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Misiones Province

Misiones (Spanish pronunciation: [miˈsjones], Missions) is one of the 23 provinces of Argentina, located in the northeastern corner of the country in the Mesopotamia region. It is surrounded by Paraguay to the northwest, Brazil to the north, east and south, and Corrientes Province of Argentina to the southwest.

Misiones
Provincia de Misiones
Province of Misiones
Anthem: Misionerita (The Song for the Child of Misiones)
Location of Misiones within Argentina
Coordinates: 26°55′S 54°31′W / 26.92°S 54.52°W / -26.92; -54.52
Country Argentina
CapitalPosadas
Subdivisions
Government
 • GovernorHugo Passalacqua (FRC)
 • Deputies7
 • Senators3
Area
 • Total29,801 km2 (11,506 sq mi)
Population
 (2022 census[1])
 • Total1,280,960
 • Rank9th
 • Density43/km2 (110/sq mi)
Demonymmisionero
GDP
 • Totalpeso 445 billion
(US$17 billion) (2018)[2]
Time zoneUTC−3 (ART)
ISO 3166 codeAR-N
HDI (2021)0.842 very high (11th)[3]
Websitewww.misiones.gov.ar

This was an early area of Roman Catholic missionary activity by the Society of Jesus in what was then called the province of Paraguay, beginning in the early 17th century. In 1984 the ruins of four mission sites in Argentina were designated World Heritage Sites by UNESCO.[4]

History edit

 
1846 impression of San Ignacio Miní, a Jesuit Reduction, abandoned following the temporary abolition of the order in 1773.

Indigenous peoples of various tribes lived in the area of the future province for thousands of years. At the time of European encounter, the area was occupied by the Kaingang and Xokleng tribes, later followed by the Guarani tribe. The first European to visit the region, Sebastian Cabot, discovered Apipé Falls while navigating the Paraná River in December 1527. In 1541 Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca reached the Iguazú Falls.

In the 17th century, members of the Society of Jesus came to the region as missionaries, initially led by Diego de Torres Bello (1551-1638). From 1609 onwards the Jesuits established a string of Jesuit Reductions, most notably that of San Ignacio (founded in 1610). In a few years they set up 30 mission villages. They taught the Guarani western-style agriculture and crafts. Their crafts were sold and traded along the river and they shared in the Reductions' prosperity.

In 1759 the Portuguese government, at the insistence of its anti-Jesuit Secretary of State, the Marquis de Pombal, ordered all Reductions closed in its territory (which then included much of present-day Misiones Province). The Marquis eventually prevailed in 1773 on Pope Clement XIV to have the Jesuit Order suppressed. With the abandoning of the missions, the prosperous trade surrounding these Reductions quickly vanished. Colonists imposed a brutal plantation economy in the region, forcing the Guarani to act as slave labor.

 
Steamer on the riverbank at Posadas in 1892

In 1814, Gervasio Posadas, the Director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, declared Misiones annexed to Argentina's Corrientes (at this time Argentina was quasi-independent but nominally still a Spanish colony). Argentina did not exert de facto control over Misiones, which was claimed by several countries and effectively governed itself. In 1830 Argentine military forces from Corrientes Province took control of Misiones.

In 1838 Paraguay occupied Misiones, claiming the area on the basis that the Misiones population consisted of indigenous Guarani, the major ethnic group of Paraguay. In 1865 Paraguayan forces invaded Misiones again in what became the War of the Triple Alliance (1864–1870). Following the defeat of Paraguay and its peace agreement with Argentina (eventually signed in 1876), Paraguay gave up its claim to the Misiones territory.

Although Argentina had claimed Misiones since 1814, academics tend to interpret Argentine possession of Misiones as beginning with the defeat of Paraguay in the War of the Triple Alliance. John Lynch writes that "the treaty of alliance [i.e. against Paraguay] contained secret clauses providing for the annexation of disputed territory in northern Paraguay by Brazil and regions in the east and west of Paraguay by Argentina [...]. After a long and harrowing war (1865–70), Argentina prised from a prostrate Paraguay territory in Misiones between the Paraná and the Uruguay and other land further west."[5] Scobie states that "the political status of Misiones remained vague" and that Argentina gained the region "as a by-product of the Paraguayan war in the 1860s".[6]

 
Ukrainian immigrants harvest yerba mate in 1920. Despite challenging conditions, Misiones attracted considerable European immigration in the early 20th-century.

