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MIGRACIONES INTERNACIONALES, VOL. 6, NÚM. 3, ENERO-JUNIO DE 2012

Transformations and Challenges of Argentinean Migratory 
Policy in Relation to the International Context

Susana NOVICK
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científi cas 

y Técnicas/Universidad de Buenos Aires

Abstract
Th e purpose of this article is to analyze recent transformations in Argentinean 
migratory policies since the 2001 crisis, based on the state’s passage of laws. Th e 
fi rst part provides a brief historical outline approach as the framework and context 
for interpreting the present processes, their continuities and discontinuities. It em-
phasizes the infl uence of the international scene on the development of migratory 
policies—“denationalization” and “renationalization”—, and the social agents in-
volved. Th e article ends with a description of policy progress and setbacks, includ-
ing the challenges that must be faced.

Keywords: 1. migration policies, 2. legislation, 3. international sphere, 4. Mer-
cosur, 5. Argentina.

Transformaciones y desafíos de la política migratoria argentina 
en relación con el contexto internacional

Resumen
El objetivo de este artículo es analizar las transformaciones recientes en la política 
migratoria argentina, a partir de la crisis de 2001, sobre la base de la producción 
normativa del Estado. En una primera parte se traza una reseña histórica abordada 
como marco y contexto en los que se interpretan los actuales procesos, sus continui-
dades y rupturas, subrayando la influencia del ámbito internacional en el proceso 
de gestación de la política migratoria –“desnacionalización” y “renacionalización”– y 
los actores sociales que intervienen. Por último, se presentan los avances y retrocesos 
en esa política, así como las dificultades que deben superarse.

Palabras clave: 1. política migratoria, 2. legislación, 3. ámbito internacional, 
4. Mer cosur, 5. Argentina.

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[206]

Introduction

Analyzing migratory policies in Argentina involves exploring one 
of the most crucial and hotly debated issues in its history as a na-
tion. Migration is a phenomenon that has left a profound mark 
on Argentinean society. Virtually from the outset, the state began 
to concern itself with population issues, prioritizing migrations 
within its strategy. It needed to populate the country quickly, 
modernize it and import labor, which was crucial to implement-
ing the dominant project: transforming its extensive territory into 
farmland to produce the food Europe needed. 

The purpose of this article1 is to analyze the recent transforma-
tions in Argentinean migratory policy since the 2001 crisis, based 
on the state’s passage of laws. Since a long-term perspective was 
used for this research, the article begins with a brief overview: 
from the First National Population Census in 1869 to the coup 
d’état in 1976 and from the coup to the crisis. And it was from 
that date onwards, when a point of inflection occurred, that dif-
ferent political experiences emerged and a new migratory law was 
sanctioned, constituting a record degree of progress in the issue. 
The first two periods are dealt with as a framework and context in 
which the current processes, their continuities and discontinuities, 
are interpreted. The theme of this study is based on the ideas put 
forward by Sassen (2001). We are therefore interested in exploring 
the tensions, ambiguities, and contradictions emerging between 
the control the state has exerted over those entering its territory 
and the constraints on their practices. Regarding the state’s au-
tonomy and sovereignty, we ask: a) Over the course of time, how 
are processes of “denationalization” on the part of Argentinean 
policy and “renationalization” on the part of migratory policy in 
particular developed and linked?; b) who are the social actors who 

1 Th is paper is a summary of some of the fi ndings yielded by the ubacyt project 
called: “Two Dimensions of Contemporary Migratory Argentina: Mercosur Im-
migrants and Argentinean Émigrés. Demographic, Political, and Social Aspects”. I 
would like to thank Gabriela Mera for her help in designing the charts.

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 207

participate in the formulation of migratory policy; c) what char-
acteristics has the process of deterritorialization had in granting 
rights to migrants? We are therefore concerned with finding out 
the extent to which the transformation of Argentinean migratory 
policy has been influenced by the international sphere.

In order to answer these questions, it is useful to observe the 
evolution of Argentinean demography, which has shown historic 
trends: low total growth, early fertility reduction, early population 
ageing, a stagnated decrease in mortality, high urban concentra-
tion and a decrease in the influx of migrants (Mazzeo, 1993). At 
the same time, since the 1990s, there has been an increase in the 
emigration of the youth population.

Although this overview contains sharp differences by region 
and social class, it gives us an idea of the importance migrations 
have had and continue to have in Argentina. According to census 
data, the foreign population has continuously decreased in every 
census since 1914, until it reached 4.2 percent in the last census in 
2001. This is a result of the interruption of the European flow-de-
spite the slight upturn observed in the post-war period, its ageing 
and death. The contribution of foreigners from border coun-
tries—Paraguayans, Bolivians, Chileans, and Uruguayans—has 
been stable as regards its percentage of the total population,2 yet 
failed to offset the loss of the European influx. Thus, in 2001, it 
accounted for 60 percent of the total foreign population.

As regards Argentinean emigration, although in the early 
1960s, the flow appeared to be related to the country’s politi-
cal ups and downs—successive corps—and could be regarded as 
a merely conjunctural phenomenon, nowadays, Argentineans’ 
movements aboard appear to have acquired a structural nature 
(No   vick, 2007).

2 According to the Argentinean National Censuses, the proportion of border 
country foreigners of the total population accounted for 2.4 percent in 1869, 2.9 
in 1895, 2.6 in 1914, 2 in 1947, 2.3 in 1960, 2.3 in 1970, 2.7 in 1980, 2.5 in 1991, 
and 2.5 percent in 2001 (MI, 1872; De la Fuente, Carrasco, and Martínez, 1898; 
Martínez, 1916; President’s Offi  ce, 1951; pen, 1962; indec, 1977; President’s Offi  ce, 
1981; indec, 1994, 2001).

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MIGRACIONES INTERNACIONALES, VOL. 6, NÚM. 3, ENERO-JUNIO DE 2012208

Interpretative Framework

For some time now, I have been interested in exploring the polit-
ical-social and ideological aspects of population phenomena and 
over the years, I have been able to appreciate the fertility of this 
field of study. However, working on texts, including legal ones, 
does not constitute an obvious or innocent practice. Discourse 
analysis experiences great difficulty in mastering its subject, since 
a discourse is not an obvious reality but rather the result of a con-
struction (Mengueneau, 1980). Language and its use are neither 
neutral nor transparent nor indifferent to the place in which they 
are performed. Political texts, within which norms are contained, 
not only help construct social reality but also “provide social ac-
tors with interpretative models for understanding this social re-
ality, examining the possibility of modifying it and therefore, 
guiding their own actions” (Vasilachis, 1997).

