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This Happened

This Happened - April 3: Marshall Plan Launched

The Marshall Plan was signed into law by U.S. President Harry Truman on this day, 1948.

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What was the Marshall Plan?

The Marshall Plan, officially known as the European Recovery Program, was a plan proposed by U.S. Secretary of State George Marshall in 1947 to provide economic aid to Western European countries devastated by World War II.

How much aid did the Marshall Plan provide?

The Marshall Plan provided over $13 billion in economic aid to Western European countries between 1948 and 1951. Sixteen countries received aid under the Marshall Plan, including France, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom.

What was the impact of the Marshall Plan?

The Marshall Plan helped to rebuild the economies of Western European countries and was seen as a major factor in the post-War economic recovery of Europe. It also helped to prevent the spread of communism in Europe and contributed to the strengthening of the United States' relationships with its European allies.

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Society

In The Shantytowns Of Buenos Aires, Proof That Neighbors Function Better Than Cities

Residents of the most disadvantaged peripheries of the Argentine capital are pushed to collaborate in the absence of municipal support. They build homes and create services that should be public. It is both admirable, and deplorable.

A person with blonde hair stands half hidden behind the brick wall infront of a house

A resident of Villa Palito, La Matanza, stands at their gate. August 21, 2020, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Guillermo Tella

-Analysis-

BUENOS AIRES – In Argentina, the increasing urgency of the urban poor's housing and public services needs has starkly revealed an absence of municipal policies, which may even be deliberate.

With urban development, local administrations seem dazzled, or blinded, by the city center's lights. Thus they select and strengthen mechanisms that heighten zonal and social inequalities, forcing the less-well-off to live "on the edge" and "behind" in all senses of these words. Likewise, territorial interventions by social actors have both a symbolic and material impact, particularly on marginal or "frontier" zones that are the focus of viewpoints about living "inside," "outside" or "behind."

The center and the periphery produce very different social perceptions. Living on the periphery is to live "behind," in an inevitable state of marginality. The periphery is a complex system of inequalities in terms of housing provision, infrastructures, facilities and transport.

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