The War of the Triple Alliance left Paraguay much impoverished, and Misiones benefited economically from belonging to Argentina.[citation needed] In 1876 the Argentine President Nicolás Avellaneda, assisted by his close friend, General Pietro Canestro (an Italian nobleman who devoted much of his life and wealth to the achievement and sustainability of the peace in the region), proclaimed the Immigration and Colonization Law. This law fostered the immigration of European colonists[7] in order to populate the vast unspoiled Argentinian territories.[citation needed]

On 22 December 1881 the national government in Buenos Aires detached the National Territory of Misiones [es] from the province of Corrientes.[8]

Several colonizing companies formed under the Immigration and Colonization Law. One of them, Adolf Schwelm's Eldorado Colonización y Explotación de Bosques Ltda. S.A., founded the city of Eldorado in 1919 with a port on the Upper Paraná. Its agricultural colonies and experimental farms, the orange- and grapefruit-tree plantations, and the cultivation of yerba mate, the mills and the dryers for such product are characteristic of this area. Swedish-Argentines became well known for growing yerba mate.

Misiones received many immigrants, mostly from Europe, coming mainly via Southern Brazil. Some came from Buenos Aires, and from Eastern Europe, in particular large numbers of Poles and Ukrainians. Since then[when?], Misiones has continued to benefit economically[citation needed] and has developed politically within Argentina. It has been successfully integrated into the Argentine state.[citation needed] As of 2016 control of the province is not contested. On December 10, 1953, the "National Territory of Misiones" gained provincial status in accordance with Law 14.294, and its constitution was approved on April 21, 1958.[9]

Misiones received more attention from national policy-makers following a 1973 international agreement to construct the Yacyretá hydroelectric dam on a point in the Paraná River shared by Paraguay and Corrientes Province. When the dam became fully operative in the 1990s, the Paraná's waters all along the Misiones shores rose. They flooded lands that the dam's authorities had failed to clear and condition adequately, resulting in the onset of mosquito-transmitted illnesses, such as leishmaniasis, yellow fever, dengue, and malaria. The entire Misiones shores along the Paraná River is now confined by two dams, one of them Yaciretá, downstream of the river, and the other Itaipú, located in Brazil and Paraguay, upstream of the river and north of Puerto Iguazú. As of 2016 Argentina was pursuing an agreement with Paraguay to expand the reservoir works in order to double the facility's electricity production.

Geography edit

Misiones is the second smallest province after Tucumán.

 
View of Iguazu Falls.
 
Alto Paraná Atlantic forests

The Misiones plateau includes a part of Brazil across the border. The rocks contain significant quantities of iron which forms a part of the soil, giving it a reddish color. At the center of the plateau rises the Sierra de Misiones, its highest peak, 843 m, near Bernardo de Irigoyen, in the Cerro Rincón.

The province is embraced by three big rivers including the Paraná, Uruguay and Iguazú. Iguazu Falls are spectacular waterfalls on the Iguazú River in the northwest corner of the province, near the city of Puerto Iguazú. Misiones shares the falls with the Brazilian state of Paraná (in that nation's Southern Region). Meanwhile, the international border with Paraguay is close by.

Climate edit

 
Köppen climate map of Misiones Province.

The province has a humid subtropical climate characterized by a lack of a dry season and abundant rainfall throughout the year.[10] Under the Köppen climate classification, it is classified as Cfa.[11] There are four distinct seasons although winters and autumns are fairly short.[11] The mean annual temperature is around 21 °C (70 °F).[10] June–August typically register the coldest days when temperatures can fall below 10 °C (50 °F).[10] However, rare incursions of polar air into the province from the south can lead to frost.[11] Summers are hot with temperatures exceeding 32 °C (90 °F) from December to February.[10] One of the main characteristic is the presence of hills in the central and northern parts of the province leading to lower temperatures as a result of the higher elevation.[11] Average annual rainfall ranges from a low of 1,870 millimetres (74 in) in the south to 2,360 millimetres (93 in) in the north.[12] The rainfall pattern in the province has a bimodal distribution with two peaks occurring in Spring and Autumn with winters being the driest.[12] The exceptions are the north and higher altitude areas where precipitation is well distributed throughout the year.[12] Snowfall has occurred at the higher hills.[11] For example, during the winter of 1975, snowfall was observed and accumulated in Bernando de Irigoyen, one of the coldest towns in the province due to its high altitude 815 m (2,674 ft).[11] Owing to the humid climate and high rainfall, relative humidity is high.[11]

The vegetation is the so-called "Selva Misionera [es]". Part of it has been transformed by mankind to implant cultures and ranching. The original biome is protected in Iguazú National Park, part of the Alto Paraná Atlantic forests, in turn part of the Atlantic Forest biome.

