Academic literature on the topic 'Partido Colorado (Uruguay)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Partido Colorado (Uruguay)"

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Andreev, Anton. "The phenomenon of the political party Cabildo Abierto in Uruguay." Latinskaia Amerika, no. 4 (2022): 42. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s0044748x0019316-6.

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The party-political system of Uruguay has always been characterized by stability and constancy. For many years, the development of the country was determined by two "traditional" parties - Partido Nacional (Blanco) and Partido Colorado - as well as the Frente Amplio coalition. The completed electoral cycle has shown that the current sys-tem is changing from both the right and the left side. In particular, the “Cabildo Abierto” party founded in May 2019, received strong support from the voters, changing the land-scape of the country's right-wing forces. This article discusses the history of the party, the factors of its formation and success, analyzes the domestic and foreign policy program, gives strokes to the political portrait of the party's founder, Guido Manini Rios.
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Cerrano, Carolina, and José Antonio Saravia. "La primera elección presidencial de Luis Alberto de Herrera desde el discurso del candidato y la prensa partidaria (1922)." Prohistoria. Historia, políticas de la historia, no. 35 (June 1, 2021): 55–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.35305/prohistoria.vi35.1404.

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Este artículo estudia la primera elección presidencial de Luis Alberto de Herrera como candidato del Partido Nacional uruguayo en 1922. En aquel tiempo su liderazgo carismático y su arrastre popular estaban en sus inicios, a diferencia del culto característico de los siguientes años. Este trabajo muestra cómo Herrera y el Partido Nacional –a partir del análisis de sus discursos políticos y de la prensa nacionalista– hicieron su propaganda electoral, y si bien el resultado fue adverso cosecharon gran número de votos acortando las distancias que lo separaban de su tradicional adversario colorado.
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López Burian, Camilo M. "El consenso de los partidos Colorado y Nacional en la política exterior uruguaya (1985-2005)." Revista de la Facultad de Derecho, no. 42 (June 1, 2017): 100–137. http://dx.doi.org/10.22187/rfd201716.

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Pérez, Mariana Alicia. "FEDERALES Y BLANCOS. FORMACIONES NACIONALES E IDENTIDADES POLÍTICO-PARTIDARIAS EN LA REGIÓN RIOPLATENSE DURANTE LA REVOLUCIÓN DE LÓPEZ JORDÁN DE 1870." Almanack, no. 33 (2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/2236-463333ea01521.

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Resumen Este artículo indaga sobre las identidades político partidarias en la región rioplatense en la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, en la etapa de formación de los estados nacionales. Analiza la revolución de López Jordán en Entre Ríos y parte de la constatación de que los bandos enfrentados en ella tomaron los nombres de los partidos uruguayos “blanco” y “colorado”, aunque en convivencia con otras oposiciones: “federal/ unitario” y “entrerriano/porteño”. A pesar de que los vínculos entre las bandas del río Uruguay y de la imbricación del partido blanco con el partido federal eran de larga data, recién es 1870 cuando -a través de los nombres- esa identidad parece fundirse. Se argumenta que los acontecimientos políticos en Uruguay en la década de 1860 y su particular impacto en la política entrerriana, junto a la crisis del partido federal tras la derrota de Pavón, explican esta cronología.
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Bohigues, Asbel. "Las elecciones uruguayas de 2014: Tabaré y el Frente Amplio otra vez." RIPS: Revista de Investigaciones Políticas y Sociológicas 15, no. 2 (December 23, 2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.15304/rips.15.2.3382.

