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In March 1812, Spanish legislators met in the Andalusian city of Cádiz. There they drafted and adopted the first liberal constitution in the Hispanic world - the Cádiz Constitution of 1812. This constitution was influential in and beyond Europe, and this collection of essays explores how its legacy not only shaped the history of state-building, elections, and municipal governance in Iberian America, but also affected national identities and citizenship, and the development of race and gender in the region.

Produktbeschreibung
In March 1812, Spanish legislators met in the Andalusian city of Cádiz. There they drafted and adopted the first liberal constitution in the Hispanic world - the Cádiz Constitution of 1812. This constitution was influential in and beyond Europe, and this collection of essays explores how its legacy not only shaped the history of state-building, elections, and municipal governance in Iberian America, but also affected national identities and citizenship, and the development of race and gender in the region.
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Autorenporträt
Scott Eastman is an associate professor of transnational history at Creighton University. He is the author of Preaching Spanish Nationalism across the Hispanic Atlantic 1759-1823. His research interests focus on the intersection of identity, colonialism, and culture in the nineteenth-century Hispanic-Atlantic world. Natalia Sobrevilla Perea is a senior lecturer at the University of Kent at Canterbury. She is the author of The Caudillo of the Andes: Andrés de Santa Cruz. She is leading a project to digitize nineteenth-century regional newspapers from Peru.