Policies are intimately related to law, since they are partly crys-
tallized through the legal system. Critical theory refers to the dual 
aspect of law, as a specific social practice and as a discourse of 
power. Ideology is therefore regarded as a condition for the neces-
sary production of legal discourse (Ruiz, 1991; Cárcova, 1991). 
Since Marxism, law has been understood as an instrument of 
domination (Poulantzas, 1969). Conversely, the alternative the-
ory of law holds that the legal system is a partially incoherent, 
relatively autonomous and paradoxically contradictory system, 
and that using its contradictions serves to create an emancipat-
ing practice (López, Saavedra, and Ibáñez, 1978; Barcellona, and 
Cotturri, 1976; Tygar, and Levy, 1981). As part of law, legislation 
constitutes a suitable object of study for understanding social re-
lations and the changes produced in society. The study of legal 
guidelines therefore serves as an appropriate means of answering 
certain questions: What is social conflict? Who strives to resolve 
it? How do they manage to do so?

Sassen (2001) holds that although construction of an interna-
tional world order entails the denationalization of national poli-
cies, the international migratory process proves to be a conflictive 

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 209

area in which states renationalize their policies, hanging on to 
their right to control borders. There is a tension in the state be-
tween its authority to control foreigners’ entry into the country 
and its obligation to protect those in its territory. Indeed, as part of 
population policies, external migratory policies constitute propos-
als and goals drawn up by the state apparatus to influence the size, 
composition, origin, direction, settlement, and inte gration of spon-
taneous migratory flows or as a global part of the economic-social 
planning drawn up (Mármora, 2002). Like the latter, the former 
fail to escape the complexity of the issues, not only because of the 
many different factors that intervene in the shaping of the migra-
tory phenomenon (social, geopolitical, work, cultural, economic, 
religious, ethical, racial, ecological, political, psychological, and 
legal) but also because of the various public organizations that 
tend to become involved in these policies, as well as the interests 
of ethnic, business, and media groups at stake. Several studies 
have shown that the effects of policies—as regards the volume, 
direction and nature of international migration—do not always 
occur in the direction intended by civil servants and politicians 
(Teitelbaum, 1984; Zolberg, Suhrke, and Aguayo, 1986). And 
while some adopt a skeptical position regarding states’ capacity 
to control migration (Hollified, 2000), others suggest that their 
policies have been largely successful (Brochmann, and Hammar, 
1999; Strikwerda, 1999).

Policies and Strategies Prior to the 2001 Crisis

This study involved analyzing the link between public policies,3 
migratory policies, development strategies and political process-
es as presented in the normative sphere—laws—of the state, by 

3 Any public policy is based on an underlying, ideologically confi gured model of 
society, that determines which policies will be most important or which ones will be 
chosen while others will be rejected. Every social group will propose diff erent devel-
opment strategies to impose its own model on the rest of society. Th ese are the result 
of a specifi c societal structure of power and the functioning of a certain state political 
system (Correa, 1975; Yocelevzky, and Rodríguez, 1983).

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exploring the treatment the various governments give migratory 
issues (Novick, 1992, 2000, 2004).

From the Founding Era to the 1976 Coup d’État

a) During the agro-export era (1870-1930),4 a migratory policy 
was formulated that was associated with a major phenomenon: 
mass European migration. The open door policy was estab-
lished during the emblematic Avellaneda Law (1876) which 
used various financial incentives—fare payment, accommoda-
tion, etc.—to encourage the influx of European farmers. This 
defined what an immigrant was for the first time, specifying 
the rights and obligations involved in this status. At the nor-
mative level, two images of foreigners coexisted during this 
period: the civilizing and the subversive. The Law of Foreign-
ers’ Residence (hcna, 1902) may be regarded as the first regu-
lation to legitimize discretional action by the authorities. The 
Law of Social Defense (hcna, 1910) was distinctly repressive 
towards the migrant population in general. In relation to its 
control function, since the flow was largely transoceanic, the 
port of Buenos Aires became the only point in which the state 
could easily intervene. The state formulated its policy through 
the Ministry of the Interior and subsequently the Ministry of 
Foreign Affairs. Private settlement companies were hired by 
the state to implement its ambitious migratory plan. Con-
tradictions arose between the liberal ideology underlying the 
strategy used—including the ruling elite’s idealization of im-
migrants as “civilizing agents”, and the non-conformist ideol-
ogy—socialist, anarchist, etc., that they brought with them. 
The influence of the international sphere was crucial, since not 
only did immigration insert Argentina into the world market, 

4 Th is period began with the presidency of Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (1868-
1874) and ended with the overthrow of the second government of Hipólito Irigoyen 
(1928-1930), when a coup d’état was carried out by the military. Th is destroyed 
the formal constitutional order for the fi rst time and the liberal, agro-export model 
collapsed.

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it also made it visible, in parliamentary debates, through “ex-
ternal creditors”, who had to be taken into account when it 
came to determining public spending to pay for the promotion 
of European immigration.

b) Industrializing Import Substitute Strategy. Conservative Govern-
ments (1930-1945).5 A number of phenomena can be observed 
during this period: the decline of the European migratory flow 
and the increase in internal migration. A restrictive policy was 
drawn up—designed as temporary solution to the crisis—as-
sociated with the selection of immigrants and ignoring the lib-
eral influx regime proposed by the Avellaneda Law. However, 
the crisis did not affect the ideology that associated European 
immigration with national progress that was still deeply rooted 
in Argentinean society. The reduction of the flow appears to 
be more the result of the new international economic situation 
than the change in the law. State control expanded, becoming 
interventionist in nature. The Ministry of Agriculture would 
be the space responsible for formulating the policy. The in-
fluence of the international context in economic policies in-
creased the “denationalization” due to the global economic 
crisis, while the migratory policy was “renationalized”, in an 
attempt to protect the internal market affected by high unem-
ployment rates.

c) Industrializing Import Substitute Strategy. Perón Governments 
(1946-1955).6 The planning experience of the period (First and 
Second Five-Year Plan) undertook diagnoses of the demograph-
ic problems in an attempt to act on all the phenomena. The 
population variable was therefore regarded as a key element 
in achieving the political project. The National Constitution, 
sanctioned by Peronism, in force from 1949 to 1956, contained 
explicit references to certain demographic phenomena. On the 

5 It includes nationalistic conservative governments (José F. Uriburu, Agustín P. 
Justo, Roberto M. Ortiz, Ramón S. Castillo), and those that emerged as a result of 
the 1943 Revolution (Pedro P. Ramírez, and Edelmiro J. Farrell).

