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Descrição Detalhada da Publicação
Artigo em revista científica
Q3
Título Revista
Revista de Estudios Políticos
Ano (publicação definitiva)
2025
Língua
Inglês
País
Espanha
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Títulos Alternativos
(Espanhol/Castelhano) Arraigado en el pasado: Legados históricos y debates sobre políticas de memoria en la Portugal postautoritaria
Abstract/Resumo
This article examines how memory issues, particularly transitional justice bills, are debated and decided in national parliaments, focusing on the historical roots of political elites and parties. Drawing on the concept of authoritarian successor parties (Loxton, 2015), we argue that the presence or absence of these parties influences the approval of transitional justice laws. In cases where no such parties exist, as in Portugal, we analyze how political parties ideologically aligned with the previous regime —but not directly linked to it— navigate the “authoritarian stigma”. We hypothesize that these parties may support transitional justice bills, even against their preferences, to distance themselves from the authoritarian past. To explore this, we conduct a qualitative analysis of transitional justice bills debated in the Portuguese parliament since 1976, a rare context with no authoritarian successor parties and a strong authoritarian stigma arising from the democratic transition. Our findings reveal that right-wing parties, despite not being successor parties, generally avoid opposing transitional justice bills. The debates also highlight the emergence of a second type of stigma, enriching the understanding of how memory and transitional justice intersect with political legacies.
Agradecimentos/Acknowledgements
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Palavras-chave
Memory policies,Transitional justice,Historical legacy,Portugal,Authoritarianism,Successor parties
Classificação Fields of Science and Technology
- Sociologia - Ciências Sociais
- Ciências Políticas - Ciências Sociais