“…While supporters of the dictatorship identified the use of force as a 'war against subversion', 'communism' or 'terrorism', some of its critics considered it a 'dirty war' (a very controversial concept even today), with tens of thousands of victims, among which were union leaders, workers, priests, human rights lawyers, scientists, doctors and leaders of political parties, their friends, acquaintances and relatives, and others who were deemed suspicious. Human rights groups claim even to this today, as an emblem or symbol, the number of '30,000 disappeared' by 'state terror' in the context of a 'genocide' (Crenzel 2008a;Feierstein 2015;Osiel 1986Osiel , 2000. 4 In general, in Argentina and in those Latin American countries which had experienced transitional justice, policies, debates and control practices with respect to common or ordinary crimes coexist with those related to truth, memory and justice surrounding serious human rights violations:…”