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En octubre de 2014 se celebraron las elecciones nacionales en Uruguay, resultando vencedor el expresidente Tabaré Vázquez y revalidándose la mayoría parlamentaria del Frente Amplio. Los resultados electorales fueron similares a los de 2009, confirmando el apoyo popular del Frente Amplio, en la presidencia desde 2005. En este trabajo se analizan los resultados en las elecciones legislativas y presidenciales de Uruguay en 2014, situándolos en la evolución del sistema de partidos uruguayo de las últimas décadas, a la vez que se atiende a la distribución territorial del voto, y el contexto político y socioeconómico previo a las elecciones. Igualmente se apunta a las principales claves para entender la tercera victoria consecutiva del Frente así como las implicaciones de dichos resultados a futuro tanto para el presidente Tabaré Vázquez como para el partido. Estas elecciones confirman el predominio del Frente Amplio en Uruguay, frente a los dos partidos tradicionales históricos, el Nacional y el Colorado, que llevan ya más de 10 años en la oposición, así como la división territorial del país: el interior apoya sobre todo a los partidos tradicionales, de centro-derecha, y la zona urbana, especialmente Montevideo, a la izquierda. In October 2014 the national elections in Uruguay took place, the expresident Tabaré Vázquez won and the Broad Front got again the parliamentary majority. The electoral results were quite similar to 2009, confirming the Broad Front’s popular support, with the presidency since 2005. This paper aims to analyse the results in both presidential and legislative elections in Uruguay in 2014, contextualizing them in the Uruguayan party system evolution in recent decades, also focusing on the territorial distribution of the vote, and the prior political and socioeconomic context to the elections. Likewise, the main key factors to explain the third consecutive victory of the Front are highlighted, as well as what these results involve for the future, both for president Tabaré Vázquez and for the party. This election confirms the predominance of the Broad Front in Uruguay, in opposition to the two historical traditional parties, National and Coloured, which have been in the opposition for more than 10 years, as well as the territorial division of the country: inland supports center-right traditional parties, and the urban zone, Montevideo specially, the left.
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Monestier, Felipe. "Political Polarisation in Uruguay in the Early 1960s: The Role of Luis Batlle Berres and Lista 15." Journal of Latin American Studies, December 13, 2023, 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x23000937.

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Abstract The historiography on Uruguay during the Cold War has identified the period 1959–62 as a key juncture in the process of political polarisation that culminated in the fall of democracy in 1973. Based on the analysis of press articles and other documentary sources, I describe the role played by the main fraction of the Partido Colorado (Red Party) led by Luis Batlle Berres in promoting polarisation of the Uruguayan political system in those years. My findings contradict the conventional depiction of Batlle Berres as a moderate who tried to prevent the polarisation provoked by other agents.
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Zourek, Michal. "Los servicios secretos del Bloque Soviético y sus aliados en América Latina: el Partido Colorado y el Partido Nacional en los planes de la inteligencia checoslovaca en Uruguay." Izquierdas 52 (August 2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.4067/s0718-50492023000100202.

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Reis, Guilherme Simões, and Nathália Lopes. "Uruguai: novo realinhamento partidário ou toda democracia de partidos sólida se desmancha no ar?" Dados 65, no. 2 (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/dados.2022.65.2.260.

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RESUMO O Uruguai sempre foi um país singular na América Latina, visto como exemplo de estabilidade, e isso não foi afetado mesmo com o realinhamento do sistema de partidos – antes bipartidário – ocorrido a partir da criação da Frente Ampla. A despeito disso, este artigo identifica, com base nas primárias e eleições nacionais de 2019, principalmente por meio de análise qualitativa de dados, mas também com evidências quantitativas, indícios de um desalinhamento e de novo realinhamento do sistema partidário. A análise da correlação de forças das frações dos partidos tradicionais e a comparação dos últimos pleitos com o histórico eleitoral de outros partidos além de colorados, blancos e Frente Ampla são o que permite tal diagnóstico. Percebem-se a emergência de agremiações antipartido ou fora da clivagem direita-esquerda e o aumento tanto da fragmentação partidária como do voto conservador.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Partido Colorado (Uruguay)"

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Meyer-Aurich, Jens. "Wahlen, Parlamente und Elitenkonflikte : die Entstehung der ersten politischen Parteien in Paraguay, 1869-1904 : ein Beitrag zur Geschichte politischer Organisation in Lateinamerika /." [Stuttgart] : F. Steiner, 2006. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb41027600c.

