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66:, and was in charge of the Department of Socioeconomic Problems. In 1975 he won a three-year scholarship from the National Institute of Anthropology and History of Mexico through the IECE. He was hired as a researcher at the National Institute of Anthropology and History of Mexico INAH. He studied the topic "oligarchy and imperialism" and finished his first semester, but due to the serious financial crisis of 1976, which resulted in the devaluation of the Mexican peso by 100%, the government abolished all scholarships and he had to return to
140:, and he published "Towards a Latin American theory of History", which was published jointly by the ADHILAC and Michoacán's college in Mexico. Since 1993 he had traveled annually as a visiting professor of the University of Brasilia and Michoacan de San Nicolas Hidalgo, to teach liberal art courses. In 1993 he published "Essays on the history of ideas in Latin America", a book of 5 essays on the ideas of Simon Bolivar,
144:, Jose Peralta, and the illustration and the expansionist ideas in the United States, with key sections on the evolution of ideas in the continent. He also published "The Noontime Country" which contained a collection of articles previously published in newspapers and magazines. As co-author he has collaborated in the book "New History of Ecuador" of the National Publishing Corporation.
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dictatorship. He spent 2 months in
Managua and nearby towns. That year he published "The History of Ecuadorian Political Parties" (1979). In 1981 he organized the Third Meeting of Latin American and Caribbean Historians ADHILAC, held in Quito and was appointed Executive Secretary of that institution.
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and wrote a long study titled ""History of the
Ecuadorian oligarchy 1750-1912" which he completed in 1992 and gave to CONUEP for publication. The Cultural Center of Madrid opened its doors for him to give an historical conference. In 1989 he published in Quito a book titled "Historical Consciousness
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In 1984 he was re-elected as the
Secretary of ADHILAC. Director of National Social Security Institute IESS, Patrick Avila, hired him to direct a research program, the result of which was the 500-page work "History of the Ecuadorian Social Security", with data and statistics on the institution since
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interventions in
Central America, notably in the case of Nicaragua, Cuba, Grenada, et al. He also wrote a renowned yet controversial book "Myth of Independence" (1976) which explained how, through war, the oligarchy, who already had a socioeconomic advantage, had gained the political power in the
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He returned to
Ecuador from Mexico with enough material to write a non-fiction book titled "The Endless War: United States vs Latin America" (Quito, 1980) which has gone through 4 editions. The book related the number of attacks on Latin American republics, from the Monroe Doctrine to the
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In 1991 he published "The
Thought of Jose Peralta" with an introductory study and the complete version of Peralta's work about slavery in Latin America. In 1992 he was appointed the director of the Department of History and Geography of the
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In 1977 he was the chair of
Socioeconomic Problems of Ecuador & Latin America, and Latin American Urban History at the Central University of Ecuador, where he continued to teach as a full-time professor until his death.
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In 1983 he joined the
Democratic Left. That year he was invited to Cuba by its Academy of Sciences, and his work on U.S. interventions appeared in "Gramma", the only newspaper in Havana.
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In 1990 he was elected president of the
Association of Latin American and Caribbean Historians ADHILAC, during the "V International Meeting" held in
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Between 1988 and 1989 he was the Deputy
Secretary of Culture and chaired the National Counsel of Culture during the administration of President
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In 1985 he married Jenny Londoño López of Guayaquil. That year he published "Nicaragua, the Invincible Trench" (1985).
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He was a professor at the Central University of Ecuador and Treasurer of the National Academy of History.
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as a war correspondent. There he witnessed first hand the struggle of the Nicaraguan people against the
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56:, Ecuador. His father was Tirso Núñez Moya and his mother was Amada Sánchez García.
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171:"Falleció el historiador Jorge Núñez Sánchez, premio Nacional Eugenio Espejo"
132:", a fiction essay in which the liberator goes on a voluntary exile in 1830.
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List of recipients of the Premio Eugenio Espejo with Spanish biographies
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it was founded in 1928 and the evolution of its services and benefits.
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In 1970 he married Susana Grijalva Chacón who he later divorced.
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He was the author of 56 books and co-author of 66 other books.
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Between 1973 and 1975 he was an assistant professor at the
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Ecuadorian writer, historian, and professor (1947–2020)
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In 2010 he was awarded the Ecuadorian national prize
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Academic staff of the Central University of Ecuador
150:On 1 November 2020, Núñez died of cancer aged 73.
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30:(6 February 1947 – 1 November 2020) was an
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287:People from Bolívar Province (Ecuador)
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52:Núñez Sánchez was born in Magdalena,
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272:21st-century Ecuadorian historians
267:20th-century Ecuadorian historians
224:Biographical Dictionary of Ecuador
34:writer, historian, and professor.
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292:Deaths from cancer in Ecuador
64:Central University of Ecuador
89:(Revista Nueva) of Quito to
138:House of Ecuadorian Culture
85:In 1979 he was sent by the
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277:Ecuadorian male writers
76:Royal Audience of Quito
215:Rodolfo Pérez Pimentel
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219:"Jorge Núñez Sánchez"
118:Archive of the Indies
112:. In 1989 he went to
42:Premio Eugenio Espejo
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23:Jorge Núñez in 2016.
231:on 18 November 2013
28:Jorge Núñez Sánchez
201:2013-10-29 at the
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121:of Andrés Bello"
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262:2020 deaths
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142:Eloy Alfaro
87:New Journal
251:Categories
181:1 November
154:References
32:Ecuadorian
126:São Paulo
91:Nicaragua
48:Biography
199:Archived
114:Seville
95:Somoza
68:Quito
237:2013
183:2020
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