President of Paraguay Essays

  • Francia's Isolation In Paraguay

    1515 Words  | 4 Pages

    who isolated Paraguay from the rest of the world? This research paper, will explain both sides of the argument to create a strong case to prove. Dr. Francia negatively affected Paraguay and did he do more harm than

  • The Culture Of Paraguay

    1379 Words  | 3 Pages

    First, is essential to understand Paraguay people and society as well its demographic in order to fully understand the culture. Paraguay is a South America country that is land lock between Bolivia, Argentina, and Brazil. Its estimated population of Paraguay is around 6,623,252 people. Most of the population is concentrated in the southern part of the country. Asuncion is the metropolitan capital and largest city of Paraguay, where the national government is located. They have two official languages

  • Democracy in Latin America

    2755 Words  | 6 Pages

    inefficient governments and most importantly governments who promote and use military. The real question is why democracy actually failed even though democracy is what people want. Paraguay is a case of failure in transition democracy because of the corruption and other things that will be argued in this essay. Paraguay and Ecuador are considered to be the only countries that democratization did not achieve consolidation, in differ from Chilli and Central American. Firstly, K. Isbester mentions that

  • Paraguay Research Paper

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    The South American county of Paraguay is very interesting and different from the counties that I am aware of. So during this research I learned a lot of different things. Paraguay is practically in the middle of Brazil, Argentina, and Bolivia. The president of Paraguay at the moment is Horacio Cartes; he was elected of April 2013. The capital of Paraguay is Asunción; this city was found in 1537 by Spanish explorer. The Paraguayan flag consist of three horizontal stripes and an emblem in the middle

  • Paraguayan War Explanation

    1993 Words  | 4 Pages

    that still awes historians to this day. Most of these casualties can be blamed on President Francisco Lopez of Paraguay

  • Geographical Overview of Paraguay

    1457 Words  | 3 Pages

    Paraguay Geography: Paraguay is a landlocked country in South America. It is located in the Southern Cone region, and it is a relatively small country. It is bordered by Bolivia to the north and northwest, Brazil to the northeast and east, and Argentina to the southeast, south, and west. The Paraguay River runs through the country from north to south, separating it into two distinct regions: the Region Oriental (Eastern Region) and the Region Occidental (Western Region). The Western Region is also

  • An Analysis Of Salamanca's War

    1239 Words  | 3 Pages

    key role in the conflict, it is necessary to first understand his personal ideals. Daniel Salamanca was elected as the president of Bolivia in 1931. He was a very respected president with a political trajectory that gave him credibility within the country and its Congress. He was an advocate for free trade, and had over 30 years of political career. As historian and ex-president Carlos D. Mesa describes, , “[Salamanca’s] credentials were the honesty and the open devotion to the republican institutions

  • Operation Condor Essay

    676 Words  | 2 Pages

    Prior to his Chilean President Salvador Allende’s election, who ran on a ticket of socialist economic reforms, the US government spent millions of dollars in Anti-Allende propaganda and attempted to reason with military forces to stage a coup against him, not even caring of the

  • Essay About Bolivia

    1645 Words  | 4 Pages

    Bolivia: A Country Divided In 1967 deep in the Bolivian Jungle a group of Bolivian Special Forces, trained by the American Green Berets were hunting down Che Guevara, a Marxist revolutionary, who had been attempting to overthrow the government. Guevara had gone to Bolivia in the hopes of instigating a revolution among the poor Bolivian peasants but to his surprise his ideals were met with either indifference or contempt and it was one of these people that betrayed his location to the Bolivia government

  • The Dirty War: Corruption In Argentina

    526 Words  | 2 Pages

    a secret group of military officers that overthrew the Argentinian government with a military coup in 1943. Juan Peron then became the secretary of labor under President Edelmiro Farrell. He became very popular with working class citizens in Argentina. He then rose to war minister then Vice President. Juan was then elected president of Argentina in 1946. He was assisted greatly by his second wife, Eva "Evita" Peron who is the subject of many books, plays, and movies. Evita is the inspiration

  • Persuasive Essay On Abortion

    2538 Words  | 6 Pages

    “Abortion, it is poverty to decide that a child must die so that you may live as you wish” (Mother Teresa). “A sixteen-year-old girl named Jenny, from a rural North Carolina town, got pregnant by her high school boyfriend. She kept the news from her father who was a stern Baptist pastor. Jenny was raised with the conviction that abortion was murder and, knowing her father’s extreme condemnation of premarital sex, she couldn’t confess her pregnancy to him. Trapped by two unthinkable alternatives