Population edit

There are 1,101,593 people living in Misiones according to the national census of 2010. A part of the population is descendant of indigenous peoples (especially Guaranis) and also Spanish who reached during the colonization and mixed with natives. Another part of the residents are descendants of European immigrants. Unlike many regions of Argentina, where the immigrants came through Buenos Aires, most of the immigrants who settled in Misiones came through Southern Brazil. The ethnic groups who settled in Misiones after Spaniards are Italians, Germans, Poles, Ukrainians, Swiss, Russians, Swedes, Danes and a small number of Arabs, Japanese and, recently, Laotians (in the late 1970s) and Chinese (in the 2000s). From the 1960s, the province has also received immigrants from Brazil (mostly descendants of East Europeans) and Paraguay (mostly descendants both of indigenous peoples and Spaniards).

The literacy rate is 91.4%.

Economy edit

 
Terminal at Puerto Iguazu International Airport.
 
Yerba mate plantation.

Misiones' economy, like most in northern Argentina, is relatively underdeveloped yet fairly well-diversified. Its 2006 output was estimated at US$4.8 billion (which shall be around US$7.2 billion in 2011, according to Argentina's economical growing) or US$4,940 per capita (around US$6,500 in 2011), over 40% below the national average.[13]

Though its rainy, erosion-prone geography discourages intensive crop farming, agriculture makes an important contribution to the province's economy, adding about 10% to the total. Misiones' thick forests have long provided for the ample production of roundwood without excessive impact on its ecosystem. The principal exploited trees are the Paraná pine, Guatambú, Cedar, Petiribí, Incense, Cane water-pipe, Anchico, Eucalyptus and Gueycá.

Misiones' chief source of agricultural income, however, has long been the cultivation of yerba mate: Misiones is Argentina's leading producer (yielding about half a million tons, annually). Tea, citrus fruit and, in minor amounts, tobacco, sugar cane, rice, coffee, cocoa and coconut are also cultivated in Misiones.[citation needed]

Light manufacturing and tourism also contribute to the local economy, each adding about 13% to the total.

Government edit

 
Governor's offices, Posadas

The provincial government is divided into the usual three branches: the executive, headed by a popularly elected governor, who appoint the cabinet; the legislative; and the judiciary, headed by the Supreme Court.

The Constitution of Misiones Province forms the formal law of the province.

 
Misiones Provincial Police

In Argentina, the most important law enforcement organization is the Argentine Federal Police but the additional work is carried out by the Misiones Provincial Police.

Political division edit

 
Misiones Province, Political Division

The province is divided in 17 departments (Spanish: departamentos):

Notable people edit

Twinning and cooperation edit

Misiones is twinned with:

