Abstract
ABSTRACTThis article reconstructs the Ibero-American debate on free ports by looking both at the circulation of ideas and news in the Atlantic, and at the political and institutional changes that the debate generated, focusing on the cases of Veracruz and Cadiz. It aims to show how the discourse on free ports permeated both sides of the Atlantic and became a pervasive political, economic, and intellectual aspect of the desire for reform and independence.
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