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Authoritarian El Salvador - Politics and the Origins of the Military Regimes, 1880-1940 (Paperback, New)
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Authoritarian El Salvador - Politics and the Origins of the Military Regimes, 1880-1940 (Paperback, New)
Series: Kellogg Institute Series on Democracy and Development
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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In December 1931, El Salvador's civilian president, Arturo Araujo,
was overthrown in a military coup. Such an event was hardly unique
in Salvadoran history, but the 1931 coup proved to be a watershed.
Araujo had been the nation's first democratically elected
president, and although no one could have foreseen the result, the
coup led to five decades of uninterrupted military rule, the
longest run in modern Latin American history. Furthermore, six
weeks after coming to power, the new military regime oversaw the
crackdown on a peasant rebellion in western El Salvador that is one
of the worst episodes of state-sponsored repression in modern Latin
American history. Democracy would not return to El Salvador until
the 1990s, and only then after a brutal twelve-year civil war. In
Authoritarian El Salvador: Politics and the Origins of the Military
Regimes, 1880-1940, Erik Ching seeks to explain the origins of the
military regime that came to power in 1931. Based on his
comprehensive survey of the extant documentary record in El
Salvador's national archive, Ching argues that El Salvador was
typified by a longstanding tradition of authoritarianism dating
back to the early- to mid-nineteenth century. The basic structures
of that system were based on patron-client relationships that wove
local, regional, and national political actors into complex webs of
rival patronage networks. Decidedly nondemocratic in practice, the
system nevertheless exhibited highly paradoxical traits: it
remained steadfastly loyal to elections as the mechanism by which
political aspirants acquired office, and it employed a political
discourse laden with appeals to liberty and free suffrage. That
blending of nondemocratic authoritarianism with populist reformism
and rhetoric set the precedent for military rule for the next fifty
years.
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