Universities in Argentina (National and Provincial) are public, tuition-free and state funded, while private universities require some form of tuition payment.
Name | Acronym | Main Location | Website | Creation | University Status | R. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
City | Province | ||||||
Arts | IUPA | General Roca | Río Negro | www.iupa.edu.ar | 10 March 1999 | 15 May 2015 | [75] [76] |
Buenos Aires City | UniCABA | Buenos Aires City | udelaciudad.edu.ar | 28 November 2018 | – | [77] | |
La Punta | ULP | La Punta | San Luis | www.ulp.edu.ar | 19 May 2004 | – | [78] |
Chubut | UDC | Rawson | Chubut | udc.edu.ar | 22 December 2008 | – | |
Trades | UPrO | Villa Mercedes | San Luis | uprosanluis.edu.ar | 22 October 2014 | – | [79] |
Córdoba | UPC | Córdoba | Córdoba | www.upc.edu.ar | 20 April 2007 | 16 September 2015 | [80] [81] |
Entre Ríos | UAdER | Paraná | Entre Ríos | www.uader.edu.ar | 12 June 2000 | 22 June 2001 | [82] [83] |
Ezeiza | UPE | Ezeiza | Buenos Aires | upe.edu.ar | 22 June 2009 | 16 September 2015 | [84] [85] |
Laguna Blanca | UPLaB | Laguna Blanca | Formosa | www.uplab.edu.ar | 1 July 2022 | 30 January 2023 | [86] |
Southwest | UPSo | Pigüé, Bahía Blanca | Buenos Aires | www.upso.edu.ar | 8 July 1992 | 1 April 2014 | [87] [88] |
The Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina, also known as Catholic University of Argentina, is a private university in Argentina with campuses in the cities of Buenos Aires, Santa Fe, Rosario, Paraná, Mendoza and Pergamino. The main campus is located in Puerto Madero, a modern neighborhood of Buenos Aires.
Universidad Central de Chile, abbreviated as UCEN, is the first autonomous private university in Chile, founded in 1982 in Santiago de Chile. It's accredited in the areas of institutional management and undergraduate teaching by the National Accreditation Commission of Chile for a term of four years from December 2017 to December 2021.
The National Endowment for the Arts is a cultural public organization created in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1958. Its purpose is to promote cultural, educational and literary activities in Argentina.
Joaquín Canaveris was an Argentine attorney, merchant, politician and military man, who served as consignee in The Consulate of Buenos Aires. He had an active participation in the defense of Buenos Aires during the English invasions, serving as an Assistant in the battalion of Tercio de Vizcaínos.
Margarida Cabral de Melo (1570–1631) was a Portuguese noblewoman related to the discoverer of Brazil Pedro Álvares Cabral. In 1599 she settled with her husband and children in Buenos Aires. She was one of the most distinguished women in the Río de la Plata, in the early 17th century, owned of luxury homes, farms and vineyards.
Tomás Onésimo Canavery (1839–1913) was an Argentine Catholic priest and military chaplain, who served under the command of Bartolomé Mitre during the War of the Triple Alliance. He participated in most of the military actions against the Paraguayan forces, being promoted to lieutenant colonel in the same battlefield by order of General Juan Andrés Gelly y Obes.
Frank K. Chevallier Boutell (1899-1974) was an Argentine lawyer, and sportsman. He was player and vice president of the Club Universitario de Buenos Aires.
Margarita Elena Chiozza was an Argentinian geographer. She graduated in history from the Faculty of Arts at the University of Buenos Aires.
The Royal University of San Felipe was a university created by King Philip V in 1738, in territory which was then part of the Kingdom of Spain. It was officially founded in Santiago in 1747 and began teaching activities in 1758. It is the immediate predecessor of the University of Chile (1843).
Francisco Álvarez Campana (1707–1773) was a Spanish merchant and politician, who served during the Viceroyalty of Peru as Regidor and Attorney General of Buenos Aires. He was the founder of the Colegio de Huérfanas de Buenos Aires, an educational institute dedicated to the teaching of orphan girls.
Francisco Antonio de Basavilbaso was a jurist and politician, who held various government posts under the Viceroyalty of Peru and later the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, including alcalde, escribano, regidor, and emissary of Buenos Aires in Spain.
Eloisa D'Herbil was a Spanish pianist and composer. A child prodigy on the piano, by age seven, she had played before the heads of state in England and Spain. As a child, the press dubbed her "Chopin in skirts" and from a young age, she began composing musical pieces. Immigrating to Argentina in 1868, she continued to write music, becoming one of the first women to write tangos.
The Boletín Oficial de la República Argentina is the government gazette of the Argentine Republic, on which the Argentine State publishes its legal norms such as laws, decrees and regulations, as well as other public acts from the executive and the judiciary.
José María "Txema" Portillo Valdés is a Spanish historian, professor of Contemporary History at the University of the Basque Country. He is an expert in Spanish constitutional history.
The Legal and Technical Secretariat of the Presidency of the Argentine Nation is a secretariat of state of the Argentine National Executive counting with ministerial level, tasked with assisting the President of Argentina, the Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers and all other dependencies of the President's Office that may not count with their own legal departments on the drafting of decrees, legislative bills, administrative decisions and legal messages.
Canal 8 Mar del Plata is a television station broadcasting on channel 8 in Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. It carries programs from Telefe and is owned by Grupo Neomedia.
The Law to Promote Access to Formal Employment for Travestis, and Transsexual and Transgender People "Diana Sacayán – Lohana Berkins", identified as the Law 27,636, is a law in Argentina that establishes that the national public sector must reserve at least 1% of its positions and vacancies for trans people, and encourages the private sector to take similar measures. It was passed by the Argentine Senate on 24 June 2021, and enacted on 8 July 2021, during the government of Alberto Fernández. The law is named after trans activists Diana Sacayán and Lohana Berkins.