La cuestión eclesial de Tacna y Arica: Religión, paradiplomacia y frontera (1900 - 1911)

dc.contributor.authorAguilera Barraza
dc.contributor.authorRené Patricio
dc.coverage.spatialBolivia
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-22T17:53:42Z
dc.date.available2026-03-22T17:53:42Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.description.abstractThis article addresses the Chilean-Peruvian conflict over the control of religious life in Tacna and Arica. Conflict that in the beginnings of the S. XX, was included within the territorial struggle that these two countries had for the tacnoariqueno area. Thus, religion was transformed into a field of paradiplomatic relations. Chile used religion to open a series of practices of symbolic desfronterizacion that annulled and eliminated the nationalistic priests, promoters of a Peruvian resistance that questioned and impeded the exercise of the new authorities, to obtain the conditions to stimulate the Chilean sovereignty in Tacna and Arica. Peru, also used religion reality to spread a speech of territorial recovery and to encourage rejection to the process of symbolic desfronterizacion that Chile established in the provinces that were engaged in the war of the saltpeter.
dc.identifier.urihttps://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/66883
dc.language.isoes
dc.relation.ispartofAldea Mundo
dc.sourceUniversidad de Los Andes
dc.subjectSovereignty
dc.subjectPolitical science
dc.subjectSociology
dc.subjectHumanities
dc.titleLa cuestión eclesial de Tacna y Arica: Religión, paradiplomacia y frontera (1900 - 1911)
dc.typearticle

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