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       República Argentina
       The Argentine Republic ( Spanish: República Argentina,  IPA [reˈpuβlika aɾxɛnˈtina]) is a country in South America, situated between the  Andes in the west and the southern Atlantic Ocean in the east and south. It is bordered by Paraguay and Bolivia in the north, Brazil and Uruguay in the northeast, and Chile in the west and south. It also claims the  British overseas territories of the  Falkland Islands ( Spanish: Islas Malvinas) and  South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands. Under the name of  Argentine Antarctica, it claims around 1,000,000  square kilometres (386,000  sq. mi) of Antarctica, overlapping other claims by Chile and the United Kingdom. By area, it is the second largest country of South America after Brazil and the 8th largest country in the  world.The country is formally named República Argentina  (pronunciation) ( help· info) (Argentine Republic), while for purposes of legislation the form Nación Argentina (Argentine Nation) is used.
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           | Flag | Coat of arms |  |  
        | Motto: En Unión y Libertad (English: In Union and Liberty)
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        | Anthem:  Himno Nacional Argentino |  
        |  |  
        | Capital | Buenos Aires 34°20′ S 58°30′ W
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        | Largest city | Buenos Aires |  
        | Official language(s) | Spanish |  
        | Government 
           President | Democratic Federal Republic Néstor Kirchner
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        | Independence -  May Revolution
 - Declared
 - Recognised
 | from Spain 25 May  1810
 9 July  1816
 in  1821 (by Portugal)
 |  
        | Area • Total
 
 • Water (%)
 | 2,791,810* km² ( 8th)
 1,077,924* mi²
 1.1%
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        | Population •  2005 est.
 •  2001 census
 •  Density
 | 39,538,000 ( 31st)
 36,260,130
 13/km² ( 165th)
 33.7/mi²
 |  
        | GDP ( PPP) • Total
 • Per capita
 | 2005 estimate US$ 484,232 million ( 22nd)
 US$ 12,468 ( 52nd)
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        | HDI ( 2003) | 0.863 ( 34th) – high |  
        | Currency | Peso (  ARS) |  
        | Time zone • Summer ( DST)
 | ART ( UTC-3) ARST ( UTC-3)
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        | Internet TLD | .ar |  
        | Calling code | +54 |  
        | * Argentina also claims 1,000,000 km² of Antarctica, the  Falkland Islands and  South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands. For a total of 3,761,274 sq. km (1,452,236 sq mi). |  
 
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  24: Series 5 
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| Contents
 
 
  Origin and history of the name 
  History 
  Politics 
  Foreign relations 
  Administrative Divisions 
  Geography 
  Economy 
  Demographics 
  Culture 
 
 
 
  Origin and history of the name - Contents 
 The name Argentina derives from the  Latin argentum ( silver) and the first Spanish conquerors to the  Río de la Plata. Indigenous people gave silver gifts to the survivors of the shipwrecked expedition, who were led by  Juan Díaz de Solís. The legend of  Sierra del Plata — a mountain rich in silver — reached Spain around  1524. The Spaniards named the river of Solís, Río de la Plata (River of Silver). The name Argentina was first used in Ruy Díaz de Guzmán's 1612 book Historia del descubrimiento, población, y conquista del Río de la Plata (History of the discovery, population, and conquest of the Río de la Plata), naming the territory Tierra Argentina (Land of silver).
 
 
 
