Secretariat of Education (Argentina)
Secretaría de Educación | |
Palacio Sarmiento, headquarters | |
Secretariat overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 1949 |
Preceding Secretariat | |
Superseding Secretariat | |
Jurisdiction | Government of Argentina |
Headquarters | Palacio Sarmiento, Buenos Aires |
Annual budget | $ 397,168,460,932 (2021)[1] |
Secretariat executive |
|
Website | argentina.gob.ar/educacion |
Argentina portal |
The Secretariat of Education (Spanish: Secretaría de Educación, formerly Ministry of Education) of Argentina is a secretariat and former ministry of the national executive power that oversaw education policies on all educational levels, alongside the governments of the twenty-three provinces of Argentina and the City of Buenos Aires.
The Ministry was founded in 1949, when the state's education portfolio was split from the Ministry of Justice and Public Instruction in the first cabinet of President Juan Domingo Perón;[2] the first minister was Oscar Ivanissevich.[3]
After president Javier Milei dissolved the Ministry of Education turning it into a secretariat,[4] Carlos Torrendell was appointed as secretary.[5] The secretariat is controlled by the Ministry of Human Capital.[6]
The secretariat of Education is headquartered at the Sarmiento Palace, popularly known as "Pizzurno Palace" due to its location on Pasaje Pizzurno, in the Buenos Aires neighbourhood of Recoleta.[7]
List of ministers and secretaries
[edit]No. | Minister | Party | Term | President | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ministry of Education (1949–1956) | ||||||
1 | Oscar Ivanissevich | Peronist Party | 11 March 1949 – 11 May 1950 | Juan Domingo Perón | ||
2 | Armando Méndez San Martín | Peronist Party | 11 May 1950 – 29 June 1955 | |||
3 | Francisco Marcos Anglada | Peronist Party | 29 June 1955 – 21 September 1955 | |||
4 | Atilio Dell'Oro Maini | Christian Democratic Party | 21 September 1955 – 17 May 1956 | Eduardo Lonardi | ||
Pedro Eugenio Aramburu | ||||||
Ministry of Education and Justice (1949–1956) | ||||||
5 | Carlos Adrogué | Radical Civic Union | 8 June 1956 – 25 January 1957 | Pedro Eugenio Aramburu | ||
6 | Acdel Ernesto Salas | Independent | 25 January 1957 – 1 May 1958 | |||
7 | Luis Rafael Mac Kay | Radical Civic Union | 1 May 1958 – 26 March 1962 | Arturo Frondizi | ||
8 | Miguel Sussini | Intransigent Radical Civic Union | 26 March 1962 – 29 March 1962 | |||
29 March 1962 – 19 October 1962 | José María Guido | |||||
9 | Alberto Rodríguez Galán | Independent | 11 October 1962 – 15 May 1963 | |||
10 | José Mariano Astigueta | Independent | 15 May 1963 – 12 October 1963 | |||
11 | Carlos Alconada Aramburú | Radical Civic Union | 12 October 1963 – 28 June 1966 | Arturo Illia | ||
Ministry of Education (1966–1973) | ||||||
12 | Carlos María Gelly y Obes | Independent | 28 June 1966 – 4 June 1967 | Juan Carlos Onganía | ||
13 | José Mariano Astigueta | Independent | 4 June 1967 – 23 October 1969 | |||
14 | Dardo Pérez Guilhou | Independent | 23 October 1969 – 8 June 1970 | |||
15 | José Luis Cantini | Independent | 8 June 1970 – 23 March 1971 | Roberto Marcelo Levingston | ||
16 | Gustavo Malek | Independent | 23 March 1971 – 25 May 1973 | Alejandro Lanusse | ||
Ministry of Culture and Education (1973) | ||||||
17 | Jorge Alberto Taiana | Justicialist Party | 25 May 1973 – 13 July 1973 | Héctor Cámpora | ||
Ministry of Education (1973–1981) | ||||||
17 | Jorge Alberto Taiana | Justicialist Party | 13 July 1973 – 14 August 1974 | Raúl Lastiri | ||
Juan Domingo Perón | ||||||
Isabel Perón | ||||||
18 | Oscar Ivanissevich | Justicialist Party | 14 August 1974 – 11 August 1975 | Isabel Perón | ||
19 | Pedro J. Arrighi | Justicialist Party | 11 August 1975 – 24 March 1976 | |||
20 | Ricardo P. Bruera | Independent | 29 March 1976 – 28 May 1977 | Jorge Rafael Videla | ||
21 | Juan José Catalán | Independent | 28 May 1977 – 26 August 1977 | |||