Villages edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Nuevos datos provisorios del Censo 2022: Argentina tiene 46.044.703 habitantes". Infobae. 31 January 2023. Retrieved 2023-02-03.
  2. ^ "PBG Misiones".
  3. ^ "El mapa del desarrollo humano en Argentina" (PDF). United Nations Development Programme. 25 June 2023.
  4. ^ Garriga, Antonio (1713). "Instruccion practica para ordenar santamente la vidà; que ofrece el P. Antonio Garriga de la Compania de Iesus. Como brebe memorial, y recuerdo à los que hazen los exercicios espirituales de S. Ignacio de Loyola fundador de la misma Compañia" [Practical Instruction to Order One’s Life According to Saintly Precepts: Offered by Father Antonio Garriga of the Society of Jesus. As a Brief Memorial and Memento of the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius Loyola, Founder of the Society]. World Digital Library (in Spanish). Misiones, Argentina. Retrieved 7 June 2013.
  5. ^ Lynch, John (29 October 1993) [1985]. "From independence to national organization". In Bethell, Leslie (ed.). Argentina Since Independence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 45, 46. ISBN 9780521439886. Retrieved 2 May 2023.
  6. ^ Scobie Argentina Oxford University Press, 1964, pages 22–3
  7. ^ Hines, Barbara (Fall 2010). "The Right to Migrate as a Human Right: The Current Argentine Immigration Law" (PDF). Cornell International Law Journal. 43 (3): 479. Retrieved 2 May 2023. In 1876, the Argentine government enacted its first immigration law, Law No. 817 of Immigration and Colonization, popularly known as the Avellaneda Law, which incorporated the protection of foreigners that had been enshrined in the law and reflected the constitutional principles of openness toward foreigners and enjoyment of rights on an equal basis with citizens.[...] During the period between 1869 and 1914, millions of primarily European immigrants arrived in Argentina.
  8. ^ Eidt, Robert C. (1971). Pioneer Settlement in Northeast Argentina. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 77. ISBN 9780299059200. Retrieved 2 May 2023. On December 22, 1881, preparations for federalizing Misiones were completed and the area was declared a national Territory.
  9. ^ Jusionyte, Ieva (2015). Savage Frontier: Making News and Security on the Argentine Border. Oakland, California: Univ of California Press. p. 70. ISBN 9780520286474. Retrieved 2 May 2023. In 1953 the National Territory of Misiones became a province and, when in 1958 its constitution was approved, state-building in the region was officially over.
  10. ^ a b c d (in Spanish). Ministerio de Turismo. Archived from the original on 30 March 2017. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g (in Spanish). Secretaria de Mineria de la Nacion (Argentina). Archived from the original on 25 September 2011. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  12. ^ a b c Rubio 2018, p. 185.
  13. ^ I.A.D.E.R

Books edit

  • Rubio, Gerardo; Lavado, Raul; Pereyra, Fernando (2018). The Soils of Argentina. Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-76853-3. ISBN 978-3-319-76853-3. S2CID 199492966.

External links edit

  • Gobierno de la Provincia de Misiones Official website (in Spanish)
  • Pictures of Misiones 2010-12-10 at the Wayback Machine

