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TIME Europe January 20, 2003 Jeff Israely |
Reversal Of Fortune Their ancestors left Italy generations ago to make lives in the New World. Now Argentines are moving to Veneto to make lives in the Old.  |
Reason December 2002 Jesse Walker |
Argentine Revolution Even as Argentina's rulers contend with competing rehabilitation schemes, of domestic origin as well as foreign, ordinary Argentines are enacting reforms of their own, building parallel institutions to fill the void left by the collapsing state.  |
TIME Europe March 4, 2002 Robin Knight |
Behind the Wall of Silence A new book explores how some of the most notorious Nazi war criminals found refuge in Peron's Argentina...  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
Argentina: Can It Go From Bad to Worse? It's hard to imagine how the Argentine economy could get much worse. Argentina's current plight is all the more troubling because only a few years ago the country was hailed as a poster-child for free-market economic reform in developing nations...  |
TIME Asia Peter Katel |
Newsmaker: Domingo Cavallo Argentina's controversial Economy Minister had led efforts to keep Latin America's third-largest economy from collapse. But his balancing act ended last week as Argentines rioted in the streets, forcing him out and toppling the government.  |
IDB America October 2001 |
IDB funds education reform in Argentina The IDB has announced the approval of a $600 million loan to improve the quality of secondary education in Argentina and make it more accessible to low-income youth...  |
Outside November 2001 Joshua Goodman |
Hot Property For a bargain price of $1.7 million, Doug Tompkins and his wife Kristine have sewn up a vast Patagonian wonderland. Who says cranky visionaries can't close a deal?  |
IDB America May/Jun 2000 |
Come see for yourself! The Buenos Aires city legislature hopes the Internet will erase doubts about how it spends taxpayer money  |
Finance & Development March 1, 2000 Pedro Pou |
Argentina's Structural Reforms of the 1990s Argentina experienced serious economic and financial difficulties in the 1980s. Hyperinflation in 1989-90 finally elicited the necessary political consensus for reform. Despite areas of concern, structural reforms implemented in the 1990s have set Argentina on the path to sustained growth.  |
Mother Jones Mar/Apr 2000 Louis Dubose & Carmen Coiro |
Don't Cry for Bush, Argentina George W. may not recall the names of world leaders, but when it comes to foreign affairs, he knows the value of his own family's name.  |
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