|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
This book examines the process of political and social reform that
Colombia has experienced in the past decade. As the relationship
between the state, the economy and the society are redefined in
Latin America, Colombia has also undergone substantial
transformations. This story offers a Colombian dimension to the
increasing interest in processes of state reform elsewhere. The
approach is interdisciplinary and will be of interest to political
scientists, economists, sociologists, geographers and historians.
This book looks at various aspects of electoral history in Europe
and Latin America, from the late 17th century to 1930, including
electoral culture and traditions, electoral participation,
electoral fraud, the role of elections in the process of
nation-building, and the role of important institutions, such as
the Church, in shaping political values and therefore electoral
behaviour. There are chapters devoted to the individual experiences
of England, Mexico, Ecuador, Ireland, Germany, Colombia, Argentina,
Chile and Spain.
The essays in this volume re-examine, from a number of different
angles the process of Independence in Spanish America. The focus is
to a large extent on the consequences of the wars of Independence
for the newly established republics. However the first section
deals with a critical review of the historiography the
'revolutionary' nature of Independence and the comparative elements
of Independence in the Americas. The remainder of the book examines
the development of the wars and the impact that Independence had on
political instability culture citizenship and the formation of new
nations. In addition to general chapters there are individual
chapters devoted to New Granada Venezuela Mexico Chile and
Argentina.
The five papers presented in this volume discuss various aspects
of the politics of Latin America during the nineteenth century.
Although the scope of the essays is wide ? including topics such as
civil wars, political parties and the use of travel narratives for
partisan purposes ? the overriding concern is with nationalism and
the role of the state.
This is a study of the role of regions in the development of modern nations in Latin America. Eduardo Posada-Carbó focuses on the Colombian Caribbean between 1870 and 1950. He examines the achievements and shortcomings of arable agriculture and the significance of the livestock industry, the link between town and countryside, the influence of foreign migrants and foreign capital, the relationship between local and national politics, and the extent to which regionalism represented a challenge to the consolidation of the national state in Colombia. This original study opens up the area to scholarly scrutiny for the first time, and has wider implications for Latin American historiography.
This book examines the process of political and social reform that
Colombia has experienced in the past decade. As the relationship
between the state, the economy and the society are redefined in
Latin America, Colombia has also undergone substantial
transformations. This story offers a Colombian dimension to the
increasing interest in processes of state reform elsewhere. The
approach is interdisciplinary and will be of interest to political
scientists, economists, sociologists, geographers and historians.
This book looks at political corruption in Latin American and
Europe from both an historical and a contemporary angle. The
approach is therefore comparative and interdisciplinary, bringing
together scholars from history, political science, anthropology,
sociology and economics. In addition to general essays, this book
includes chapters analysing political corruption in individual
countries: Italy, Spain, France, Great Britain, Chile, Brazil,
Venezuela, Paraguay and Mexico.
This book looks at various aspects of electoral history in Europe
and Latin America, from the late 17th century to 1930, including
electoral culture and traditions, electoral participation,
electoral fraud, the role of elections in the process of
nation-building, and the role of important institutions, such as
the Church, in shaping political values and therefore electoral
behaviour. There are chapters devoted to the individual experiences
of England, Mexico, Ecuador, Ireland, Germany, Colombia, Argentina,
Chile and Spain.
Re-imagining Democracy in Latin America and the Caribbean,
1780-1870 examines the ways in which the ancient concept of
“democracy” was re-imagined as relevant to the modern world in
Latin America and the Caribbean between the later eighteenth and
later nineteenth centuries. In most regions this process largely
followed the French Revolution, while in Latin America it more
closely followed independence movements of the 1810s and 20s. A
sequel to two previous volumes edited by Joanna Innes and Mark
Philp, Re-imagining Democracy in the Age of Revolutions: America,
France, Britain, Ireland 1750-1850 and Re-imagining Democracy in
the Mediterranean 1770-1860, this volume studies how a variety of
political actors and commentators used “democracy” to
characterize or debate modern conditions through the ensuing
half-century. By 1870, it was firmly established in mainstream
political lexicons throughout the region. Here, specialists in the
field contribute wide-ranging accounts of aspects of the context in
which the word was re-imagined, highlighting state formation, race,
constitutionalism, urban political culture, education, and outside
views of the region — the six concluding chapters explore
differences in its fortune from location to location. Ultimately,
this edited volume deftly explores the history of the language of
democracy and encourages new debates about its meaning.
This volume stresses the need for a comparative approach when
dealing with the funding of party politics and a major related
aspect - corruption. This topic lies at the heart of any realistic
discussion of the logic of democratic representation. Corruption,
or the perception of corruption, has led to an ever-increasing
concern with political financing. In some cases the trend is toward
a greater role for the state in financing political parties, in
others the reverse is true. In this collection the individual
experiences of several Latin American countries (including Chile,
Colombia, Mexico, Uruguay, and Venezuela) are examined against the
background of Western Europe, with a view to identifying
similarities as well as differences. Given the centrality of
political parties to liberal democracies, this subject is of great
significance. Contributors include Angel Alvarez (Universidad
Central, Venezuela), Kevin Casas Zamora (University of Costa Rica),
Fernando Cepeda Ulloa (Universidad de los Andes, Colombia), Pilar
del Castillo (Spanish Minister of Education), Justin Fisher
(University of Brunel), Manuel Antonio Garreton (University of
Chile), Emilio Lama de Espinosa (Real Instituto Espanol Elcano de
Relaciones Internacionales y Estrategicas, Madrid, Spain), Juan
Molinar Horcasitas (Partido de Accion Nacional, Mexico), Michael
Pinto-Duschinsky (University of Brunel), Weronique Pujas
(University of Grenoble, France), Martin Rhodes (European
University Institute, Florence, Italy), Diego Urbaneja (Universidad
Central, Venezuela), and Laurence Whitehead (Nuffield College,
University of Oxford, UK).
|
|