22 | Juan Rafael Llerena Amadeo | Independent | 26 August 1977 – 29 March 1981 | |||
Ministry of Culture and Education (1981) | ||||||
23 | Carlos Burundarena | Independent | 29 March 1981 – 12 December 1981 | Roberto Viola | ||
Ministry of Education (1981–1983) | ||||||
24 | Cayetano Licciardo | Independent | 22 December 1981 – 10 December 1983 | Roberto Viola | ||
Ministry of Education and Justice (1983–1989) | ||||||
25 | Carlos Alconada Aramburú | Radical Civic Union | 10 December 1983 – 21 June 1986 | Raúl Alfonsín | ||
26 | Julio Rajneri | Independent | 21 June 1986 – 10 September 1987 | |||
27 | Jorge Federico Sabato | Radical Civic Union | 10 September 1987 – 26 May 1989 | |||
28 | José Gabriel Dumón | Radical Civic Union | 26 May 1989 – 8 July 1989 | |||
Ministry of Education (1989–2001) | ||||||
29 | Antonio Salonia | Independent | 8 July 1989 – 4 December 1992 | Carlos Menem | ||
30 | Jorge Alberto Rodríguez | Justicialist Party | 4 December 1992 – 28 March 1996 | |||
31 | Susana Decibe | Justicialist Party | 28 March 1996 – 7 May 1999 | |||
32 | Manuel García Solá | MID | 7 May 1999 – 10 December 1999 | |||
33 | Juan José Llach | Radical Civic Union | 10 December 1999 – 25 September 2000 | Fernando de la Rúa | ||
34 | Hugo Juri | Radical Civic Union | 25 September 2000 – 20 March 2001 | |||
35 | Andrés Delich | Radical Civic Union | 20 March 2001 – 21 December 2001 | |||
Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (2002–2003) | ||||||
36 | Graciela Giannettasio | Justicialist Party | 3 January 2002 – 25 May 2003 | Eduardo Duhalde | ||
37 | Daniel Filmus | Justicialist Party | 25 May 2003 – 10 December 2007 | Néstor Kirchner | ||
Ministry of Education (2007–2015) | ||||||
38 | Juan Carlos Tedesco | Independent | 10 December 2007 – 20 July 2009 | Cristina Fernández de Kirchner | ||
39 | Alberto Sileoni | Justicialist Party | 20 July 2009 – 10 December 2015 | |||
Ministry of Education and Sports (2015–2017) | ||||||
40 | Esteban Bullrich | Republican Proposal | 10 December 2015 – 17 July 2017 | Mauricio Macri | ||
Ministry of Education (2017–2018) | ||||||
41 | Alejandro Finocchiaro | Republican Proposal | 17 July 2017 – 5 September 2018 | Mauricio Macri | ||
Ministry of Education, Culture, Science and Technology (2018–2019) | ||||||
41 | Alejandro Finocchiaro | Republican Proposal | 5 September 2018 – 10 December 2019 | Mauricio Macri | ||
Ministry of Education (2019–2023) | ||||||
42 | Nicolás Trotta | Independent | 10 December 2019 – 20 September 2021 | Alberto Fernández | ||
43 | Jaime Perczyk | Independent | 20 September 2021 – 10 December 2023 | |||
Secretary of Education (2023–) | ||||||
44 | Carlos Torrendell | Independent | 10 December 2023 – present | Javier Milei |
References
[edit]- ^ "Presupuesto 2021". Ministerio de Economía (in Spanish). 2020. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
- ^ Ferreyra, Gabriela Verónica (8 October 2015). "La educación durante los años peronistas. El Consejo Nacional de Educación y las orientaciones pedagógico-didácticas destinadas a los maestros (1948-1949)" [Education during Peronist Periods. The National Education Council and orientations pedagogic didactics destined for the teachers (1948 – 1949)] (PDF). Revista de Estudios Marítimos y Sociales (in Spanish). Retrieved 20 September 2021.
- ^ [https://www.aacademica.org/000-099/119.pdf La “depuración oficial” en las políticas educativas: la gestión Ivanissevich en el Ministerio de Educación] on UNLP
- ^ Qué ministerios ELIMINÓ Javier MILEI tras su ASUNCIÓN on Cronista.com, 10 Dec 2023
- ^ Jaureguy, Martina (3 December 2023). "What we know about Javier Milei's cabinet so far". Buenos Aires Herald. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
- ^ MINISTERIO DE CAPITAL HUMANO SECRETARÍA DE EDUCACIÓN - Resolución 90/2024 on Boletín Oficial de la Argentina, 4 Apr 2024
- ^ "Clave: Gobierno suma 80 nuevas obras públicas; sube gasto $708.000 millones". Ámbito (in Spanish). 6 August 2021. Retrieved 20 September 2021.