Comparative politics of Latin America: democracy at last?
"This text offers a unique balance of comparative politics theory and interdisciplinary country-specific context, of a thematic organization and in-depth country case studies, of culture and economics, of scholarship and pedagogy. No other textbook draws on such a diverse range of scholarly lit...
Gespeichert in:
Beteilige Person: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York [u.a.]
Routledge
2011
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schlagwörter: | |
Links: | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=022475700&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
Zusammenfassung: | "This text offers a unique balance of comparative politics theory and interdisciplinary country-specific context, of a thematic organization and in-depth country case studies, of culture and economics, of scholarship and pedagogy. No other textbook draws on such a diverse range of scholarly literature to help students understand the ins and outs of politics in Latin America today. The insightful historical background in early chapters provides students with a way to think about how the past influences the present. However, while history plays a part in this text, comparative politics is the primary focus, explaining through detailed case studies and carefully paced analysis such concepts as democratic breakdown and transition, formal and informal institutions, the rule of law, and the impact of globalization. Concepts and theories from comparative politics are well integrated into country-specific narratives and vice versa, leading to a richer understanding of both. Several important pedagogical aids foster student learning: Learning objectives at the start of every chapter "Learning checkpoints" at the end of each section to insure comprehension Bolded key terms focus attention on important concepts Glossary at the end of the book provides a useful reference Discussion questions at the end of each chapter Integrated case studies on most countries in the region A companion website with practice quizzes and other useful study aids"-- Provided by publisher. |
Umfang: | XII, 594 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 9780415889179 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | Contents
Acknowledgments
xiii
Introduction
Latín
American Studies and the Comparative
Study of Democracy
1
What Do Latin Americans Tell Pollsters About Democracy?
3
What Defines Latin America as a Geographic Area?
6
What Method Should We Use to Understand the Region?
7
Preview of the Chapters
10
An Invitation
14
PART I COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY AND
LATIN AMERICAN AREA STUDIES
17
Chapter
1
Conceptions of Democracy
19
Liberal Democracy in the Real World of Latin America
19
Are There Other Kinds of Democracy?
21
Latin America and the Third Wave of Liberal Democracy
23
Liberalism, Pluralism, and Polyarchy
28
How Comparativists Apply Polyarchy to the Study of Latin America
31
Democracy Without People?
36
Popular Democracy
37
Corporatism: A Latin American Way of Politics?
39
Communism: Fidel Castro Claims Cuba Is Democratic
43
Not Taking Democracy for Granted
45
Chapter
2
Inequality, Political Culture, and Popular Sovereignty
47
Strong Presidents,
Personalism,
and Toy Democracies
(?) 48
Clientelism and Corruption in the Political Culture
50
Inequality, Poverty, and Democracy
53
Race and Ethnic Inequality
56
Gender and Exclusion
59
Class, Culture, and Politics
62
vi
Contents
PART II HISTORY: COLONIAL LEGACIES, MASS POLITICS,
AND DEMOCRACY
65
Chapter
3
Democratic and Autocratic Threads in
Latin American History
67
Indigenous Peoples and the Pre-Columbian Legacy
69
Indigenous Politics Today: Bolivia s
Evo
Morales and
Mexico s Zapatistas
75
The Colonial Era
79
Why Did the Conquistadors Succeed? Why Does It Matter Today?
82
Afro-Latin America: Roots and Slavery
85
Some Colonial Patterns That Persist Today
87
National Identity in Latin America
89
Independence or Neocolonialism
—
or Both?
91
Chapter
4
Political Without Economic Independence
93
The Path to Independence in Spanish America
94
Brazil s Divergent Path to Independence
98
Failed States, New Nations
100
Rebuilding States, Modernization
103
Conservatives, Liberals, and Modernization
104
Commodity Booms and Busts
—
New Exports, New Elites
105
Mexico: From Failed State to Modernizing Dictatorship
106
Paraguay s Unsuccessful Break With the Pattern
107
Foreign Influences and Domestic Reactions
109
Stirrings of Change at the Dawn of a New Century
112
Independence
—
Did It Make a Difference?
113
PART III DEVELOPMENT AND MASS POLITICS IN
THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
117
Chapter
5
Development and Dependency: Theory and
Practice in Latin America
119
Contending Approaches to Development
120
Modernization Theory
122
Dependency Theory and Latin America s Structuralists
126
Import Substitution
128
Marxism s Influence in Latin America and Development Theory
131
Institutionalism
134
Contents
vii
Peripheral Vision: Latin America in the World System
134
A Populist Path to Development?
139
Chapter
6
Populism, Development, and Democracy in
the Twentieth Century
140
What Is Populism?
