Beyond orthodoxy: asserting Latin America's new strategic options toward the United States
In: Latin American politics and society, Volume 53, Issue 4, p. 127-146
ISSN: 1531-426X
1472906 results
Sort by:
In: Latin American politics and society, Volume 53, Issue 4, p. 127-146
ISSN: 1531-426X
World Affairs Online
In: Journal of Latin American studies, Volume 38, Issue 1, p. 226-227
ISSN: 0022-216X
In: International political science abstracts: IPSA, Volume 68, Issue 1, p. 143-143
ISSN: 1751-9292
In: Bulletin of Latin American research: the journal of the Society for Latin American Studies (SLAS), Volume 6, Issue 1, p. 111
ISSN: 1470-9856
In: Latin American Politics and Society, Volume 45, Issue 2, p. 177
In: Latin American politics and society, Volume 55, Issue 3, p. 93-116
ISSN: 1548-2456
AbstractWhy do some protest movements in Latin America succeed in rolling back privatizations while others fail? This article argues that protests against privatizations have tended to succeed under two conditions. First, privatization's opponents form linkages (or "brokerage") across multiple sectors of society. Broad coalitions are more likely to achieve their goals, while groups acting alone, such as labor unions, are more easily defeated or ignored by governments. Second, civil rights are protected but political representation is weak. In that case, opponents have the legal right to protest, but are unlikely to have opportunities for communicating their concerns through formal institutions, which prompts them to channel their demands outside of existing political institutions. Using case examples and logistic regression, this study confirms these arguments and discusses the implications for democracy in the region.
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"The Political Economy of the Developmental State in Latin America" published on by Oxford University Press.
In: Latin American perspectives, Volume 34, Issue 1, p. 7-30
ISSN: 1552-678X
Political exile is a major constitutive feature of Latin American politics. It has contributed to the establishment of the rules of the political game on a transnational basis, both before and after the consolidation of the states. It is linked to the tension between the hierarchical structure of these societies and the political models that predicated participation, the process of fragmentation and conflictive territorial boundaries, the evolution of factions into modern politics, spurring civil wars, political violence, and polarization. This article analyzes exile as a selective mechanism, its transformation into a mass phenomenon, and the creation fo communities of Latin American exiles and expatriates, influential in the framework of transnational politics. References. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Inc., copyright 2007.]
In: Latin American politics and society, Volume 45, Issue 2, p. 159-170
ISSN: 1531-426X
Enthält Rezensionen u.a. von: Babb, Florence E.: After revolution: mapping gender and cultural politics in neoliberal Nicaragua. - Austin : Univ. of Texas Press, 2001. - 314 S
World Affairs Online
In: Latin American politics and society, Volume 43, Issue 4, p. 1
ISSN: 1548-2456
An Indian farm lobby, the Kisan Sammelan / Marcus Franda -- The Farmers' Federation of Thailand / Brewster Grace -- Rural mobilization for modernization in South Korea / Albert Ravenholt -- Ecuadorian agrarian reform / Howard Handelman -- Food policy decision-making in Colombia / Thomas G. Sanders -- Peasants, landlords, and bureaucrats, the politics of agrarian reform in Peru / Howard Handelman -- Agrarian reform and the international consensus / Alan W. Horton
In: Political science quarterly: PSQ ; the journal public and international affairs, Volume 87, p. 401-418
ISSN: 0032-3195
Blog: Two Weeks Notice: A Latin American Politics Blog
Here is a link to the latest draft of the Democratic Party Platform. Here is what I wrote about 2016 in Global Americans. The party is not paying much attention to Latin America, either then or now. Back then, I wrote that countries were just jumbled together. In 2020 they solved that problems by not mentioning countries at all. Mexico is not mentioned at all, even in the discussion of USMCA. I know, I know, the platform is just a basic document of values, with a lot of cooks making the soup. But as I noted last year, is it so hard to say we support the Colombia peace process and anti-corruption efforts in Central America, we value Mexico for everything, and the like?Below is the "Americas" section:Democrats believe the Western Hemisphere is America's strategic home base—a region bound together by common values, history, and vision of a more prosperous, democratic, and secure future. When the United States hosts the region's leaders at next year's Summit of the Americas—the first to be held here since the 1994 inaugural meeting in Miami—we will turn the page on the Trump Administration's denigration and extortion of our neighbors, and we will chart a new era of cooperation based on partnership and shared responsibility for the region we all call home. "Denigration and extortion." Strong, but accurate. I really don't like "strategic home base," which is militarist and imperialist. It's not our home--it's their home.Democrats will reaffirm the importance of North America to U.S. global economiccompetitiveness. We will ensure the USMCA lives up to its commitment to create prosperity for American workers, and we will strictly enforce compliance with its labor and environmental provisions. We will reinvigorate and build upon the North American Plan for Animal and Pandemic Influenza launched under the Obama-Biden Administration and work with our partners to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, which has caused the biggest economic decline in history across Latin America and the Caribbean. This is a funny paragraph, beginning with acknowledging Trump's passage of a new bill, then pivoting to an Obama policy as counterweight. The labor and worker language is like 2016, which also reflected Bernie Sanders' influence, but I feel like the wording is stronger now. Rather than coerce our neighbors into supporting cruel migration policies, we will work with our regional and international partners to address the root causes of migration—violence and insecurity, weak rule of law, lack of educational and economic opportunity, pervasive corruption, and environmental degradation. Rather than encourage climate denial and environmental devastation, we will rally the world to protect the Amazon from deforestation, protect Indigenous peoples, and help vulnerable nations in the Caribbean and Central America adapt to the impacts of climate change. And rather than imitate populist demagogues, we will link arms with our neighbors to realize our shared aspirations for the region's future. This is new and good. In 2016, Democrats framed immigration largely in domestic terms. Viewing it in structural terms, including climate, is a reality-based view, and very necessary.We will reject President Trump's failed Venezuela policy, which has only served to entrench Nicolás Maduro's dictatorial regime and exacerbate a human rights and humanitarian crisis. To rise to the occasion of the world's worst refugee crisis and worst humanitarian crisis outside a warzone in decades, the United States will mobilize its partners across the region and around the world to meet the urgent needs of the people of Venezuela, and grant Temporary Protected Status to Venezuelans in the United States. Democrats believe that the best opportunity to rescue Venezuela's democracy is through smart pressure and effective diplomacy, not empty, bellicose threats untethered to realistic policy goals and motivated by domestic partisan objectives. There are no specifics and Biden has never had any beyond doing mostly what Trump is doing without the empty threats. TPS is clearly critical, so a good step forward and he really needs to contrast himself in Florida on that issue.Democrats will also move swiftly to reverse Trump Administration policies that haveundermined U.S. national interests and harmed the Cuban people and their families in the United States, including its efforts to curtail travel and remittances. Rather than strengthening the regime, we will promote human rights and people-to-people exchanges, and empower the Cuban people to write their own future. This is an easy one. Obama started it, and Biden will get back to that point and move forward again. Subscribe in a reader
In: Studies of the Americas
In: Springer eBooks
In: Political Science and International Studies
Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Analytical framework -- Chapter 3: Bogota. Public space between appropriation and deliberation -- Chapter 4: São Paulo. Pixadores' public scream of hate -- Chapter 5: Valparaíso. A tale of murals, tags and world heritage -- Chapter 6: Oaxaca. Revolutionary art and the (difficult) quest for democracy -- Chapter 7: Havana. Going public, no matter what -- Chapter 8: Conclusion. Street art and democracy. Lessons learned