This book traces the process by which national elections became
international events or, more precisely, what the effects of this
process are on state sovereignty.
Contrary to the conventional wisdom in International Relations -
to judge by the neglect of this phenomenon in the literature - this
book argues that the study of IEM does not belong only in the field
of comparative politics. As a system-wide phenomenon, IEM should
not be restricted to the study of purely domestic politics or of
foreign policy. This book contends that sovereignty has been
partially transformed by the recent emergence of IEM. Furthermore,
the author locates the origins of this change in the Americas,
claiming that the western hemisphere's normative structure - what
Santa-Cruz calls the Western Hemisphere Idea (WHI) - was
particularly conducive to this new understanding of state
sovereignty. This is the first work to engage the issue of IEM in a
comprehensive manner from a theoretical perspective. International
Election Monitoring, Sovereignty, and the Western Hemisphere covers
a broad and relevant scholarly literature, and the cases
comparisons widen the book's appeal, since they illustrate a useful
range of experience.
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