La trascendencia socio-jurídica del cooperativismo agropecuario en Cuba
Abstract
The cooperative movement in Cuba, at the beginning it was based on a mercantilist foundation driven by the Commercial Code, although it found traces of its identity in the Associations Law of 1989. During the neocolonial stage the impulses of the growth of the cooperative were diminished by the negligence and corruption of its rulers, reason why in the prerevolutionary stage the cooperative did not have roots. With the triumph of the revolution several legal bodies are dictated until the recent promulgation of Decree-Law No. 365/2018 that it was analyzed from the variables concept, constitution, partners and cooperative relations, social organs, economic regime, social organization and cooperative relations-State, shows a step forward in the legal regulation and understanding of the figure in the country.
Received: 29 October 2019
Accepted: 21 November 2019
Published online: 20 December 2019
Downloads
The authors, by submitting their manuscripts to the Deusto Estudios Cooperativos (DEC), accept the conditions listed below on copyright and undertake to comply with them. They do not sign any document of assignment of rights to the Publisher.
1. Authorship: The author must be the sole creator of the work or legally acting on behalf of and with the full agreement of all the authors.
2. Copyright and Code of conduct:
a) Authors warrant that their work is original; has not been previously copyrighted or published in any form; is not under consideration for publication elsewhere; its submission and publication do not violate the Ethical Guidelines of DEC and any codes (of conduct), laws or any rights of any third party; and no publication payment by the Publisher (University of Deusto) is required.
b) Authors grant to the Publisher the worldwide, sub-licensable, and royalty-free right to exploit the work in all forms and media of expression, now known or developed in the future, for educational and scholarly purposes.
c) Authors retain the right to present, display, distribute, develop, and republish their work to progress their scientific career provided the original publication source (DEC) is properly acknowledged.
d) Authors warrant that no permissions or licences of any kind have been granted or will be granted that might infringe the rights granted to the Publisher.