The end of the Cold War removed hemispheric security from the
top of the agenda of U.S.-Latin American relations. Democracy,
trade and investment, drugs, and migration rose in importance.
Pressures to eliminate the anachronistic U.S. embargo on Cuba
increased. The new agenda also includes Latin America's growing
ties to the countries of the European Union and other regions.
This book contains fifteen essays by distinguished U.S., Latin
American, and European scholars on each of these issues, framed by
overviews of the changing historical context from the nineteenth
century to the end of the Cold War. Authors include such notables
as Harvard scholars John Coatsworth, Jorge Dominguez, and Marcelo
Suarez-Orozco; European academics such as editors James Dunkerley
and Victor Bulmer-Thomas; and Latin American intellectuals such as
Eduardo Gamarra and Rodolfo Cerdas-Cruz.
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