The Network of clandestine detention places in Tucumán during 1975

This article reconstructs and characterizes the network of clandestine detention places in Tucumán during 1975 under the Operation Independence. It does so by systematizing the repressive trajectory of 440 survivors of that era.The analysis of these data shows that the bulk of the repressive activit...

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Autor principal: Jemio, Ana Sofía
Formato: Artículo publishedVersion Peer-reviewed papers text Artículo evaluado por pares texto
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Instituto de Arqueología y Museo, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales e IML, Universidad Nacional de Tucumán 2020
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Acceso en línea:http://publicaciones.csnat.unt.edu.ar/index.php/mundodeantes/article/view/8
http://suquia.ffyh.unc.edu.ar/handle/suquia/10007
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Sumario:This article reconstructs and characterizes the network of clandestine detention places in Tucumán during 1975 under the Operation Independence. It does so by systematizing the repressive trajectory of 440 survivors of that era.The analysis of these data shows that the bulk of the repressive activity was guaranteed from a few Clandestine Detention Centers (CCD). This more concentrated circuit coexisted with a network of spaces that served as a point of support for the repressive process, but they were not instituted in CCD. How to interpret the coexistence of a centralizing tendency with another opposite, which tends towards dispersion? Returning to the term Clandestine Detention Center, the idea of a repressive circuit and the concept of concentrative power, an interpretation of this phenomenon is proposed.Taken one by one, these small spaces are irrelevant to explain the global functioning of the repressive apparatus. But taken as a whole, they explain a considerable part of the victims and, above all, they show a great territorial dispersion.