Post by account_disabled on Feb 17, 2024 5:27:39 GMT
Victims. Elites and Violence Alliances Impunity and Inequality Introduction in Latin America a Large Part of the Economic Elites Have Played and in Many Cases Continue to Do So a Role of Primary Importance in the Exercise of Political Violence Either Through Support for Dictatorial Regimes as Has Been the Case of Southern Cone Especially in Argentina and Chile or Through the Construction of Alliances and Financing of Armed Actors in Scenarios of Internal Conflicts Such as in Colombia and Central America.
The Involvement of Economic Rights Abuses or Their Complicity and Support for Illegal Armed Groups in the Region Have Been Denounced by Several National and International Civil Society Organizations.and Have Been the Subject of Bolivia Telemarketing Data Academic Research. In Fact the Truth Commissions of Nine Latin American Countries Have Identified Economic Corporate Complicity as One of the Elements of the Dynamics of Violence Exercised in Contexts of Dictatorships and Armed Conflicts.. However There Are Not Enough Studies on the Way in Which Such Violence and the Impunity That Usually Accompanies It Operate as Key Mechanisms of Reproduction of These Elites and Are Functional to the Accumulation of Their Status and Wealth.
Hence This Article Proposes to Analyze How Involvement in Violent Practices as Well as the Construction of Strategic Alliances Grants Them Preferential Treatment by the Justice System That Contributes Not Only to the Reproduction of Their Privileged Position but Also to the Survival of Social Inequalities. For This the Cases of Argentina and Colombia Will Be Exemplified Which Although With Clear Differences in the Forms and Extent of Violence.
The Involvement of Economic Rights Abuses or Their Complicity and Support for Illegal Armed Groups in the Region Have Been Denounced by Several National and International Civil Society Organizations.and Have Been the Subject of Bolivia Telemarketing Data Academic Research. In Fact the Truth Commissions of Nine Latin American Countries Have Identified Economic Corporate Complicity as One of the Elements of the Dynamics of Violence Exercised in Contexts of Dictatorships and Armed Conflicts.. However There Are Not Enough Studies on the Way in Which Such Violence and the Impunity That Usually Accompanies It Operate as Key Mechanisms of Reproduction of These Elites and Are Functional to the Accumulation of Their Status and Wealth.
Hence This Article Proposes to Analyze How Involvement in Violent Practices as Well as the Construction of Strategic Alliances Grants Them Preferential Treatment by the Justice System That Contributes Not Only to the Reproduction of Their Privileged Position but Also to the Survival of Social Inequalities. For This the Cases of Argentina and Colombia Will Be Exemplified Which Although With Clear Differences in the Forms and Extent of Violence.