  History - Contents 
 The area of present Argentina was sparsely populated until it was colonised by  Europeans. The native people known as  Diaguita lived in northwestern Argentina on the edge of the expanding  Inca Empire; the  Guaraní lived farther east.Europeans arrived in  1502. Spain established a permanent colony on the site of Buenos Aires in  1580, and the  Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata in  1776. Independence from Spain was declared on  July 9,  1816. Centralist and federationist groups were in conflict, until national unity was established and the  constitution promulgated in  1853.Foreign  investment and  immigration from Europe aided the introduction of modern agricultural techniques and integration of Argentina into the world economy in the late 19th century. In the 1880s the " Conquest of the Desert" subdued or exterminated the remaining native tribes throughout  Patagonia.From  1880 to  1930 Argentina became one of the ten wealthiest nations. Conservative forces dominated Argentine politics until  1916, when their traditional rivals, the  Radicals, won control of the government. The military forced  Hipólito Yrigoyen from power in 1930 leading to another decade of Conservative rule.
 Political change led to the presidency of  Juan Perón in  1946, who aimed at empowering the working class and greatly expanded the number of unionised workers. The  Revolución Libertadora of  1955 deposed him.In the 1950s and 1960s, military and civilian administrations traded power. When military governments failed to revive the economy and suppress escalating  terrorism in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the way was open for Perón's return to the presidency in 1973, with his third wife,  María Estela Isabel Martínez de Perón, as Vice President. During this period, extremists on the  left and  right carried out  terrorist acts with a frequency that threatened public order.Perón died in  1974. His wife succeeded him in office, but a military coup removed her from office in  1976, and the armed forces formally exercised power through a  junta in charge of the self-appointed  National Reorganisation Process, until  1983. The armed forces repressed opposition using harsh illegal measures (the " Dirty War"); thousands of dissidents were " disappeared", while the  SIDE cooperated with the  CIA,  DINA and other South American intelligence agencies in  Operation Condor. Many of the military leaders that took part in the Dirty War were trained in the U.S. financed  School of the Americas. Among them Argentine dictators  Leopoldo Galtieri and  Roberto Viola.Economic problems, charges of corruption, public revulsion in the face of  human rights abuses and, finally, the country's  1982 defeat in the  Falklands War discredited the Argentine military regime.Democracy was restored in  1983.  Raúl Alfonsín's Radical government took steps intending to account for the "disappeared", establishing civilian control of the armed forces and consolidating democratic institutions. Failure to resolve endemic economic problems and an inability to maintain public confidence caused his early departure.President  Carlos Menem imposed  peso- dollar  fixed exchange rate in  1991 to stop  hyperinflation, and adopted far-reaching market-based policies, dismantling  protectionist barriers and business  regulations, and implementing a privatisation program. These reforms contributed to significant increases in investment and growth with stable prices through most of the 1990s.The Menem and  de la Rúa administrations faced diminished competitiveness of exports, massive imports which damaged national industry and reduced employment, chronic fiscal and trade deficits, and the contagion of several economic crises. The  Asian financial crisis in  1998 precipitated an outflow of capital that mushroomed into a  recession, which led to a total freezing of the  bank accounts (the  corralito), and culminated in a financial panic in November 2001. The next month, amidst  bloody riots, President de la Rúa resigned.Several new presidents followed in quick succession. Argentina  defaulted on its international debt obligations. The peso's almost 12-year-old link with the dollar was abandoned, resulting in massive  currency depreciation and  inflation, in turn triggering a spike in unemployment and poverty. In  2003,  Néstor Kirchner became the president, and started implementing new policies based on re-industrialisation,  import substitution, increased exports, consistent fiscal surplus, and high exchange rate.
 
 
 
  Politics - Contents 
 
 
       The  Argentine constitution of 1853, as  revised in 1994, mandates a  separation of powers into  executive,  legislative, and  judicial branches at the national and provincial level. The  president and vice-president are directly elected to 4-year terms. Both are limited to two consecutive terms; they are allowed to stand for a third term or more after an interval of at least one term. The president appoints  cabinet ministers, and the constitution grants him considerable power as both  head of state and  head of government, including authority to enact laws by presidential decree under conditions of "urgency and necessity" and the  line-item veto.Argentina's  parliament is the bicameral  National Congress or  Congreso de la Nación, consisting of a  Senate ( Senado) of 72 seats and a  Chamber of Deputies ( Cámara de Diputados) of 257 members. Since 2001, senators have been directly elected, with each province, including the  Federal Capital, represented by three senators. Senators serve 6-year terms. One-third of the Senate stands for reelection every 2 years via a partial majority system in each district. Members of the Chamber of Deputies are directly elected to 4-year term via a system of  proportional representation. Voters elect half the members of the  lower house every 2 years.
          Congress building in Buenos Aires 
 
 
  Foreign relations - Contents 
 Argentina is currently prompting the  Mercosur as its first external priority, contrasting with the 1990s' emphasis in the relationship with the  United States.
 
 
 
  Administrative Divisions - Contents 
 
 
       Argentina is divided into 23  provinces (provincias; singular: provincia), and 1  autonomous city (commonly known as capital federal), marked with an asterisk:
         Provinces of Argentina. Argentine Antarctica and Southern Atlantic Islands (23) not shown. 
       * The current official name for the  federal district is "Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires".Buenos Aires has been the capital of Argentina since its unification, but there have been projects to move the administrative centre elsewhere. During the presidency of Raúl Alfonsín a law was passed ordering the move of the federal capital to  Viedma, a city in the Patagonic province of Río Negro. Studies were underway when hyperinflation, in 1989, killed off the project. Though the law was never formally repealed, it has become a mere historical relic, and the project has been forgotten.
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          Buenos Aires (City)*
            Buenos Aires (Province)
            Catamarca
            Chaco
            Chubut
            Córdoba
            Corrientes
            Entre Ríos
            Formosa
            Jujuy
            La Pampa
            La Rioja | 
          
            Mendoza
            Misiones
            Neuquén
            Río Negro
            Salta
            San Juan
            San Luis
            Santa Cruz
            Santa Fe
            Santiago del Estero
            Tierra del Fuego, Antártida e Islas del Atlántico Sur
            Tucumán |  
 Urbanization
 
