Abstract

This article is devoted to the origins of the Cuban state-legal subjectivity. The Cuban nation, which was born in the second half of the 18th century, went through a series of fundamental transformations in the 19th century, the basic result of which was the liberation from the yoke of the Spanish metropolis and the achievement of national independence. A number of social, foreign policy, and financial and economic factors contributed to this aspect. The American protectorate, however, imposed on Cuba in the form of the Platt Constitutional Amendment of 1901, did not allow the Island of Liberty to enjoy full sovereignty, which ultimately led to the victory of the Cuban Revolution of 1959.

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