Students of twentieth-century Colombia and Venezuela will find
in the essays useful information on events taking place there
through the mid-1980s. Teachers of Latin American government and
politics will be able to use these essays as case studies of
consociational democracy in the region. And all Latin Americanists
will welcome the advent of scholarly writing informed by the
consociational model that provides us an approach to contemporary
Latin American politics that is at once enlightening and
convincing. "Southeastern Latin Americanist"
Venezuela and Columbia both have two-sided structures of
democracy. They combine the Liberal Democratic/Anglo-American model
and the Latin American model. The first includes the procedural
norms of free elections, citizen participation, individual rights,
and multi-interest groups. The second comprises the substantive
norms of economic development and social justice. The contributors
address the following questions: Is one or the other model more
significant? How much of a blending or overlap, if any, exists
between these two models? Is there a third model that is more
significant? In answering these questions, the contributors examine
such principal components as national structures and societal
evolution, political parties, economic development, the state and
the military, guerilla movements, international relations and
foreign policy, and the drug trade. Editor Donald L. Herman
concludes this study by offering a prognosis for the two respective
regimes for the rest of the twentieth century.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!