 
       About 2.7 million people live in the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, and roughly 11.5 million in  Greater Buenos Aires (2001), making it one of the largest urban conglomerates in the world. Together with their respective  metropolitan areas, the second and third largest cities in Argentina,  Córdoba and  Rosario, comprise about 1.3 and 1.1 million inhabitants, respectively.Most European  immigrants to Argentina (coming in great waves especially around the World War I and II) settled in the cities, which offered jobs, education, and other opportunities that enabled newcomers to enter the  middle class. Since the 1930s many rural workers have moved to the big cities.The 1990s saw many rural towns become  ghost towns when train services were abandoned and local products manufactured on a small scale were replaced by massive amounts of imported cheap goods, in part because of the monetary policy which kept the U.S. dollar exchange rate fixed and low. Many slums ( villas miseria) sprouted in the outskirts of the largest cities, inhabited by empoverished low-class urban dwellers and migrants from smaller towns in the interior of the country.Argentina's urban areas have a European look, reflecting the influence of their European settlers. Many towns and cities are built like Spanish cities around a main square called a plaza. A cathedral and important government buildings often face the plaza. The general layout of the cities is called a damero, that is, a checkerboard, since it is based on a pattern of square blocks, though modern developments sometimes depart from it (for example, the city of La Plata, built at the end of the 19th century, is organised as a checkerboard plus diagonal avenues at fixed intervals).In descending order by number of inhabitants, the major cities in Argentina are Buenos Aires,  Córdoba,  Rosario,  Mendoza,  La Plata,  Tucumán,  Mar del Plata,  Salta,  Santa Fe, and  Bahía Blanca.
          Government house of Tucumán 
 
 
  Geography - Contents 
 
 
       Argentina can roughly be divided into three parts: the fertile plains of the  Pampas in the central part of the country, the centre of Argentina's agricultural wealth; the flat to rolling plateau of  Patagonia in the southern half down to  Tierra del Fuego; and the rugged  Andes  mountain range along the western border with Chile, with the highest point being the  Cerro Aconcagua at 6,960 metres (22,834  ft).Major rivers include the  Paraguay,  Bermejo,  Colorado,  Uruguay and the largest river, the  Paraná. The latter two flow together before meeting the Atlantic Ocean, forming the estuary of the  Río de la Plata. The Argentine climate is predominantly  temperate with extremes ranging from  subtropical in the north to arid/sub-Antarctic in far south.
          Map of Argentina 
 Enclaves and exclaves
 There is one Argentine  exclave: the island of  Martín García (co-ordinates  34°11′S 58°15′W). It is situated near the confluence of the Paraná and Uruguay rivers, a mere kilometre (0.62 mi) inside Uruguayan waters, about 3.5 kilometres (2.1 mi) from the Uruguayan coastline, near the small city of  Martín Chico (itself about halfway between  Nueva Palmira and  Colonia del Sacramento).An agreement reached by Argentina and Uruguay in 1973 reaffirmed Argentine jurisdiction over the island, ending a century-old dispute between the two countries. According to the terms of the agreement, Martín García is to be devoted exclusively to a natural preserve. Its area is about 2 square kilometres (500  acres), and the population about 200 people.
 
 
 
  Economy - Contents 
 Argentina benefits from rich  natural resources, a highly  literate population, an export-oriented agricultural sector, and a diversified  industrial base. The country historically had a large middle class, compared to other Latin American countries, but this segment of the population was decimated by a succession of economic crises. Today, while a significant segment of the population is still financially well-off, they stay in sharp contrast with millions who live in poverty or on the brink of it.Since the late 1970s the country piled up public debt and was plagued by bouts of high  inflation. In 1991, the government  pegged the peso to the  U. S. dollar and limited the growth in the  monetary base. The government then embarked on a path of  trade liberalisation,  deregulation, and  privatisation. Inflation dropped and  GDP grew, but external economic shocks and failures of the system diluted its benefits, causing it to crumble in slow motion, from 1995 and up to the  collapse in 2001.By 2002 Argentina had  defaulted on its debt, its GDP had shrunk,  unemployment was over 18%, the peso had  devalued 75% after being  floated, and inflation was hitting again. However, careful spending control and heavy  taxes on now soaring exports gave the state the tools to regain resources and conduct  monetary policy.In 2003,  import substitution policies and soaring  exports, coupled with a lower inflation and expansive economic measures, triggered a surge in the GDP, which was repeated in 2004, creating jobs and encouraging internal consumption.  Capital flight decreased, and  foreign investment slowly returned. The influx of foreign currency from exports created such a huge  trade surplus that the Central Bank was forced to buy dollars from the market, which it continues to do at the time, to be accumulated as  reserves.The situation in 2005 is much improved, but there are still large numbers of unemployed people that beg for some money or food, especially in the outskirts of Buenos Aires. Some of them are homeless, and there is at least one small non-profit humanitarian organisation which distributes free food to some of them most days of the week.
 
