Argentina: A Blackmailed Democracy

Abstract
After many years of dictatorship, a new democratic regime was established in Argentina in December 1983. For the first time, the rules of public life became the focus of public debate and the political community began to look at itself critically. The possibility for a democratic regime found a fragile but decisive footing in changing political beliefs and began to gain popularity. The change of regime was felt to be only a beginning. More importantly, a political system was to be refurbished which, although grounded in the constitution, had been unstable since the late 1920s. There were, however, obstacles posed by the more authoritarian ideologies of the corporations.

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