6 Phase comprising the fi rst two constitutional governments of Juan Domingo 
Perón.

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subject of migrations: it encouraged European immigration 
and stipulated that all those that entered the country with-
out violating the laws enjoyed Argentineans’ civil rights as well 
as political rights five years after having obtained citizenship. 
The new policy was driven by selection and guidance criteria. 
The idea of Latin American integration constituted one of the 
arguments legitimizing the amnesty policies begun by Peronist 
governments. The capacity for state control increased, with the 
Ministry of the Interior intervening, followed by the Ministry 
of Technical Affairs and subsequently the Ministry of Foreign 
Affairs. For its part, economic policy was “nationalized” in an 
attempt to achieve a model of autonomous capitalism. Con-
versely, migratory policy acknowledged the regional contribu-
tion of border countries, in which the national factor became 
less important as the sole model of legitimacy.

d) Industrializing Import Substitute Strategy. Concentrating Stage. 
Military Governments (1955-1962 and 1966-1973).7 This peri-
od is characterized by a profound crisis and a growing climate 
of social protest. The guidelines drawn up perceive immi-
grants as dangerous actors for society, increasing the violence 
against foreigners and authorizing the state to expel them. The 
reduction and fluctuation of the flow from the border coun-
tries observed during this stage is the result of various circum-
stances: the restrictive policy implemented, salary reductions, 
economic recession, and the exclusion and repression of un-
documented migrants. The policy was “renationalized” since 
it only defined national interests “threatened” by foreigners, 
while the dominant liberal ideology proved influential in re-
defining economic policies by encouraging new and growing 
foreign capital investment.

7 It includes the governments that followed the coup d’état known as the “Revo-
lucion Libertadora” (Eduardo Lonardi, and Pedro E. Aramburu), the Constitutional 
government of Arturo Frondizi, and José M. Guido; and those that arose in the wake 
of the “Revolución Argentina” (Juan C. Onganía, Roberto M. Levingston, and Ale-
jandro A. Lanusse).

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 213

e) Industrializing Strategy (1963-1966 and 1973-1976). Distribu-
tive Stage. Democratic Governments.8 This period is character-
ized by a generous policy towards Latin American immigrants 
(two amnesties), a progressive position in the international 
sphere (World Population Conference in Bucharest, 1974), 
where the migratory phenomenon was regarded as a factor 
of progress and development, and the creation of new insti-
tutional spheres. Peronism’s planning experience (Three-Year 
Plan for National Reconstruction and Liberation, 1973) for-
mulated four basic projects: a) orientation of internal migra-
tions; b) recovery of Argentinean emigration to other countries; 
c) integration of Latin American immigration; and d) promotion 
of overseas immigration. Migratory policy took the regional 
context into account again and was denationalized whereas 
economic policies attempted to recovery sovereignty to protect 
national interests.

From 1976 Coup d’Etat to 2001 Crisis

The strategy of economic openness and liberalization includes 
several stages. The first, involving initiation and penetration 
(1976-1983), carried out by the military government, was the 
most energetic and bloodiest. The second, entailing transition 
(1984-1989), took place during Dr. Raúl Alfonsín’s government, 
when certain sectors still resisted deregulation and created a cer-
tain impasse. The third period (1989-1999) was one of consolida-
tion during the governments of Dr. Carlos Menem, when there 
were no socially organized groups able to oppose the neoliberal 
project implemented. The fourth was one of collapse, during Dr. 
De la Rúa’s government, when the failure of the model, the fi-
nancial crisis and social protest led to the president’s resignation.

8 It includes the governments of Arturo H. Illia and the Peronist governments 
(Héctor J. Cámpora, Raúl A. Lastiri, Juan Domingo Perón, and María Estela Mar-
tínez de Perón).

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a) In relation to the population issue, particularly the migratory 
issues, the dictatorship quickly showed interest in these issues. 
In 1977, government passed a decree establishing the National 
Population Objectives and Policies. In 1981, a law was passed 
replacing all current legislation: the General Law of Migration 
and the Promotion of Immigration (hcna, 1981) comprising 
115 articles, revoked the Avellaneda Law. Its considerations ar-
gued the need to encourage immigration, which it expressly 
declared should be European, associating it with the colonizing 
process, to consolidate and increase the country’s population 
assets. The law expressly forbade all undocumented foreigners 
from engaging in paid activities, denying them access to health 
and education services and obliging civil servants to denounce 
the situation to the authorities. The “national security doc-
trine” continued to underlie military regulations. The Ministry 
of the Interior would be the exclusive sphere for policy design, 
while its ability to control became increasingly concentrated 
and discretional. The migratory phenomenon was regulated 
from an almost exclusively police-based perspective. Migratory 
policy was nationalized, while economic policy was denation-
alized by encouraging the influx of foreign capitals, guarantee-
ing their profitability and transferring it to state firms.

b) Contradictory policies were observed during Dr. Alfonsín’s 
government: although an amnesty was decreed in 1984, per-
mitting the integration of immigrants, in 1985, a restrictive im-
migration policy was formulated through a minor regulation 
(Ruling 2340/1985 of the National Migration Department).9 
Two years later, a decree was passed whereby the migration 
law in force during the military dictatorship was regulated, 
lending it legal and ideological validity. As for emigration, in 
1984, a policy designed to ensure the return of Argentinean 
exiles was passed. In short, its decisions show an ambivalent 
position, which failed to meet the expectations raised by the 

