Author Archives: Daniel Kressel

About Daniel Kressel

Daniel Gunnar Kressel is a Golda Meir fellow at the Department of Spanish, Portu- guese, and Latin American Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He specializes in the history of transnational right-wing ideologies and networks, in Latin America, Spain, and Israel. His upcoming book, Hispanic Technocracy: Turning Fascism into Catho­ lic Authoritarianism in Spain, Argentina, and Chile, explores the authoritarian Catholic ideologies underpinning Latin America’s neoliberal turn of the 1970s.

Collective Impunity for Transition? Consenso and the International Travels of a Spanish Paradigm

Before South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation, there was the Spanish consenso. The idea of negotiated and peaceful consensus it embodied, as a way to overcome violent pasts after the end of dictatorship, was forged in the work of Communists, Socialists, Christian Democrats and human rights organisations both internationally and in Spain from the late 1950s onwards. Following the death of Franco and Spain’s successful democratization from the late 1970s, it would then become an influential approach that travelled internationally for two decades. This article highlights the role Continue reading → Continue reading →