misiones, province, misiones, redirects, here, misiones, paraguay, misiones, department, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, rem. Misiones redirects here For Misiones in Paraguay see Misiones Department This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Misiones Province news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Misiones Spanish pronunciation miˈsjones Missions is one of the 23 provinces of Argentina located in the northeastern corner of the country in the Mesopotamia region It is surrounded by Paraguay to the northwest Brazil to the north east and south and Corrientes Province of Argentina to the southwest Misiones Provincia de MisionesProvinceProvince of MisionesFlagCoat of armsAnthem Misionerita The Song for the Child of Misiones Location of Misiones within ArgentinaCoordinates 26 55 S 54 31 W 26 92 S 54 52 W 26 92 54 52Country ArgentinaCapitalPosadasSubdivisionsList Departments 17Municipalities 78Government GovernorHugo Passalacqua FRC Deputies7 Senators3AreaRanked 21st Total29 801 km2 11 506 sq mi Population 2022 census 1 Total1 280 960 Rank9th Density43 km2 110 sq mi DemonymmisioneroGDP Totalpeso 445 billion US 17 billion 2018 2 Time zoneUTC 3 ART ISO 3166 codeAR NHDI 2021 0 842 very high 11th 3 Websitewww wbr misiones wbr gov wbr arThis was an early area of Roman Catholic missionary activity by the Society of Jesus in what was then called the province of Paraguay beginning in the early 17th century In 1984 the ruins of four mission sites in Argentina were designated World Heritage Sites by UNESCO 4 Contents 1 History 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Population 4 Economy 5 Government 6 Political division 7 Notable people 8 Twinning and cooperation 9 Villages 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Books 12 External linksHistory editSee also History of yerba mate nbsp 1846 impression of San Ignacio Mini a Jesuit Reduction abandoned following the temporary abolition of the order in 1773 Indigenous peoples of various tribes lived in the area of the future province for thousands of years At the time of European encounter the area was occupied by the Kaingang and Xokleng tribes later followed by the Guarani tribe The first European to visit the region Sebastian Cabot discovered Apipe Falls while navigating the Parana River in December 1527 In 1541 Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca reached the Iguazu Falls In the 17th century members of the Society of Jesus came to the region as missionaries initially led by Diego de Torres Bello 1551 1638 From 1609 onwards the Jesuits established a string of Jesuit Reductions most notably that of San Ignacio founded in 1610 In a few years they set up 30 mission villages They taught the Guarani western style agriculture and crafts Their crafts were sold and traded along the river and they shared in the Reductions prosperity In 1759 the Portuguese government at the insistence of its anti Jesuit Secretary of State the Marquis de Pombal ordered all Reductions closed in its territory which then included much of present day Misiones Province The Marquis eventually prevailed in 1773 on Pope Clement XIV to have the Jesuit Order suppressed With the abandoning of the missions the prosperous trade surrounding these Reductions quickly vanished Colonists imposed a brutal plantation economy in the region forcing the Guarani to act as slave labor nbsp Steamer on the riverbank at Posadas in 1892In 1814 Gervasio Posadas the Director of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata declared Misiones annexed to Argentina s Corrientes at this time Argentina was quasi independent but nominally still a Spanish colony Argentina did not exert de facto control over Misiones which was claimed by several countries and effectively governed itself In 1830 Argentine military forces from Corrientes Province took control of Misiones In 1838 Paraguay occupied Misiones claiming the area on the basis that the Misiones population consisted of indigenous Guarani the major ethnic group of Paraguay In 1865 Paraguayan forces invaded Misiones again in what became the War of the Triple Alliance 1864 1870 Following the defeat of Paraguay and its peace agreement with Argentina eventually signed in 1876 Paraguay gave up its claim to the Misiones territory Although Argentina had claimed Misiones since 1814 academics tend to interpret Argentine possession of Misiones as beginning with the defeat of Paraguay in the War of the Triple Alliance John Lynch writes that the treaty of alliance i e against Paraguay contained secret clauses providing for the annexation of disputed territory in northern Paraguay by Brazil and regions in the east and west of Paraguay by Argentina After a long and harrowing war 1865 70 Argentina prised from a prostrate Paraguay territory in Misiones between the Parana and the Uruguay and other land further west 5 Scobie states that the political status of Misiones remained vague and that Argentina gained the region as a by product of the Paraguayan war in the 1860s 6 nbsp Ukrainian immigrants harvest yerba mate in 1920 Despite challenging conditions Misiones attracted considerable European immigration in the early 20th century The War of the Triple Alliance left Paraguay much impoverished and Misiones benefited economically from belonging to Argentina citation needed In 1876 the Argentine President Nicolas Avellaneda assisted by his close friend General Pietro Canestro an Italian nobleman who devoted much of his life and wealth to the achievement and sustainability of the peace in the region proclaimed the Immigration and Colonization Law This law fostered the immigration of European colonists 7 in order to populate the vast unspoiled Argentinian territories citation needed On 22 December 1881 the national government in Buenos Aires detached the National Territory of Misiones es from the province of Corrientes 8 Several colonizing companies formed under the Immigration