos Aires: Patients, Psychiatrists, and the Argentine State, 1880–1983." Hispanic American Historical Review 90, no. 2 (May 1, 2010): 369–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-2009-166.

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32

Buch, Esteban. "L’avant-garde musicale à Buenos Aires : Paz contra Ginastera." Circuit 17, no. 2 (December 10, 2007): 11–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/016836ar.

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Le Centro Latinoamericano de Altos Estudios Musicales (claem), fondé en 1962 à Buenos Aires par Alberto Ginastera et financé par la Fondation Rockefeller, fut pendant les années 1960 le principal centre de musique contemporaine d’Amérique latine. Pourtant, le pionnier du dodécaphonisme en Argentine, Juan Carlos Paz, l’appelait volontiers l’« Academia Pitman de la composition musicale ». Ce mépris résultait d’une rivalité qui aura structuré le milieu local de la musique contemporaine pendant trente ans, et qui correspondait à deux visions concurrentes de l’histoire de la musique, entre l’avant-garde et le nationalisme. On retrace cette histoire en analysant notamment les documents de la querelle qu’en 1942 Paz baptisa « El Caso Ginastera ª.
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33

Chiaramonte, Gustavo E. "The shark genus Carcharhinus Blainville, 1816 (Chondrichthyes : Carcharhinidae) in Argentine waters." Marine and Freshwater Research 49, no. 7 (1998): 747. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/mf97249.

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The purpose of this contribution is to review the species of the shark genus Carcharhinus found along the coast of Argentina. New southern limits for the distribution of the genus are given for the western South Atlantic. The presence of Carcharhinus leucas (Valenciennes, 1839) is recorded for the first time on the Province of Buenos Aires coast. New evidence is given which confirms the presence of Carcharhinus brachyurus(GÜnther, 1870) in the area. Carcharhinus plumbeus (Nardo, 1827) is known from only a single Argentine record. Carcharhinus longimanus (Poey, 1861) has been recorded from oceanic waters offshore of Argentina, but has not been taken from continental shelf waters. Resumen. En éste trabajo se revisan las especies de tiburones del género Carcharhinus encontradas en la costa de la Argentina. Nuevos límites septentrionales para la distribución de las especies del género en el Atlántico Sudoccidental son presentados. Se refiere por primera vez la presencia de Carcharhinus leucas (Valenciennes, 1839) para la costa de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Se presenta nueva evidencia que confirma la presencia de Carcharhinus brachyurus (GÜnther, 1870) en el área. Carcharhinus plumbeus (Nardo, 1827) ha sido citado una sóla vez para Argentina. Carcharhinus longimanus (Poey, 1861) ha sido registrado en aguas oceánicas frente a la plataforma de Argentina, pero no en aguas sobre la plataforma continental.
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Reber, Vera Blinn. "Misery, Pain and Death: Tuberculosis in Nineteenth Century Buenos Aires." Americas 56, no. 4 (April 2000): 497–528. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003161500029825.

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Dijo anoche, su canto de muertela Canción de la tos en tu perchoy, al mojarse en las notas rojizasmostró flores de sangre el pañuelo.Pulmonary tuberculosis substantially influenced societal attitudes and Argentine life style in the nineteenth century. Because tuberculosis was socially defined, how Porteños viewed the tubercular depended on conceptions of the disease, as well as popular and medical views of contagion and cure. Illness did not isolate individuals from society or even from familiar faces and responsibilities. Class, gender, age, attitudes on contagion, and approaches to treatment influenced the choices available to men, women, and children.
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35

Ares, Silvia G. Kurlat. "Books and Bombs in Buenos Aires: Borges, Gerchunoff, and Argentine-Jewish Writing (review)." MLN 121, no. 2 (2006): 462–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/mln.2006.0043.

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36

Brodsky, A. "Oy, My Buenos Aires: Jewish Immigrants and the Creation of Argentine National Identity." Hispanic American Historical Review 94, no. 3 (January 1, 2014): 519–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-2694535.

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37

Szurmuk, Monica. "Books and Bombs in Buenos Aires: Borges, Gerchunoff, and Argentine-Jewish Writing (review)." MFS Modern Fiction Studies 50, no. 2 (2004): 498–500. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/mfs.2004.0048.

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38

Kerner, Amy. "Oy, My Buenos Aires: Jewish immigrants and the creation of Argentine national identity." East European Jewish Affairs 47, no. 2-3 (May 4, 2017): 314–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13501674.2017.1384641.

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39

Novillo-Corvalán, Patricia. "Global South Modernism: Tagore, Victoria Ocampo, and the Geopolitics of Horizontal Relations." Modernist Cultures 16, no. 2 (May 2021): 164–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/mod.2021.0327.

