Adoption and justice in Argentine history. Cordoba in the sixties

In this article I analyze the role of the judiciary in an early stage of the adoption legalization process, the sixties, when it was a recent legal figure but had existed for centuries among the repertoires of family formation. From a reconsideration and synthesis of previous work based on the analy...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gentili , Agostina
Format: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Language:spa
Published: Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Museo de Antropología 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/39175
https://suquia.ffyh.unc.edu.ar/handle/suquia/175109
Description
Summary:In this article I analyze the role of the judiciary in an early stage of the adoption legalization process, the sixties, when it was a recent legal figure but had existed for centuries among the repertoires of family formation. From a reconsideration and synthesis of previous work based on the analysis of files from the Córdoba juvenile courts, I argue that in that early stage of the institutionalization of adoption, formal and informal practices coexisted and fed each other in the legal processes. The realities of adoption were diverse and the judiciary adopted a flexible and tolerant attitude towards this diversity, while at the same time building around them a narrative that exalted those features that came closest to the normative family aspirations, softened those that contradicted them and concealed those that could reveal the class fictions on which those aspirations were founded.