141
Latin America s Masses Enter Politics
143
The Political Logic of Import Substitution Industrialization
145
Case Studies of Populism and
ISI
147
Brazil: Getulio Vargas and the
Estado Novo
148
Argentina: Juan and
Eva Perón
151
Chile: From the Radical Party to Salvador
Allende
154
Mexico: Populism After Revolution
157
Assessing Populism and
ISI
—
Lessons for Today
159
The Peasants Were Usually Left Out
160
Did
ISI
Reduce Dependency?
161
Did Populism Advance or Retard Democracy?
163
Recent Populism in Venezuela, Peru, and Ecuador
165
History and Politics: Some Final Thoughts
166
PART IV DEMOCRATIC BREAKDOWN, ECONOMIC
STRUGGLES, AND TRANSITIONS
169
Chapter
7
Democratic Breakdown and Military Rule
171
What Causes Democratic Governments to Break Down?
172
Social and Political Polarization
174
The Breakdown of Populist Democracy
176
Cuba and Cold War Politics
—
An External Element in Breakdown
178
Breakdown in Brazil: Setting the Trend
180
Breakdown in Argentina: The Dirty War
182
Breakdown in Chile: The
Allende
Tragedy and Pinochet
184
Shall We Coup? Why and When Does the Military Intervene?
190
Internal Factors
190
Contextual Factors
191
Costa Rica: The Exception That Proves the Rule?
193
Politics in the Ranks
194
Bureaucratic Authoritarianism
196
Populism in Uniform
200
What Role for Latin Americas Military Today?
201
Will the Military Return to Power?
205
viii Contents
Chapter
8
State and Market in Latin America
207
From Democracy to Military Rule and Back Again
208
New Economic Policies After
ISI
208
The Lost Decade of the
1980s
and the Debt Crisis
210
How the Debt Crisis Started
210
Sovereignty, Democracy, and Structural Adjustment
214
Population Explosion of the Cities
217
The Decline of Economic Nationalism
220
Adjusting to the Global Market: Three Variations
223
The Chilean
Neoliberal
Success Story
223
Brazil: The Business-Friendly State
224
Cuba: Escaping the Debt Crisis and Not Escaping Debt or Crisis
226
Did Latin Americans Democratically Choose
Neoliberalism?
228
Chapter
9
Transitions and Pacted Democracies in Brazil and
the Southern Cone
230
Types of Transition, Democracy, and Regime Change
231
Negotiating Democratic Transitions: Compromise and Risk
234
Cases of Transition in the Southern Cone and Brazil
236
Chile s Controlled Transition
237
Argentina s Transition and National Humiliation
244
Brazil s Gradual Transition
250
Human Rights in Times of Transition: The Case of Uruguay
255
Forbidden to Forget
257
Chapter
10
Transitions From Party-Dominant Regimes in
Mexico and Venezuela
259
Mexico s Transition to Multiparty Politics
260
Venezuela s Transition From Pacted Democracy to Radical Populism
269
Conclusions Drawn From Six Cases of Transition
276
PARTV REVOLUTION AND DEMOCRACY
281
Chapter
11
Nationalism and Revolution in Mexico and Cuba
283
The Mexican Revolution
285
Origins: Modernization for the Few
286
The Revolutionary Civil War
288
Did the Mexican Revolution Make a Difference?
290
Chiapas, the Zapatistas, and Revolutionary Revival
292
Contents ix
Guatemala s Frustrated Revolution: United Fruit, the CIA, and the
1954
Coup
294
The Cuban Revolution
296
Origins: Nationalism and Neocolonialism
296
The Rise of Fidel Castro and the Revolution of
1959 299
Radicalization of the Cuban Revolution
304
Nationalism and Communism: The Struggle for the Legacy of
José Martí
305
Successes and Failures: Taking Stock of Cuba s Revolution
307
Human Rights, One-Party Rule, and Cuba s Uncertain Future
309
Relevance of Revolution
311
Chapter
12
Democracy in Times of Revolution
313
Ideology and Revolution in Latin America
314
Communism and Revolution in Latin America
314
The Latin American Left Divides Over Revolutionary Strategy
318
Liberation Theology
—
Religion in Revolution and Revolution in
Religion
319
The Social Question and Revolution in Central America
322
The
Nicaraguán
Revolution
325
El Salvador s Near Revolution
328
Genocide and Resurgent Revolution in Guatemala
330
Violence, Civil Society, and Revolution
331
Terrorism and Peru s
Sendero Luminoso
332
Colombia s Tragic Civil War
334
Democracy and Revolution
337
PART VI MOVEMENTS, CIVIL SOCIETY, AND PARTIES
339
Chapter
13
Social Class and Politics in Latin America
341
The Social Class System
342
Class-Based Organizations and Movements
347
Business Interests: Merchants, Bankers, Landowners, and Industrialists
347
Drug Lords
—
A New Business Sector
348
Working Class Movements and Unions
351
The Urban Poor and Neighborhood Associations
356
Neighborhood Organizations and Populist Politics
357
Peasants, Rural Movements, and Landlords
360
The Evolving Rural Economy
361
Class- and Nonclass-Based Movements
363
χ
Contents
Chapter
14
New Social Movements, New Politics?