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This article explores cultural dialogues between countries located in the (so-called) global South, focusing on India and Argentina through the nexus between the Bengali author, artist, and educationalist Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1941) and the Argentine writer, publisher, and feminist Victoria Ocampo (1890–1979). The article examines the dialectical tensions that arose out of their encounter in Buenos Aires in 1924 which, while forging productive cultural networks through the globalist paradigms proposed by Ocampo's modernist review SUR and Tagore's Bengal-inflected notion of visva-sahitya – as well as the latter's significant contribution to the Argentine cultural scene – it also brought to the fore the geopolitics of empire by foregrounding India's and Argentina's fraught colonial relations with imperial Britain. 1
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40

Hernández, Antonio María. "The Municipal Regime, the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires and the Metropolitan Areas in the Argentine Federation." Verfassung in Recht und Übersee 53, no. 1 (2020): 51–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0506-7286-2020-1-51.

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The Argentine Constitution, especially after the 1994 Constitutional Reform, established a federal structure of four orders of government: Federal, Provinces, the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires and Municipal. Also, Provinces have the possibility to create regions for economic and social development. In this first point, some characteristics are highlighted, such as the tendency towards centralization. The autonomous municipal regime is analyzed in the second point. The municipal regime was inserted in the original Constitution of 1853, but throughout the history there has been a debate about its nature, ranging from autarchy to autonomy. In the 1994 Constitutional Reform, municipal autonomy was recognized, with five aspects: institutional, political, administrative, financial, and economic. In the third point, the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires is studied. It is a City-State, with a nature similar to that of the Provinces and is represented in the Chamber of Deputies and in the Senate of the Nation. Its own Constitution was drafted in 1996. The phenomenon of metropolitan areas of Buenos Aires and Cordoba are briefly considered, in the fourth point. And, finally, in the fifth point, the transcendent relationship between the autonomous municipal regime and the federal republic and the role of cities in the globalized world are reflected.
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Caimari, Lila. "The Archive’s Moment." Histories 1, no. 3 (July 4, 2021): 100–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/histories1030013.

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This article summarizes observations on the “archive question” as it manifests itself in Argentina at the present moment. Based on a presentation delivered in Buenos Aires, it opens with a general appraisal of the multiple dynamics (political, disciplinary, technological) converging on this issue. Then, it focuses on a particular dimension of this process—namely, the impact of the digital archive on the reconstruction of the Argentine past.
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Livesey, Alastair. "Urbaser S.A. and Consorcio de Aguas Bilbao Bizkaia, Bilbao Biskaia Ur Partzuergoa v. The Argentine Republic." World Trade Review 17, no. 1 (January 2018): 175–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1474745617000556.

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On 8 December 2016, an International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) tribunal chaired by Professor Andreas Bucher, with co-arbitrators Professor Pedro J. Martinez-Fraga (Claimants' appointee) and Professor Campbell McLachlan QC (Respondent's appointee), issued its award in Urbaser and CAAB v. Argentina (Award). The dispute related to a Concession Contract granted to Aguas Del Gran Buenos Aires S.A. (AGBA), a company in which Claimants were shareholders, for the provision of water and sewerage services in the Province of Greater Buenos Aires (Province). Claimants alleged that they had faced numerous obstacles created by the Province's authorities, which precluded the efficient and profitable operation of their Concession. Respondent counterclaimed that Claimants had failed to make the necessary investment in the Concession, thereby violating their obligation under international law based on the human right to water.
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Hite, Katherine. "Empathic unsettlement and the outsider within Argentine spaces of memory." Memory Studies 8, no. 1 (October 8, 2014): 38–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1750698014552407.

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In quite distinctive ways, protagonists of Argentine spaces of memory have addressed the complex questions of whether and how visitors experience empathy and empathic unsettlement in these spaces. I will draw from my recent experiences as co-professor with Marita Sturken of a group of US students in Buenos Aires. I will suggest that tension-ridden engagement between outsiders and insiders, including our exchanges with Argentine guides in three iconic sites of memory, can in some instances be conceived as empathic unsettlement. I will make use of performance studies to reflect on our “situatedness” within these spaces, in terms of “co-performance” and the outsider within. I hope to relate our dialogues and experiences to the possibilities for cross-border solidarities.
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Nash, Marian. "Contemporary Practice of the United States Relating to International Law." American Journal of International Law 87, no. 3 (July 1993): 433–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2203652.

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On January 19, 1993, President George Bush transmitted to the Senate for its advice and consent to ratification the Treaty Between the United States of America and the Argentine Republic Concerning the Reciprocal Encouragement and Protection of Investment, with Protocol, signed at Washington on November 14, 1991, and an amendment to the Protocol effected by exchange of notes at Buenos Aires on August 24 and November 6, 1992.
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Carrasquero, Silvia Irene. "The geological collection from the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition (1902–04) in the Museo de La Plata, Argentina." Scottish Journal of Geology 57, no. 1 (March 19, 2021): sjg2020–029. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/sjg2020-029.

