Recent events throughout Latin America have placed issues of
democracy on centerstage. Collected here for the first time are
articles that evaluate different models of democracy, challenging
the realities and myths of the practice of democracy in various
countries throughout the region. This is a provocative and
revealing study of the critical issues in the struggle for
democracy and current events in the Third World and the United
States.
Through the writings of leading Latin American and U.S.
scholars, including James Petras, Pablo Gonzalez Casanova, and Max
Azicri, the book addresses such important topics as whether
Washington's model democracies are truly democratic, and how
Guatemala's civilian regime compares to Nicaragua's revolutionary
democracy. By covering countries as diverse as Cuba, Argentina, and
Guatemala, the collection adds to an understanding of different
models of democracy and challenges traditional methodologies used
to evaluate them. Several essays put the issue of democratization
in the context of economic crisis, resulting in political
redefinitions, and the emergence of the new social movements. The
book includes a foreword and introduction by the editors, and
concludes with a comprehensive index. It will be a useful resource
for courses in political science and Latin American history, and an
important addition to college, university, and public
libraries.
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