365
Movements, Groups, and Political Opportunities
367
New Social Movements and Their Issues
370
Human Rights Groups
370
Women s Movements
372
Racial and Ethnic Movements
373
Afro-Descendant Movements in Brazil and the Caribbean
374
Indigenous Movements
375
Social Movements and Global Networking
379
Social Movements and the Pink Tide
382
Movements and Civil Society
383
Chapter
15
Parties and Electoral Politics
387
Party Systems
388
Types of Parties in Latin America
389
Dinosaurs: Traditional and Populist Parties
389
Strange Bedfellows and the Costa Rican Exception
394
New Social Movements and Parties: An Uneasy Relationship
396
Mexico s
PRD
396
Brazilian Workers Party
397
Why Do Movement Parties Often Disappoint Movements?
399
Parties Growing Out of Armed Struggles
401
The PCC: A Movement Party?
403
Personalist
Parties and the New Caudilloism
404
Neopopulism and Neoliberals
405
New Conservative Parties
406
Neopopulism on the Left
407
Technopols,
Media, and Think-Tanks
409
What Makes an Election Fair?
412
Shall We Party?
416
PART V» RIGHTS, INSTITUTIONS, AND LAW:
THE FORMAL RULES OF THE GAME
419
Chapter
16
Institutions, Constitutions, and Governance
421
Constitutions and the Search for Democratic Stability
423
Presidentialism and Impeachment of the Street
424
Contents
x¡
Democratic
Governance
426
New Institutionalism and Constitutional Design
429
Executive-Legislative Relationships
429
Consequences of Reform
431
Parties, Presidents, and Congress
436
Argentina
436
Chile
437
Brazil
440
Fair Elections and Democratic Legitimacy
442
Institutions and Innovation
445
Conclusion: Institutions Matter
448
Chapter
17
Corruption, Human Rights, and the Rule of Law
451
Law and Order in Latin America
452
Crime and Justice
452
Corruption
456
Human Rights and the Rule of Law
460
Human Rights and State Violence
462
Drug Wars and the War on Terrorism
464
Rating Human Rights Records
468
Freedom House
468
Rating Cuba
470
Progress on Law and Rights?
472
PART
VIII
GLOBALIZATION AND THE ROLE OF
THE UNITED STATES
475
Chapter
18
Democracy in Times of Globalization
477
The Obsolescent Nation-State?
479
Economic Globalization and Latin America
481
Manufacturing,
Maquilas,
and the Global Assembly Line
483
Globalizing Agribusiness and Mining
486
Tourism
488
Trade Agreements and Regional Economic Blocs
490
North American Free Trade Agreement
491
Debt and Resistance in Argentina
496
An Alternative Economic Integration Scheme
498
Latin America Meets the World: Separately or United?
501
Transnational Issues and Global Citizenship
503
xii Contents
Climate
Change
504
Disease
507
Migration
508
Democracy Without Sovereign Nation-States?
512
Chapter
19
Democracy, Intervention, and American Foreign Policy
514
Conditional Support for Democracy
515
Sovereign Neighbors or Backyard ?
516
U.S. Military Intervention
520
The Organization of American States
(OAS)
526
Intervention in the Cold War: Covert Operations and
Democratic Breakdowns
528
Destabilization: Focus on Chile
530
Intervention in the Caribbean: Democracy at Gunpoint?
532
Cuba, the Bay of Pigs, and the Economic Blockade
534
The Contra War in Nicaragua
538
Funding War, Preaching Democracy in Central America
541
Endowing Democracy: State Building and Intervention
543
Returning to First Questions
548
Conclusion Tentative Answers to Frequently Asked Questions
About Democracy in Latin America
552
Glossary
554
References
564
Index
581
|
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spellingShingle | Hellinger, Daniel C. 1948- Comparative politics of Latin America democracy at last? Demokratie (DE-588)4011413-2 gnd |
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title | Comparative politics of Latin America democracy at last? |
title_auth | Comparative politics of Latin America democracy at last? |
title_exact_search | Comparative politics of Latin America democracy at last? |
title_full | Comparative politics of Latin America democracy at last? Daniel C. Hellinger |
title_fullStr | Comparative politics of Latin America democracy at last? Daniel C. Hellinger |
title_full_unstemmed | Comparative politics of Latin America democracy at last? Daniel C. Hellinger |
title_short | Comparative politics of Latin America |
title_sort | comparative politics of latin america democracy at last |
title_sub | democracy at last? |
topic | Demokratie (DE-588)4011413-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Demokratie Lateinamerika Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=022475700&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hellingerdanielc comparativepoliticsoflatinamericademocracyatlast |