9 Boletín Ofi cial de la República Argentina, en <http://www.boletinofi cial.gov.ar/
Inicio/Index.castle>.

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 215

advent of democracy. Economic policy was not substantially 
modified, maintaining the project of trade liberalization. Con-
versely restrictive migratory policy was extended, legitimizing 
the traditional state spaces involved.

c) A contradictory policy continued during Dr. Menem’s gov-
ernments. Regarding emigration, in 1991, a law was passed 
allowed Argentineans resident abroad to vote, once they had 
been registered in the Electoral Roll. The first time this law 
was enforced was during the legislative elections of 1993. A to-
tal of 8 823 Argentineans had registered, 62 percent of whom 
voted, since the law stipulated a voluntary right (hcna, 1991). 
Regarding immigration, certain integrating experiences were 
observed: such as the law, passed in 1992, granting amnesty to 
citizens from border countries as well as the signing of Migra-
tory Agreements with Bolivia, Peru, and Paraguay in 1998. The 
three bilateral instruments expressly acknowledged the shared 
responsibility of the three countries of origin and destination, 
and their importance lay in the fact that they facilitated the 
legalization of immigrant workers. Another advance observed 
during this period involved granting foreigners the right to 
vote in municipal and/or provincial elections.10 Paradoxically, 
this period also saw the emergence and expansion of restric-
tive trends. Thus, in 1993, the president sanctioned a decree 
authorizing the National Migration Department (nmd), with 
the support of security forces, to conduct national supervision 
operations throughout the country to verify immigrants’ legal 
status. Attempts were made to justify the legitimacy of this 
harsh measure on the basis of the severe problem caused “by 

10 Although foreign residents are not allowed to vote in the national elections (for 
president, vicepresident or legislators), during Menem’s governments they were given 
the right to suff rage in various provinces: La Pampa (1989), Tierra del Fuego (1991), 
Corrientes (1993), Buenos Aires (1994), Neuquén (1994), Chubut (1994), Chaco 
(1995), Mendoza (1997), Salta (1997), Misiones (1999), Formosa (2003), and in the 
city of Buenos Aires (1996). During Alfonsín’s government, this right was granted in 
the following provinces: Tucumán (1983), Santa Fe (1985), San Juan (1986), Jujuy 
(1986), San Luis (1987), Santiago del Estero (1987), Córdoba (1987), Catamarca 
(1988), and Río Negro (1988). 

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the illegal occupancy of housing and other crimes affecting 
social peace”. This decree heralded the new restrictive policy 
that would subsequently be sanctioned (pen, 1994). The fol-
lowing year, new admission criteria were established “to pro-
tect national interests” and the regulation passed by Alfonsín 
was repealed. A comparative interpretation of the two regula-
tions—Alfonsín’s and Menem’s decrees—, one radical, the oth-
er legalistic, clearly reveals greater control and concentration 
of decision making in the Ministry of the Interior. In 1998, 
a regulation was passed, introducing regressive changes into 
immigrants’ rights. Demanding a written work contract as an 
essential condition for legally engaging in lucrative activities—
when half the Argentinean work force is employed in the un-
derground economy—reflects its restrictive spirit (pen, 1998).

Regarding social actors, it is interesting to note the creation 
of two Population Commissions in Parliament, giving it great-
er scope to formulate policies. In the constitutional reform of 
1994, the migratory issue did not undergo any modifications, 
and merely repeated ideas that had been in force since 1853. 
Once the neoliberal model was intensified and openness to the 
globalized world was imposed, economic policies were “dena-
tionalized”. The migratory policy tended to resolve internal 
tensions, accusing immigrants from the border countries of be-
ing responsible for the failure of the model and exacerbating 
xenophobic views. At the same time, the rights of citizens in its 
deterritorialized population were expanded, by incorporating 
them into the re-writing of its national imaginaries as a means 
of positioning itself in the world economic system.

d) The government of Dr. Fernando de la Rúa came to power in 
1999 and attempted to improve the most controversial aspects 
of the previous administration: by adopting the neoliberal per-
spective, it sought to do away with corruption. However, as 
a result of the expansion of the economic crisis and growing 
foreign debt, social protest increased to such an extent that in 
December 2001, the president was forced to resign. This peri-
od was characterized by: high unemployment rates, a shortage 

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 217

of state resources for social policies, greater dependence on in-
ternational financial centers, a regression of state participation 
in vital areas of society, an increase in poverty and so on. The 
unemployed, now known as piqueteros, became more active in 
their mobilizations, demanding their rights. It is significant 
that this democratic government failed to sanction any amnes-
ty decrees, as had been done since the middle of the century.

Policies and Strategies Following the 2001 Crisis

The 2001 crisis proved to be a point of inflection in Argentinean 
history, since it destroyed the dominant bloc, putting an end to the 
pattern of accumulation that had prevailed for the previous thirty 
years. Other contributing factors included social mobilization and 
the leading role of the popular sectors in the collapse of the neo-
liberal model. Two options were proposed as a solution to the 
crisis: dollarization, proposed by foreign firms and transnational 
banking, and devaluation, proposed by the diversified oligarchy 
(economic groups together with a number of foreign conglom-
erates). This last option prevailed, with catastrophic effects for 
the most vulnerable sectors (Basualdo, 2006). This problematic 
context gave rise to the government of Néstor Kirchner, through 
free elections won by a narrow margin. Thus, a transformed Latin 
American political scenario marked the start of economic growth 
that reduced the high levels of unemployment caused by the neo-
liberal government. As for the migratory issue, the law sanctioned 
by the military in 1981 had already been operating for 20 years 
and was not easy to repeal. Dr. Menem’s government saw numer-
ous bills on migrations, yet results regarding the repeal of military 
law were negligible. Some of the projects only proposed partial 
reforms (a total of six were submitted between 1996 and 1999) 
while others sought to repeal it (a total of four were submitted be-
tween 1994 and 1999). The unified project, agreed on in Decem-
ber 1999 at the Commission of Population and Human Rights 
of the Chamber of Deputies, served as the basis for Rep. Gius-
ti   nia  ni (Socialist Party) to draft his bill, submitted to Congress 