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In December 1903, William Speirs Bruce, leader of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition, arrived in Buenos Aires and contacted Francisco Moreno, director of the Museo de La Plata to request his assistance. Bruce asked Moreno to be an intermediary with the Argentine government and to facilitate Bruce's wish for Argentina to take over the meteorological station that the Scottish expedition had established on Laurie Island (South Orkney Islands). Moreno was please to provide the necessary assistance and was instrumental in Bruce achieving his ambition. As a gesture of appreciation, before leaving Buenos Aires Bruce presented a small collection of Laurie Island rock specimens to Moreno as a donation to the Museo de La Plata. This donation initiated the museum's Antarctic collection.
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ΛΟΥΚΟΣ, ΧΡΗΣΤΟΣ. "ΚΟΙΝΩΝΙΚΗ ΙΣΤΟΡΙΑ ΤΟΥ ΤΑΝΓΚΟ ΑΠΟ ΤΙΣ ΥΠΟΒΑΘΜΙΣΜΈΝΕΣ ΣΥΝΟΙΚΙΕΣ TOΥ BUENOS AIRES ΣΤΑ ΣΑΛΟΝΙΑ ΤΗΣ ΕΥΡΩΠΗΣ." Μνήμων 20 (January 1, 1998): 251. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mnimon.677.

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<p>Christos Loukos, Histoire sociale du tango. Des faubourgs marginaux deBuenos Aires aux salons européens</p><p>Le tango (qui comprend danse, musique et paroles) est né la secondemoitié du XIXe siècle dans les faubourgs marginaux de Buenos Aires.Il s'agit du proquit de plusieurs mélanges culturaux, dont les sujets sontdes natifs mais aussi des centaines de milliers d'immigrants qui accourentde l'Europe en Argentine à la recherche d'un emploi ou d'une meilleurechance. Sont examinées les causes qui ont permis à cette danse marginellede gagner les classes populaires et enfin, après un accueil enthousiasteen Europe, surtout en France, la veille de la première guerremondiale, d'être adoptée en tant que produit national par la bourgeoisieargentine. Le tango, comme expression de l'identité argentine, subit lesconséquences des bouleversements politiques et sociaux qui tourmententle pays à partir de 1930: intervention des militaires dans la vie politique,crise économique des années 30, régime péronien, périodes successivesde vie politique normale et de dictature militaire. Le tango devient uninstrument de propagande pour les régimes autoritaires mais aussi unearme de résistance pour les démocrates, un grand nombre desquels vivaienten exil.</p>
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Fortuna, Victoria. "Dancing Argentine Modernity: Imagined Indigenous Bodies on the Buenos Aires Concert Stage (1915–1966)." Dance Research Journal 48, no. 2 (August 2016): 44–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0149767716000206.

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This article argues that the unrealized balletCaaporá(1915), conceived for choreography by Vaslav Nijinsky, and Oscar Araiz'sLa consagración de la primavera(1966,The Rite of Spring) fundamentally shaped the establishment and reimagination of concert dance as a site of modernity in Argentina. Both works danced modernity through imagined pre-Columbian indigenous myths choreographed in Euro-American concert dance forms. In Argentina, “unmarked” ballet and modern dance forms signaled a universalized cultural advancement aligned with the West, while indigenous myths staged “marked” Latin American origins that held racial difference at a distance from the modern present.CaaporáandConsagraciónnegotiated the “marked” and the “unmarked” toward different ends. WhileCaaporástrove to “Argentinize” European ballet at the turn of the century,Consagraciónmarked the move to claim concert dance as Argentine at midcentury. By focusing on the role of indigenism in these two works, this article contributes to scholarship on the modernist negotiation of the marked and unmarked in Latin American concert dance as a strategy for staging—and transcending—the nation.
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Donnay, Arlette. "Réception à l'ambassade de la République fédérale d'Allemagne à Buenos Aires en République Argentine." Négociations 5, no. 1 (2006): 115. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/neg.005.0115.

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Woscoboinik-Scheimberg, Nora, and Marcela Armus. "Panorama diagnostique et thérapeutique actuel des troubles graves du développement à Buenos Aires, Argentine." Cahiers de PréAut 4, no. 1 (2007): 91. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/capre.004.0091.

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Aizenberg, Edna. "Argentine space, Jewish memory: memorials to the blown apart and disappeared in Buenos Aires." Mortality 12, no. 2 (April 25, 2007): 109–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13576270701255099.

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