and Colonization Law One of them Adolf Schwelm s Eldorado Colonizacion y Explotacion de Bosques Ltda S A founded the city of Eldorado in 1919 with a port on the Upper Parana Its agricultural colonies and experimental farms the orange and grapefruit tree plantations and the cultivation of yerba mate the mills and the dryers for such product are characteristic of this area Swedish Argentines became well known for growing yerba mate Misiones received many immigrants mostly from Europe coming mainly via Southern Brazil Some came from Buenos Aires and from Eastern Europe in particular large numbers of Poles and Ukrainians Since then when Misiones has continued to benefit economically citation needed and has developed politically within Argentina It has been successfully integrated into the Argentine state citation needed As of 2016 update control of the province is not contested On December 10 1953 the National Territory of Misiones gained provincial status in accordance with Law 14 294 and its constitution was approved on April 21 1958 9 Misiones received more attention from national policy makers following a 1973 international agreement to construct the Yacyreta hydroelectric dam on a point in the Parana River shared by Paraguay and Corrientes Province When the dam became fully operative in the 1990s the Parana s waters all along the Misiones shores rose They flooded lands that the dam s authorities had failed to clear and condition adequately resulting in the onset of mosquito transmitted illnesses such as leishmaniasis yellow fever dengue and malaria The entire Misiones shores along the Parana River is now confined by two dams one of them Yacireta downstream of the river and the other Itaipu located in Brazil and Paraguay upstream of the river and north of Puerto Iguazu As of 2016 update Argentina was pursuing an agreement with Paraguay to expand the reservoir works in order to double the facility s electricity production Geography editMisiones is the second smallest province after Tucuman nbsp View of Iguazu Falls nbsp Alto Parana Atlantic forestsThe Misiones plateau includes a part of Brazil across the border The rocks contain significant quantities of iron which forms a part of the soil giving it a reddish color At the center of the plateau rises the Sierra de Misiones its highest peak 843 m near Bernardo de Irigoyen in the Cerro Rincon The province is embraced by three big rivers including the Parana Uruguay and Iguazu Iguazu Falls are spectacular waterfalls on the Iguazu River in the northwest corner of the province near the city of Puerto Iguazu Misiones shares the falls with the Brazilian state of Parana in that nation s Southern Region Meanwhile the international border with Paraguay is close by Climate edit See also Climate of Argentina and Climatic regions of Argentina nbsp Koppen climate map of Misiones Province The province has a humid subtropical climate characterized by a lack of a dry season and abundant rainfall throughout the year 10 Under the Koppen climate classification it is classified as Cfa 11 There are four distinct seasons although winters and autumns are fairly short 11 The mean annual temperature is around 21 C 70 F 10 June August typically register the coldest days when temperatures can fall below 10 C 50 F 10 However rare incursions of polar air into the province from the south can lead to frost 11 Summers are hot with temperatures exceeding 32 C 90 F from December to February 10 One of the main characteristic is the presence of hills in the central and northern parts of the province leading to lower temperatures as a result of the higher elevation 11 Average annual rainfall ranges from a low of 1 870 millimetres 74 in in the south to 2 360 millimetres 93 in in the north 12 The rainfall pattern in the province has a bimodal distribution with two peaks occurring in Spring and Autumn with winters being the driest 12 The exceptions are the north and higher altitude areas where precipitation is well distributed throughout the year 12 Snowfall has occurred at the higher hills 11 For example during the winter of 1975 snowfall was observed and accumulated in Bernando de Irigoyen one of the coldest towns in the province due to its high altitude 815 m 2 674 ft 11 Owing to the humid climate and high rainfall relative humidity is high 11 The vegetation is the so called Selva Misionera es Part of it has been transformed by mankind to implant cultures and ranching The original biome is protected in Iguazu National Park part of the Alto Parana Atlantic forests in turn part of the Atlantic Forest biome Population editThere are 1 101 593 people living in Misiones according to the national census of 2010 A part of the population is descendant of indigenous peoples especially Guaranis and also Spanish who reached during the colonization and mixed with natives Another part of the residents are descendants of European immigrants Unlike many regions of Argentina where the immigrants came through Buenos Aires most of the immigrants who settled in Misiones came through Southern Brazil The ethnic groups who settled in Misiones after Spaniards are Italians Germans Poles Ukrainians Swiss Russians Swedes Danes and a small number of Arabs Japanese and recently Laotians in the late 1970s and Chinese in the 2000s From the 1960s the province has also received immigrants from Brazil mostly descendants of East Europeans and Paraguay mostly descendants both of indigenous peoples and Spaniards The literacy rate is 91 4 Economy edit nbsp Terminal at Puerto Iguazu International Airport nbsp Yerba mate plantation Misiones economy like most in northern Argentina is relatively underdeveloped yet fairly well diversified Its 2006 output was estimated at US 4 8 billion which shall be around US 7 2 billion in 2011 according to Argentina s economical growing or US 4 940 per capita around US 6 500 in 2011 over 40 below the national average 13 Though its rainy erosion prone geography discourages