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MIGRACIONES INTERNACIONALES, VOL. 6, NÚM. 3, ENERO-JUNIO DE 2012218

in December 2001 and again in March 2003. Following several 
parliamentary ups and downs, and in view of the possibility of 
further delay, it was agreed to deal with the bill during the last 
ordinary session of the Chamber of Deputies in 2003, where it 
was unanimously approved by the delegates. A few days later, in 
December, law num. 25.871 was passed in the Senate. A read-
ing of the General Principles of the new law shows that it points 
towards formulating a new national demographic policy, by 
streng thening the country’s socio-cultural fabric, and promoting 
immigrants’ integration into society and the labor force. One of 
the most important reforms undertaken by the law is the recogni-
tion of the human right to migrate. According to article 4, “The 
right to migration is the essential, inalienable right of a person, 
which the Argentinean Republic guarantees on the basis of the 
principles of equality and universality”. This article not only ac-
knowledges and incorporates into internal law what is established 
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights but stipulates the 
state’s obligation to guarantee this right. A summary of the new 
rights enshrined in the law num. 25.871 is given below:

Table 1. Immigrants’ Rights Contained in Law 25.871

Right to Article
Migration 4th
Education 7th
Health 8th
Equal rights for nationals and foreigners 6th
Due process in situations of arrest and expulsion 61th and 70th
Free legal assistance 86th
Assistance from an interpreter 86th
Participate in the decisions concerning public life and 
the administration of local communities 11th
Family reunifi cation 10th

Source: hcna, 2004.

It also introduces the principle of effective legal control of all the 
administrative documents issued by the respective authorities. In 
the event of expulsion, the immigrant may utilize administrative 

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 219

and judicial resources. The decision to expel him will therefore 
only be determined by a judge.

At the same time, article 17 reverses the criterion usually as-
sociated with the influx of foreigners. Whereas in military legisla-
tion, emphasis was placed on the police control of undocumented 
immigrants, who were forced into irregularity by the difficulty 
of completing their paperwork, the new law encouraged them to 
legalize their status. 

In relation to Mercosur, the new law cites, for the first time ever 
in the history of migratory legislation, a process of regional inte-
gration and gives citizens of member countries special treatment. 

This new Mercosur perspective is confirmed in the amnesty 
decree drawn up by the president, granting foreigners from out-
side Mercosur resident in Argentina on June 30, 2004 the pos-
sibility of legalizing their migratory status within a period of 180 
days. Expulsions were suspended for foreigners who were able to 
take advantage of the benefits afforded by this decree. The new 
migratory law was cited as the legal basis in the sense that the 
state must provide the conditions to enable foreigners to legalize 
their situation. 

Table 2, given below, shows that 12 065 persons took advan-
tage of the benefits of this amnesty. The majority were from Asia, 
followed by Latin Americans. The largest group comprised per-
sons from China, followed by Koreans, and then Colombians and 
Dominicans.

The nmd subsequently created the National Program of Nor-
malization of Migratory Documents, designed to: a) legalize im-
migrants’ status, and b) create new policies to ensure the insertion 
and integration of the immigrant population (pen, 2004a). 

In June 2005, a new decree extended the nmd’s administra-
tive emergency and arranged for the migratory legalization of 
foreigners from Mercosur and associated countries (pen, 2005). 
This process, implemented from April 2006 onwards and known 
as Patria Grande program, enabled persons from countries in the 
expanded Mercosur (Uruguay, Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay, Chile, 
Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama) to obtain a 

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temporary, two-year stay in the country through simplified re-
quirements. After this period had elapsed, people could choose to 
request permanent residence in Argentina provided they were able 
to prove “a legal livelihood”. 

As one can see from table 3, between April 17, 2006 and April 
30, 2009, through the Homeland Program, 423 712 immigrants 
have gained access to legal residence. As one can see, Paraguayan 
citizens are the largest group, followed by Bolivians and Peruvians 
(first column).

At the same time, the new law establishes preferential treat-
ment—by nationality—for immigrants from countries in the ex-
panded Mercosur countries, by providing them with temporary 
residence with authorization to remain in the country for two 
years, which may be extended, with multiple entrances and exits. 
The number of immigrants who settled in Argentina as a result of 
this program totals 257 123. The most numerous group are Bo-
livians, followed by Paraguayans and Peruvians (second column).

Lastly, the combination of the two processes, from 2006 to 
2009, gives a total of 680 835 legalized immigrants. Paraguayans 

Table 2. Number of Foreign Citizens Protected by Decree 1169/2004, 
Arranged by Continent and Region

Continent Region Number

Asia
Southeast Asia 9 932
Middle East 47
Rest of Asia 115

America
Latin America and Caribbean 1 025
North America 185

Europe

Continental Europe 398
East Europe 135
Great Britain and Ireland 86
Nordic Countries 27

Africa 98
Oceania 17

Total 12 065
Source: National Migration Department (mi, 2005; pen, 2004b).

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 221

comprise the largest group, followed by Bolivians and Peruvians 
(third column).

Table 3. Residence due to Ordinary Immigration Process 
and Homeland Program (pg) 2006-2009

Nationality PG Residence paperwork begun*

Residence as a result 
of ordinary immigration 

process**

Total residence 
(PG and ordinary)

Bolivia 105 017 97 790 202 807
Brazil 4 600 9 727 14 327
Chile 5 360 12 311 17 671
Colombia 1 247 13 538 14 785
Ecuador 930 4 495 5 425
Paraguay 248 086 55 519 303 605
Peru 47 464 53 625 101 089
Uruguay 10 790 7 003 17 793
Venezuela 217 3 115 3 332
Panama 1 — 1

Total 423 712 257 123 680 835
*Status of applications (first stage) for Normalization of Migratory Documents Program Period 
from February 16, 2006 to April 30, 2009. Applicable to migrants who entered the country before 
April 17, 2006.
**Excludes applications through Homeland Program. 
Source: Drawn up by Office of International Issues, National Migration Department (mi, 2009). 

These figures show that there a significant amount of immi-
grants from border countries living in extremely vulnerable con-
ditions. They lack formal legal status that would include them 
and enable them to engage in various activities, whether social, 
political or cultural. Moreover, the flow from neighboring coun-
tries has not stopped despite the crisis and Argentina is still a 
focus of attraction in the southern region.