  • History Of Argentina

    778 Words  | 2 Pages

    was known as the Viceroyalty of La Plata. This land area was even larger than just Argentina and also included what are today the areas of countries such as Bolivia, Uruguay, Paraguay, Brazil, and even Chile. The name Argentina became the republic's official in 1860. Argentina added it’s northern areas when a war with Paraguay ended in the year 1874, and obtained the large area of Patagonia in 1881. Occupying such a large space of the South American continent means that Argentina has many different

  • Brazil In The 19th Century Essay

    1704 Words  | 4 Pages

    Plaque by epochal events such as the creation of the Portuguese capital, the port for trades, and political crisis. The nineteenth century was a political and social turning point for Brazil. The purpose of this essay is to give an in-depth knowledge of Brazil in the nineteenth century. Whether it was as the building of the Portuguese Empire, the rise of the Brazilian economy and the end of the slave trade. Brazil in the nineteenth century was defined by momentous changes. On November 21, 1807, Queen

  • Present Day Uruguay Research Paper

    576 Words  | 2 Pages

    country was held under control of Spain, then later by Brazil. However, after gaining independence on August 25, 1825, they went to war with Paraguay which then lead to a period of dictatorship. Though, as it had changed over time into what it is now, their first presidential representative was elected as of 1903. Jose Batlle y Ordonez, the first president of Uruguay laid the foundation of modern democracy in Uruguay. In present day Uruguay, the legal system in based on Spanish civil code. Citizenship

  • Documentary, South of the Border

    1770 Words  | 4 Pages

    pursuant to the filling of gaps left by mainstream media about the social and political movements in the southern continent. Through a series of interviews he conducted with Presidents Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, Cristina Kirchner and former president Nėstor Kirchner of Argentina, Evo Morales of Bolivia, Fernando Lugo of Paraguay, Lula da Silva of Brazil, Rafael Correa of Ecuador and Raúl Castro of Cuba, Stone was able to compare firsthand information from the leaders themselves with that reported and

  • Argentina

    1439 Words  | 3 Pages

    Argentina is a federal republic in southern South America on the border of Bolivia and Paraguay; on the east by Brazil, Uruguay, and the Atlantic Ocean, on the south by the Atlantic Ocean and Chile, and on the west by Chile. The country is the biggest country on the south side and is triangular in shape, with the base in the north and the corner at Punta Dungeness, the southeastern tip of the continent. The length of Argentina in a northern to southern direction is about 2,070 mi.. Its biggest

  • Argentina Research Paper

    533 Words  | 2 Pages

    Argentina is the second largest and most populous country in South America. It is bordered by Brazil, Uruguay, Bolivia, Paraguay, Chile, and the Atlantic Ocean. The terrain in Argentina consists mainly of lowlands and flatlands but also contains some major mountain ranges. Within northwest Argentina lies the Andean peaks which stretch over 7,000 meters above sea level. Nearly one third of Argentina’s land area is covered by fertile plain called the Pampas. Argentina, like a large majority of south

  • Brief History of Bolivia

    1819 Words  | 4 Pages

    Bolivia, a country rich in history and natural beauty has a long storied past. Named after independence fighter Simon Bolivar, Bolivia broke away from Spanish rule in 1825. However, Bolivia’s history goes much deeper. To understand Bolivia we must travel back in time to its origins. Bolivia traces its roots back around 21,000 years when it was part of the culture of Andean South America. Around 600 B.C. the Andean empire emerged on a high plateau between the Altiplano Mountains. This empire

  • Bolivia

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    Bolívar. It vested supreme authority in a president, who was chosen for a life term. In May 1951 Paz Estenssoro won nearly half the presidential election vote while in exile. In order to prevent the election of Paz Estenssoro, the incumbent president, placed the government under the control of the military and resigned. General Hugo Ballivián was appointed president. General René Barrientos Ortuno, a member of the government by the army, was elected president in July 1966. In July 1980 General Luís

  • Democracy In South America

    1016 Words  | 3 Pages

    South America is a land of different cultures and has a history of as many different types of government, mostly dictatorships. Most of South America won independence from Spain and Portugal between 1810 and 1824. In 1823, President James Monroe enunciated the first US policy on Latin America. The Monroe Doctrine warned European nations against interfering in the affairs of independent nations in the Western Hemisphere. In 1904, Roosevelt's Corollary said the US would act as a "policeman"