intensive crop farming agriculture makes an important contribution to the province s economy adding about 10 to the total Misiones thick forests have long provided for the ample production of roundwood without excessive impact on its ecosystem The principal exploited trees are the Parana pine Guatambu Cedar Petiribi Incense Cane water pipe Anchico Eucalyptus and Gueyca Misiones chief source of agricultural income however has long been the cultivation of yerba mate Misiones is Argentina s leading producer yielding about half a million tons annually Tea citrus fruit and in minor amounts tobacco sugar cane rice coffee cocoa and coconut are also cultivated in Misiones citation needed Light manufacturing and tourism also contribute to the local economy each adding about 13 to the total Government edit nbsp Governor s offices PosadasThe provincial government is divided into the usual three branches the executive headed by a popularly elected governor who appoint the cabinet the legislative and the judiciary headed by the Supreme Court Main articles Chamber of Representatives of Misiones and Governor of Misiones Province The Constitution of Misiones Province forms the formal law of the province nbsp Misiones Provincial PoliceIn Argentina the most important law enforcement organization is the Argentine Federal Police but the additional work is carried out by the Misiones Provincial Police Political division edit nbsp Misiones Province Political DivisionThe province is divided in 17 departments Spanish departamentos Department CapitalApostoles Department ApostolesCainguas Department Campo GrandeCandelaria Department Santa AnaCapital Department PosadasConcepcion de la Sierra Department Concepcion de la SierraEldorado Department EldoradoGeneral Manuel Belgrano Department Bernardo de IrigoyenGuarani Department El SoberbioIguazu Department Puerto EsperanzaLeandro N Alem Department Leandro N Alem MisionesLibertador General San Martin Department Puerto RicoMontecarlo Department MontecarloObera Department OberaSan Ignacio San IgnacioSan Javier Department San JavierSan Pedro Department San PedroVeinticinco de Mayo Department Alba PosseNotable people editClotilde Gonzalez de Fernandez 1880 1935 pioneer of education in Misiones ProvinceTwinning and cooperation editMisiones is twinned with nbsp Pyrenees Atlantiques France since 2012 Villages editAlmafuerte Campo Ramon Cerro Azul Cerro Cora Colonia Alberdi Colonia Aurora Colonia Delicia Colonia Polana Fachinal Florentino Ameghino Garuhape Mi Gobernador Lopez Gobernador Roca Itacaruare Los Helechos Olegario Victor Andrade Profundidad San MartinSee also editHito Tres Fronteras Yacireta dam Immigrant s Festival History of yerba mateReferences edit Nuevos datos provisorios del Censo 2022 Argentina tiene 46 044 703 habitantes Infobae 31 January 2023 Retrieved 2023 02 03 PBG Misiones El mapa del desarrollo humano en Argentina PDF United Nations Development Programme 25 June 2023 Garriga Antonio 1713 Instruccion practica para ordenar santamente la vida que ofrece el P Antonio Garriga de la Compania de Iesus Como brebe memorial y recuerdo a los que hazen los exercicios espirituales de S Ignacio de Loyola fundador de la misma Compania Practical Instruction to Order One s Life According to Saintly Precepts Offered by Father Antonio Garriga of the Society of Jesus As a Brief Memorial and Memento of the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius Loyola Founder of the Society World Digital Library in Spanish Misiones Argentina Retrieved 7 June 2013 Lynch John 29 October 1993 1985 From independence to national organization In Bethell Leslie ed Argentina Since Independence Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 45 46 ISBN 9780521439886 Retrieved 2 May 2023 Scobie Argentina Oxford University Press 1964 pages 22 3 Hines Barbara Fall 2010 The Right to Migrate as a Human Right The Current Argentine Immigration Law PDF Cornell International Law Journal 43 3 479 Retrieved 2 May 2023 In 1876 the Argentine government enacted its first immigration law Law No 817 of Immigration and Colonization popularly known as the Avellaneda Law which incorporated the protection of foreigners that had been enshrined in the law and reflected the constitutional principles of openness toward foreigners and enjoyment of rights on an equal basis with citizens During the period between 1869 and 1914 millions of primarily European immigrants arrived in Argentina Eidt Robert C 1971 Pioneer Settlement in Northeast Argentina Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press p 77 ISBN 9780299059200 Retrieved 2 May 2023 On December 22 1881 preparations for federalizing Misiones were completed and the area was declared a national Territory Jusionyte Ieva 2015 Savage Frontier Making News and Security on the Argentine Border Oakland California Univ of California Press p 70 ISBN 9780520286474 Retrieved 2 May 2023 In 1953 the National Territory of Misiones became a province and when in 1958 its constitution was approved state building in the region was officially over a b c d Geografia in Spanish Ministerio de Turismo Archived from the original on 30 March 2017 Retrieved 29 March 2017 a b c d e f g Provincia de Misiones Clima y Meteorologia in Spanish Secretaria de Mineria de la Nacion Argentina Archived from the original on 25 September 2011 Retrieved 29 March 2017 a b c Rubio 2018 p 185 I A D E R Books edit Rubio Gerardo Lavado Raul Pereyra Fernando 2018 The Soils of Argentina Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 319 76853 3 ISBN 978 3 319 76853 3 S2CID 199492966 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Misiones Province Gobierno de la Provincia de Misiones Official website in Spanish French Culture in Misiones Pictures of Misiones Archived 2010 12 10 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Misiones Province amp oldid 1192031021, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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