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Juventud Uruguaya de Pie

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Uruguayan Youth Standing
Juventud Uruguaya de Pie
Formation29 October 1970
TypeStudent organization
PurposeActivism
HeadquartersAv. 18 de Julio, Montevideo
Location
Region served
National
Official language
Spanish
Key people
Daniel García Pintos

The Uruguayan Youth Standing[1] or Uruguayan Youth at Attention[2] (Spanish: Juventud Uruguaya de Pie) was a right to far-right student organization in Uruguay during the 1970s.

This relatively short-lived organization (it was dissolved in 1974[3]) had a Patriotic and anti-Communist orientation and was opposed to the insurgency of the Tupamaros and other far-left organizations.[4] It experienced rapid growth, but its armed struggle efforts were relatively less successful.[5] A factional undercurrent of the group desired a national revolution along the lines of Falangism.[3]

The main colours of their flag represent the two traditional major Uruguayan political parties: the National Party (white) and the Colorado Party (red). Presidents Jorge Pacheco Areco and Juan María Bordaberry both spoke positively of the group.[6]

Bibliography

  • Bucheli, Gabriel (2019). O se está con la patria o se está contra ella. Montevideo: Fin de Siglo. ISBN 9789974499744.

References

  1. ^ Harrington, Samuel Ernest; Masaeli, Mahmoud; Sneller, Rico (2019-01-17). Latin American Perspectives on Global Development. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-5275-2603-7.
  2. ^ Gross, Liza (2019-04-09). Handbook Of Leftist Guerrilla Groups In Latin America And The Caribbean. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-72287-5.
  3. ^ a b Rein, Raanan; Sheinin, David M. K. (2021-07-05). Armed Jews in the Americas. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-46254-0.
  4. ^ The Uruguayan far right in the 1970s (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Mazzeo, Mario (2006). El Chamaco Rébori: un hombre, una ciudad y un río (in Spanish). Ediciones Trilce. ISBN 978-9974-32-415-2.
  6. ^ de Sierra, Gerónimo; Riella, Alberto (2017), "Condiciones socioeconómicas y políticas de la crisis institucional (1973-1980)", Cincuenta años de sociología política Uruguay y América Latina, antología esencial, CLACSO, pp. 153–184, doi:10.2307/j.ctv253f4km.15, JSTOR j.ctv253f4km.15, S2CID 245077672, retrieved 2022-06-07

External links


This page was last edited on 31 December 2023, at 03:27
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