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Books on the topic "Partido Colorado (Uruguay)"

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Montero, Carlos. Uruguay 1989: Partido Colorado. [Montevideo, Uruguay]: Puntosur Editores, 1988.

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Gutiérrez, Marcos. Uruguay, 1985-1989: Impulso democrático, bloqueo conservador. [Montevideo]: Centro Uruguay Independiente, 1989.

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Gutiérrez, Marcos. Uruguay, 1985-1989: Impulso democrático, bloqueo conservador. [Montevideo]: Centro Uruguay Independiente, 1989.

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Iturria, Raúl. 1958: El an̋o en que cambió la historia. [Montevideo, Uruguay: Tierradentro Ediciones, 2008.

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Santiago, Rafael de. Blancos o nacionalistas?: 1852-1876, una época de definición. Montevideo: [s.n.], 1987.

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Parés, Juan José Fernández. Batalla de Carpintería, la primera con las divisas blancas y coloradas: 19 de Setiembre de 1836 : una compilación histórica. [Montevideo, Uruguay]: Ediciones "El Galeón,", 1996.

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Partido Colorado (Uruguay). Convención Nacional. Partido Colorado: Exposiciones realizadas por los sres. ministros, en la sesión de la Convención Nacional del Partido Colorado de fecha 14 de Marzo de 1987. [Montevideo, Uruguay?]: El Partido, 1987.

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Daniel, Pelúas, ed. Coparticipación y coalición: 164 años de acuerdo entre Blancos y Colorados. Montevideo: Arca, 2000.

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Stirling, Guillermo. La revolución del centro. Montevideo: La República, 2004.

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Ibáñez, Jorge Batlle. La modernización del Uruguay: "Nunca usamos la fuerza del ejercito a nuestro favor, ni lo volveremos a hacer". [Uruguay?]: Centro de Información y Capacitación, 1985.

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Book chapters on the topic "Partido Colorado (Uruguay)"

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Mohan, Rajat. "Some Other Journeys." In From Here to Denmark, 275—C12P61. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198893103.003.0012.

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Abstract From being one of the world’s poorest countries at its independence from Britain in 1966, Botswana was an upper middle-income and a High Human Development country barely four decades later. Its traditional tribal institutions, particularly the kgotla were always remarkably inclusive and it had also been spared the ravages of extractive colonization. Enlightened leadership, particularly that of its first president, Seretse Khama, also played a critical role in Botswana’s journey, including in equitable sharing of its large diamond finds avoiding the feared resource curse. Greater equity and centralization of power led in turn to the evolution of successful inclusive institutions in post-independence Botswana, including an autonomous and competent Weberian bureaucracy. Even though Uruguay had been a democracy for almost two centuries, it also suffered from a long history of political particularism (clientelism). From its independence in 1825 till the mid-1960s, two political parties, Partido Colorado, ‘Red’, (PC) and the Partido Nacional, ‘Blanco’, (PN) had monopolized the country’s political system. Things began to change only when a third political party, a left-oriented Broad Front, the Frente Amplio (FA) emerged by the mid-1960s. Pressures for some fundamental institutional reforms in the country resulted in significant economic reforms, including in the bureaucracy and public-service delivery, and political institutions.
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Mazzuca, Sebastián. "Party-Driven State Formation in Comparative Perspective." In Latecomer State Formation, 307–49. Yale University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300248951.003.0010.

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This chapter focuses on Colombia and Uruguay, which are the two final cases of party-driven state-formation in Latin America. It describes the competing partisan forces in Colombia and Uruguay as the crucible for supraregional loyalties that connect political elites from distant localities when other linkages were non-existent. It also refers to the two parties that dominated the emerging political arena in Colombia and Uruguay. The party loyalties in Colombia got structured around a Conservative-versus-Liberal cleavage, while in Uruguay the struggle was essentially between nearly identical liberal parties, Colorados versus Blancos. The chapter reviews the analysis of territory consolidation in Colombia and Uruguay, which confirms the insight that was crucial to understanding the process of state-formation in Mexico.
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