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Ítem El Orden Social en la Regeneración(Universidad Icesi, 2012-07-01) Henao Albarracín, Ana MaríaThe troublesome nature of order --assumed as the distinction between legitimacy and illicit, conventional and unusual, recognized and inconsistent-- enforced with determination in the Colombian political life of the nineteenth century, and came to be a major concern around which moved many of the political deliberations of the epoch. This article illustrates some of the major topics relative to the social order difficulties arisen during the political process led by the conservative elite in the late nineteenth century, the so-called “Regeneration”. These arguments will be explained in specific regulatory principles, which configure the individual rights and freedoms essential to establish the public order. Noticeable in the drafting of the Constitution of 1886 and in the following articles, they will change in terms of their original text, in account of a more authoritarian and centralist tendency, detected within a nation-building project, aimed to the homogenization, cohesion and national coexistence. Therefore, it would turn out to be the hope to resolve the complications of order and frustrated peace.Ítem El Orden Social en la Regeneración(Universidad Icesi, 2013-01-01) Henao Albarracín, Ana MaríaContiene: Introducción.-- Libertad en el orden y orden en la libertad.-- Sobre la libertad de imprenta.-- Catolicismo y libertad de Cultos.-- La cuestión de la Enseñanza.-- El derecho de Asociación: Una herencia liberal por suprimir.-- Conclusiones.-- Fuentes Primarias.-- Bibliografía.Ítem ¡Caramba! ¡That is life in the tropic!: un recorrido por la ley y el orden en la literatura hispanoamericana(Universidad Icesi, 2011-07-01) Montealegre M., CarolinaTwo hundred years of colonial rule left Latin America in a state of institutional development characterized by the tension between law and culture. Taking historical and neo-institucional perspectives, this paper discusses the gap between traditional behaviors and those imposed through legal order by the rulers of the country, which are not necessarily the most adequate ones. The author examines eleven Latin American novels so as to better understand formal and informal institutions of three critical phases of institutional development in Latin America.