 
 
  Demographics - Contents 
 
 
       Unlike most of its neighbouring countries, Argentina's population descends overwhelmingly from Europeans. The basic demographic stock (97% of the population)  [1] is made up of descendants of Spanish, Italian, German and other European settlers.Waves of immigrants from European countries arrived in the late  19th and early  20th centuries. The Patagonian  Chubut Valley has a significant  Welsh-descended population and retains many aspects of Welsh culture. Other important immigrant groups came from Germany (German colonies were settled in the provinces of Entre Ríos, Misiones, Formosa, Córdoba and the Patagonian region, as well as in Buenos Aires itself), France (mostly settled in Buenos Aires city and province),  Scandinavia (especially Sweden), the United Kingdom and Ireland (Buenos Aires and Patagonia), and  Eastern European nations, such as Poland, Russia, Ukraine and the  Balkans region (especially Croatia and  Serbia) and others. The overwhelming majority of Argentina's  Jewish community, numbering about 395,379  [2], also derives from immigrants of Northern and Eastern European origin —  Ashkenazi Jews. It is the largest Jewish community in  Latin America and fifth largest in the world.Middle Eastern immigrants number about 500,000, mainly in urban areas.[ citation needed]Small numbers of people from  Far East Asia have also settled Argentina, mainly in Buenos Aires. The first  Asian-Argentines were of Japanese descent, but Koreans, Vietnamese, and  Chinese soon followed. There are also smaller numbers of people from the  Indian subcontinent.
          Night shot of the Colon Theatre in Buenos Aires, Argentina. 
 
 
  Culture - Contents 
 
 
       Argentine culture has been primarily informed and influenced by its European roots. Buenos Aires is undeniably the most European city in South America, due both to the prevalence of people of Italian and Spanish descent and to conscious imitation.Argentine cinema has achieved international recognition with films such as " The Official Story" and " Nine Queens", though it has only rarely been taken into account by mainstream popular viewers who prefer Hollywood-type movies. Even low-budget productions, however, have obtained prizes in cinema festivals (such as  Cannes). The city of  Mar del Plata organizes its own festival dedicated to this art.The best-known element of Argentine culture is probably their music and dance, particularly  tango. In modern Argentina, tango music is enjoyed in its own right, especially since the radical  Astor Piazzolla redefined the music of  Carlos Gardel. It must be noted that while tango refers mostly to a particular dancing music for foreigners, the music together with the lyrics (often sung in a kind of slang called  lunfardo) are what most Argentines primarily mean by tango. Tango lyrics can be considered a kind of poetry. Since the 1970s rock and roll is also widely appreciated in Argentina. First during the 1970s and then again at the mid 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s, national rock and roll and pop music experienced bursts of popularity, with many new bands (such as  Soda Stereo and Sumo) and composers (like  Charly García and  Fito Páez) becoming important referents of national culture. Buenos Aires is also considered the  techno/ electronica country in Latin America, that started with little raves, and nowadays is home of important events such as  Creamfields (which has the world record of 65,000 people), South American Music Conference and many more.
        European classical music is well-considered in Argentina, with the  Colón Theater one of the best opera houses in the world. Musicians such as  Martha Argerich and composers like  Lalo Schifrin have become internationally famous.See also the articles on the  cuisine, the  music, and the  football of Argentina. For a prevalent custom among Argentines, see  mate. For the traditional Buenos Aires dance, see  tango.
          European and modern styles in Buenos Aires 
 Language
 The only official language is  Spanish, although some immigrants and indigenous communities have retained their  original languages in specific points of the country. There are, for example many  Welsh-speaking towns in Patagonia and  German-speaking cities in Córdoba and Buenos Aires.Argentina is the largest  Spanish-speaking community that employs  voseo (the use of the  pronoun vos instead of tú, associated with some alternate verb conjugations). The most prevalent dialect is  Rioplatense, with most speakers located in the basin of the  Río de la Plata.
 
 Religion
 
 
       Argentina is an overwhelmingly  Christian country. The majority of Argentina's population (80%) is at least nominally  Roman Catholic. Roman Catholicism is supported by the state, as stipulated in the Constitution. Evangelical churches gained a place in Argentina especially since the 1980s and now number more than 3.5 million or 10%. Members of the  Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( Mormons) number over 330,300, the seventh largest concentration in the world [3]. Traditional  Protestant communities are also present.The country also hosts the largest Jewish population in  Latin America, about 395,379 strong. It is also home to one of the largest  mosques in Latin America, serving Argentina's small Muslim community.
          Estancia Jesuitica in Alta Gracia, Argentina |  
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