Unlike the amnesty decrees issued in Argentina since 1949 
by all the democratic governments, this program proposes the 
permanent legalization of immigrants. It is a plan drawn up by 
government with the collaboration, for the first time ever in this 
type of applications, of municipal organizations, immigrants’, re-
ligious, trade union, and civil society associations. The govern-
ment emphasizes the success of the initiatives and holds it up as 

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MIGRACIONES INTERNACIONALES, VOL. 6, NÚM. 3, ENERO-JUNIO DE 2012222

a model in Latin America. For our part, we believe that the pro-
gram constitutes a step forward, despite the obstacles it has faced 
in its everyday practice. 

Taking up the thread of our research, we could add that the 
new Argentinean migratory policy is being “denationalized” 
through new visions: the acceptance and reception of the prin-
ciple established by international guidelines regarding the right 
to migrate as an essential human right, a circumstance that limits 
the autonomy and power of the state. In addition, it prioritizes the 
process of regional integration as an important factor in grant-
ing differentiated rights, by expanding the scenario and defining 
policy through criteria that exceed strictly national limits. At the 
same time, in the economic sphere, greater concern can be ob-
served over nationalizing the policy to limit the bonds of depen-
dence on international financing organizations.

Nevertheless, there is an ambiguous panorama regarding the 
spaces involved. One of the issues is the tension between the Min-
istry of the Interior and Foreign Affairs in the formulation and 
enforcement of the policy, particularly as regards émigrés. This 
tension reflects the vision of each of these spaces and their tradi-
tional perspectives. It suggests that through the sanction of the 
new law, the balance has tipped towards the Ministry of the Interi-
or. For the first time ever, the law includes emigration issues. Since 
the nmd, which belongs to this ministry, is responsible for enforc-
ing this law, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has to some extent 
been affected in an area that was previously its exclusive province.

Mercosur Agreements

The maturity of the regional integration process was partly re-
sponsible for the fact that in 2002, the four Mercosur countries 
and Bolivia, and Chile signed an agreement on the permanent 
legalization of nations, designed to “facilitate migratory applica-
tions through legal instruments” by permitting their legalization 
without the need for them to return to their countries of origin 
(Mercosur, 2002). 

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 223

A few months later, on December 6, 2002, an agreement on 
residence for nationals of the party states to the expanded Merco-
sur was signed. This instrument was passed by Argentina on June 
9, 2004 through Law 25.902. The agreement affirmed, “The de-
sire of the Mercosur party states and member to strengthen and 
deepen the process of integration as well as the fraternal links 
between them”. It stated that, “The implementation of a policy 
to ensure the free circulation of persons in the region is essen-
tial to achieving these aims”. It also seeks, “To resolve the migra-
tory status of the nationals of the party states and members in 
the region in order to strengthen the links binding the regional 
community”. The agreement seeks to establish common rules for 
applying for residence for the nationals of the various countries 
mentioned. Citizens of a party state resident in their own country 
or living in another state may request temporary residence for two 
years, provided they fulfill certain requirements (valid passport, 
birth certificate, certificate accrediting the lack of a criminal re-
cord, medical certificate, and payment of a fee). Temporary resi-
dence may become permanent provided the applicant submits an 
application to the migratory authorities in the receiving country 
within the ninety days prior to the expiration of his or her tempo-
rary residence permit.

The agreement goes beyond the free circulation of goods and 
begins to contemplate the free circulation of persons, as well as 
expanding the concept of human rights. An attempt is being 
made to simplify paperwork to encourage an exchange between 
countries in order to create a genuine community, by facilitating 
entry and guaranteeing migrants’ fundamental rights from one 
country to another. In addition to civil liberties—the right to 
come and go, the right to work, the right of association, and the 
right to worship—it also contains the right to family reunifica-
tion and the transfer of resources. In the case of workers’ rights, 
the Agreement clearly stipulates equality in the application of la-
bor rights, in addition to the commitments acquired in reciprocal 
agreements legislation regarding pensions. Immigrants’ children 
will also enjoy identical opportunities regarding education. The 

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MIGRACIONES INTERNACIONALES, VOL. 6, NÚM. 3, ENERO-JUNIO DE 2012224

same guarantees a state awards its citizens should be extended to 
any citizen belonging to the Mercosur countries inhabiting its 
country. Article 11 includes a criterion for general interpretation: 
in the event of doubt, the regulation that is most favorable to the 
immigrant will be applied. On May 20, 2004, the Brazilian Con-
gress passed this historic agreement. Lastly, the agreement came 
into effect in August 2008, since it was approved by Argentina, 
Brazil and Bolivia in 2004. It was subsequently approved by Uru-
guay and Chile in 2005, and lastly by Paraguay in 2008. Despite 
the obstacles that may still occur regarding its application, this 
novel, transcendental fact marks the start of the regional con-
struction of a migratory policy.

R@ICES Program

In October 2003, within the sphere of the Ministry of Education, 
a program called r@ices (Red de Argentinos Investigado res y 
Científicos en el Exterior/Network of Argentinean Researchers 
and Scientists Abroad) was designed to promote liaison policies 
with Argentinean researchers abroad, as well as actions to en-
courage their permanence in the country and the return of those 
interested in performing their activities in Argentina. In Novem-
ber 2008, through Law 26421 (hcna, 2008), this program ac-
quired the status of a state policy, now under the auspices of the 
recently-created Ministry of Science, Technology and Productive 
Innovation. Since its inception, approximately 780 researchers, 
mainly from the exact sciences, have been repatriated through the 
Return Subsidies and Reinsertion Scholarships of the National 
Council of Scientific and Technical Research (Conicet). France, 
the United States and Great Britain are the main countries from 
which they returned, followed, in order of importance, by Italy, 
Germany and Canada.

New Refugee Law 

For some time, the United Nations High Comissioner for Refu-
gees (unhcr) and ngos engaged in the protection of immigrants 

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 225

and refugees had requested the passage of a refugee law. They 
pointed to the need for a clear, concrete normative framework 
that would provide legal status for refugees and applicants. The 
sanction of the new General Law of Recognition and Protection 
of Refugees num. 26165 (hcna, 2006a), passed by the National 
Congress on November 8, 2006, clearly legislates on behalf of 
refuge, based on international human rights law. It also created 
the National Refugee Commission, an organization responsible 
for enforcing the law, within the Ministry of the Interior. It is 
interesting to note that although this institution will comprise 
five members belonging to national government, it will also in-
clude one member of unhcr and another member of refugee as-
sociations and ngos. Here, as in the implementation of the Patria 
Grande program, the policy incorporates social actors from civil 
society, who partly circumscribe state power.

