Nicaragua

the pending task of reassessing the recent past violence

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51378/realidad.v1i162.7729

Keywords:

Political violence, Nicaragua-History, Sandinista People’s Revolution, 1979

Abstract

In this work, the author seeks to explain the relationship between memory and political violence of the Nicaraguan  “recent past” that began in 1979 on the occasion of the  Sandinista revolution. The author considers that the  memory regarding that recent past is notoriously  “institutional”, i.e., shaped both by the State and the  interests of the elites that have been the protagonists of  the recurrent political violence without which content and  meaning could be given to the history of the country. The  “resizing” of violence is proposed as a primary and urgent task in order to “unframe” and democratize Nicaraguan  memory, institutionalized, a reflection of the projects of the  elites, especially in the context of the repressive spiral  perpetrated against the population by Daniel Ortega’s  government since 2018.

Realidad: Revista de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades No. 162, 2023: 16-35.

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Author Biography

Danny Ramírez-Ayérdiz, Universidad de Buenos Aires/CONICET

Licenciado en Derecho, magíster en derechos humanos, becario doctoral del Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, doctorando en Ciencias Sociales en la Universidad de Buenos Aires. Secretario ejecutivo del Centro de Asistencia Legal Interamericano en Derechos Humanos (CALIDH)

Published

2023-07-31


How to Cite

Ramírez-Ayérdiz, D. (2023). Nicaragua: the pending task of reassessing the recent past violence. Realidad, Revista De Ciencias Sociales Y Humanidades, (162), 16–35. https://doi.org/10.51378/realidad.v1i162.7729

Issue

Section

Essays