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The Dictator Next Door - The Good Neighbor Policy and the Trujillo Regime in the Dominican Republic, 1930-1945 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R666
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The Dictator Next Door - The Good Neighbor Policy and the Trujillo Regime in the Dominican Republic, 1930-1945 (Paperback)
Series: American Encounters/Global Interactions
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The question of how U.S. foreign policy should manage relations
with autocratic governments, particularly in the Caribbean and
Latin America, has always been difficult and complex. In The
Dictator Next Door Eric Paul Roorda focuses on the relations
between the U.S. and the Dominican Republic following Rafael
Trujillo’s seizure of power in 1930. Examining the transition
from the noninterventionist policies of the Hoover administration
to Roosevelt’s Good Neighbor policy, Roorda blends diplomatic
history with analyses of domestic politics in both countries not
only to explore the political limits of American hegemony but to
provide an in-depth view of a crucial period in U.S. foreign
relations. Although Trujillo’s dictatorship was enabled by prior
U.S. occupation of the Dominican Republic, the brutality of his
regime and the reliance on violence and vanity to sustain his rule
was an untenable offense to many in the U.S. diplomatic community,
as well as to certain legislators, journalists, and bankers. Many
U.S. military officers and congressmen, however—impressed by the
civil order and extensive infrastructure the dictator
established—comprised an increasingly powerful Dominican lobby.
What emerges is a picture of Trujillo at the center of a crowded
stage of international actors and a U.S. government that, despite
events such as Trujillo’s 1937 massacre of 12,000 Haitians, was
determined to foster alliances with any government that would
oppose its enemies as the world moved toward war. Using previously
untapped records, privately held papers, and unpublished
photographs, Roorda demonstrates how caution, confusion, and
conflicting goals marked U.S. relations with Trujillo and set the
tone for the ambivalent Cold War relations that prevailed until
Trujillo’s assassination in 1961. The Dictator Next Door will
interest Latin Americanists, historians, political scientists, and
specialists in international relations and diplomacy.
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