International Convention

The passage, in December 2006, through the Law 26202 (hcna, 
2006b), of the International Convention on the Protection of the 
Rights of all Migrant Workers and Members of their Families11 
(unga, 1990) constituted an important event for Argentina. It 
mark ed the end of a lengthy process in which the Argentinean 
state sought ideological coherence with the establishment of the 
right to migrate as an essential human right. As for the interna-
tional scope of the convention, it should be pointed out that it 
has been ratified by 57 countries although the central countries, 
which receive immigrants, have yet to do so. In Latin America, 
it has been ratified by 15 countries. These circumstances have 
transformed this part of the American continent into an area 
where rights are protected. The most significant countries to sign 
are Chile and Argentina, since they are still receiving countries.

11 Adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in Resolution 45/158 of 
December 18, 1990. Th e bill requesting that Argentina adopt this resolution was 
submitted in July 2004 by senator Rubén H. Giustiniani, belonging to the Socialist 
Party (Santa Fe), and radical senators Miriam B. Curletti (Chaco), and Carlos Prades 
(Santa Cruz).

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Initiatives by the Ministry of the Interior

On March 12, 2007, as a result of Ruling 452 (mi, 2007), the 
Ministry of the Interior created an ambitious program called 
Province 25, run by the Secretariat of Provinces, to strengthen 
the links and communication between the state and Argentineans 
resident abroad by “assisting them with everything related to the 
exercise of their political rights, the creation of sphere of sectoral 
political representation, and the optimization of paperwork and 
applications”. The regulation bases its legitimacy on the increase 
of the flow which, according to estimates from the nmd, amounts 
to 1 053 000 persons, “a much higher figure than the number 
of those on the electoral roll of several Argentinean provinces”. 
However, the evolution of the electoral participation of Argentin-
ean émigrés has been scarce and is on the decline, as shown by 
the following chart:

Table 4. Participation of Argentineans Resident Abroad 
in Electoral Processes (1993-2005)

Year Type of election Citizens enrolled Votes issued
Voter turnout 
(percentage)

1993 National delegates 8 814 5 337 60.55
1995 Presidential 18 118 9 576 52.85
1997 National delegates 23 405 5 737 24.51
1999 Presidential 26 013 8 824 33.92
1999 National delegates 25 138 7 862 31 28
2001 National delegates 28 158 3 589 12.75
2003 Presidential 29 293 6 420 21.92
2005 National delegates 35 704 2 992 8.38

Source: mi, 2007.

The ruling states that the system in force entails high operating 
costs for the state, and delays in vote counting as well as involving 
a significant effort for voters. This raises the need to create a polit-
ical institution that will represent them and reflect their interests.

In keeping with this perspective, in August 2009, a bill on 
the “Creation of an Overseas District and Parliamentary Repre-

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 227

sentation” was submitted to the Chamber of Deputies. The bill 
proposed that Argentinean citizens resident abroad should be en-
titled to elect five delegates to represent them in the Chamber of 
Deputies. Political parties with legal status as a national party 
can propose candidates for the Overseas District. Argentineans 
will not only be able to vote in the elections but also be able to 
be represented in Parliament. The bases of the project cite Euro-
pean (France, Italy, and Switzerland) and Latin American (Co-
lombia and Ecuador) legislations as positive experiences. The bill 
has been submitted for approval by the Commissions for Consti-
tutional Affairs, Foreign Affairs and Worship. We regard this as 
a positive extension of the recognition of political rights, which 
intensified the process of deterritorialization.

Final Notes

The new migratory law sanctioned by the National Congress 
in December 2003 marks a substantial change in Argentinean 
migratory policy as well as constituting a historic achievement: 
repealing a law dating from the era of the military dictatorship 
after twenty years of democratic governments. The social model 
underlying the new law reflects the idea of a more egalitarian 
society that values the potential of youth and immigrants’ con-
tribution. Society appears to be immersed in a regional process, 
Mercosur, whose growing importance influenced the definition 
of new policies.

Several circumstances reveal an ideological twist at the formal 
level of recent policy: a) passage of the International Convention, 
which protects the rights of migrant workers and their relatives; 
b) the new refugee law, covering a legal gap that the organizations 
and associations involved have long asked to be filled; c) amnesty 
for immigrants outside Mercosur; d) the implementation of the 
Patria Grande program for permanente regularization; e) the ap-
proval of the Law on Residence in Mercosur; f) the expansion of 
immigrants’ and refugees’ participation in the new legislation; 
g) the expansion of citizens’ rights outside national territory; h) the 

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discourse of government officials responsible for migratory policy. 
These references indicate the acceptance of the principles in force 
in the international context and the transformation of the para-
digm sustaining the policy: of “national security” as a value to be 
protected from the potential threat from foreigners by acknowl-
edging the human right to migrate.

At the same time, politics has become more complex in many 
respects: a) regarding the origin of the flows: the traditional flow 
of immigrants from neighboring countries and Korea has now 
been expanded by immigrants from China; b) regarding its dual 
nature as a sending and receiving country that now characterizes 
Argentina, which implies an original perspective on the prob-
lem; c) regarding the new actors involved in the formulation and 
enforcement of policies: the growing participation of social sec-
tors—civil society organizations—as well as other governments: 
of countries where Argentineans reside, of the immigrants’ coun-
tries or countries with which a space of regional integration is be-
ing built. The state and its specialized officials are no longer the 
only ones responsible for this issue.

Although the recent changes have advanced regarding the 
protection and respect of migrants’ rights, specific studies have 
shown that immigrants in Argentina continue to be discrimi-
nated against and exploited, and in many cases, persecuted and 
mistreated. There are cultural, economic, and ideological issues 
explaining this phenomenon. What is still under debate is the ex-
tent to which immigrants experience this treatment because they 
are foreign or poor.

One of the problems to be solved involved the sanction of a le-
gal ruling, postponed for several years and only recently enacted. 
On May 3, 2010, Decree 616/2010 (pen, 2010), governing the 
Law of Migrations num. 25871 (hcna, 2004) was sanctioned. 
Likewise, the innovations are not automatically reflected in the 
social actors who should apply these guidelines every day. On 
the contrary, decades of authoritarian military ideology influ-
ence the contradictions that occur on a daily basis between the 
laws that have been passed and political practices. It will be a 
challenge for society as a whole to change the mentality of the 

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 229

social actors responsible for implementing the new law. The state 
must implement proper work training programs for nmd agents 
and its auxiliary police force, as well as publicity and information 
campaigns. The national, provincial, and municipal regulations 
contradicting the new law must be repealed. The third challenge 
is the need to persuade certain sectors of society of the advantages 
of the new regulation and thereby neutralize some of the bills 
submitted to the Chamber of Deputies that seek to amend it by 
restricting rights and guarantees.

Nevertheless, progress has been made in the application of the 
new law. This is borne out by the sentence passed by the Federal 
Chamber of Appeals in the city of Paraná in the Province of Entre 
Ríos, demanding the immediate release of three Chinese citizens 
who had been arrested in Concordia, during an operation carried 
out by personnel from the Argentinean Naval Sub-Prefecture.

The long-term perspective shows that during the agro-export 
strategy (1870-1930), economic policy was denationalized, open-
ing up the economy to foreign investment in railroads, meat 
industry, and services as was migration policy. This led to the 
promotion of European immigration associated with settlement, 
the extermination of the indigenous population, with the par-
ticipation of civil society groups—private settlement firms—to-
gether with the enforcement of the policy that had been designed. 
On the other hand, during the subsequent period (1930-1945) 
and partly as a result of the serious international crisis, whereas 
economic policy was denationalized—through growing Ameri-
can investment in the textile and food industries—migratory 
policy became more restrictive and was nationalized, protecting 
the domestic market from high unemployment rates. Conversely, 
during the first decade of Peronism (1945-1955), economic policy 
was nationalized, in an attempt to create an autonomous form of 
capitalism: through an increase in public investment, the nation-
alization of foreign firms, etc. Migratory policy was denational-
ized, since the Latin American context was regarded as a variable 
in the amnesties formulated. Conversely, the concentrating indus-
trializing experience (1955-1962, and 1966-1973) denationalized 
economic policy through foreign investment and the expansion 

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of monopolistic multinational firms, and nationalized migratory 
policy, through restrictions on immigrants from border countries 
and repressive measures against undocumented immigrants, now 
based on internal control and national security. The distributive 
experience (1963-1966 and 1973-1976) nationalized economic 
policy, through an increase in public investment, state control of 
foreign capital and denationalized migratory policy through am-
nesties for border migrants and the promotion of Latin American 
migration. Following the 1976 coup d’État, economic policy was 
denationalized, through a process of foreign investment and rapid 
privatization. Migratory policy was partly nationalized through 
profound contradictions, which includes the growing control of 
undocumented migrants, restrictions on border migrants, amnes-
ties and so on.

Finally, in the wake of the 2001 crisis, the new Argentinean 
migratory policy was denationalized through two factors: a) the 
priority given to the process of regional integration as an impor-
tant factor in granting differentiated rights—for Mercosur mem-
bers and non-members—by expanding the scenario and defining 
policy through criteria that exceed strictly national limits, and 
b) the acceptance of the international framework for the protec-
tion of human rights, which restricted the state’s autonomy and 
power. At the same time, in the economic sphere, an ambiguous 
process was observed that attempted to recover part of national 
sovereignty from international financing organizations, through 
the refusal to pay debts, the rejection of imf policies and so on.

During the periods of conservative, concentrating strategies, 
including military ones, migratory policies tended to be nation-
alized. Conversely, distributive experiences were characterized by 
a process of denationalization. Border migrations appeared on 
the government’s agenda in the 1930s, playing a crucial role in the 
import substitute strategy. In principle, one could say that the evo-
lution of this trend over time has suffered the effect of the uneven 
policies designed by the various governments: military policies 
are restrictive while those drawn up by democratic governments are 
reparatory. Some studies (Novick, 2000), however, show that the 
link between governments’ ideological origin and their respective 

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NOVICK/TR ANSFORMATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF ARGENTINEAN MIGR ATORY POLICY 231

external migratory policies is neither mechanical nor univocal. 
In Argentina, the ideological dimension that influences migra-
tory policy design cuts through and goes beyond the normative-
political perspective, revealing a degree of autonomy that appears 
to be more closely linked to our cultural history. For its part, the 
international sphere is present throughout the period studied, al-
though it has acquired different shades and intensities. 

In relation to the Latin American region, the 1990s saw the 
beginning of a bi- and multilateral treatment of migrations that 
went beyond the traditional perspective of regarding policy of an 
instrument that is merely related to national sovereignty (borders, 
security, etc.). The bilateral agreements signed with Bolivia, Peru, 
and Paraguay in the late 1990s were forerunners to the policy 
formulated after the 2001 crisis. 

Sassen (2001) holds that although construction of an inter-
national world order entails the denationalization of national 
policies, the international migratory process proves to be a con-
flictive area in which states renationalize their policies, hanging 
on to their right to control borders. But here we must distinguish 
between central and peripheral countries. In fact, the Argentin-
ean case is paradigmatic, since whereas other receiving countries 
emphasize restrictive policies and in some cases ignore human 
rights principles, such as the Return Guidelines in the European 
Union and the California Law in the United States, the experi-
ence in Argentina, still a magnet for Latin American migrants, 
after a profound economic and social crisis, has been quite the 
opposite.

References

Argentinean Congress (hcna), 1902, “Estableciendo los casos 
en que podrá ordenarse la salida del territorio a extranjeros” 
[law 4144], Boletín Oficial de la República Argentina, num. 
2751, Bue   nos Aires, p. 1, November 25. Available at <http://
www.boletinoficial.gov.ar/BuscadoresPrimeraLog/Busqueda 
AvanzadaLogDetalle.castle?dest=&idAviso=7004373> (last ac-
cessed on June 20, 2011).

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MIGRACIONES INTERNACIONALES, VOL. 6, NÚM. 3, ENERO-JUNIO DE 2012232

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