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This volume brings together essays written over three decades on
Bolivian history and politics. The book opens with a contemporary
survey of the new government of the MAS headed by Evo Morales.
Subsequent chapters review the neoliberal experiments of the 1980s
and 1990s, the strategic and intellectual failures of Che Guevaras
guerrilla foco; the origins of the Revolution of 1952; explanations
for the dominance of the caudillos of the 19th century; and the
extraordinary story of Francisco Burdett OConnor, whose life
combined liberation struggles on both sides of the Atlantic.
				
		 
	
	
		
			
				
			
	
 Looking into Brazil's recent experience of democracy is an arduous
undertaking, given the complexities of a country of continental
size and great regional contrasts, where areas of prosperity and
wealth mingle with underdevelopment and poverty. This book looks at
some of the important issues involved in building up a democracy
and keeping it working. How should we assess Brazil's experience of
democracy? To what extent has the emergence of a democratic regime
improved Brazilians' social, economic, and political life? Has
democracy been consolidated to the point of making a political
breakdown unthinkable or improbable? These are questions that any
student of Brazil has to address. The answers to them, however, are
far from simple. Contributors include Edmund Amann (School of
Economic Studies, University of Manchester, UK), Maria Celi Scalon
(Insituto Universitario de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil),
Carlos Antonio Costa Ribeiro (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais,
Brazil), Mauricio Coutinho (Universidade Estadual de Campinas,
Brazil), Argelina Cheibub Figueiredo (Universidade de Sao Paulo,
Brazil), James Dunkerley (Institute of Latin American Studies and
Queen Mary, University of London, UK), Antonio Sergio A. Guimaraes
(Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil), Anthony Hall (London School of
Economics and Political Science, UK), Fernando Limongi
(Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil), Fiona Macaulay (Centre for
Brazilian Studies, University of Oxford and Institute of Latin
American Studies, University of London, UK), Celso Martone
(Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil), Leandro Piquet Carneiro
(Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil), Mauro Porto (Universidade de
Brasilia, Brazil), and Brasilio Sallum Jr. (Universidade de Sao
Paulo, Brazil).
				
		 
	
	
		
			
				
			
	
 This book offers a nuanced and multifaceted collection of essays
covering a wide range of concerns, concepts, presidential
doctrines, and rationalities of government thought to have marked
America's engagement with the world during this period. The
collection is organised chronologically and looks at the work of
intellectuals who have written both in support and critically about
US foreign policy in various geographical and historical contexts.
This includes Andrew Carnegie, Carl Schmitt, Hans Morgenthau,
George Kennan, Samuel Huntington, Paul Wolfowitz and many other
such thinkers and practitioners who have contributed in shaping the
ways in which we have come to think of US foreign policy over the
years. The book will be of significant interest to students and
academics within the fields of US foreign policy analysis,
international relations and intellectual history. -- .
				
		 
	
	
		
			
				
			
	
 This book adopts a variety of disciplinary, thematic, and
country-based approaches to the complex and contested issues around
the character of the nation-state in Latin America. In recent years
there has been a great deal of scholarly interest in this topic
from the viewpoint of cultural and literary studies, but Latin
America remains under-represented in general historical and
sociological theories of nationhood. The authors seek to develop
debate and research on the topic through case-studies (including
Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Peru and Spain),
historiographical review, and themes such as the role of violence,
military conscription and pensions, money and the role of finance,
early notions of development, the ambiguous role of liberalism, and
how to evaluate the reach and qualities of the nation-state.
Contributors include Miguel Angel Centeno (Princeton University),
Malcolm Deas (St Antony's College, Oxford), James Dunkerley
(Institute of Latin American Studies, University of London), Paul
Gootenberg (State University of New York at Stony Brook), Alan
Knight (St Antony's College, Oxford), Colin Lewis (London School of
Economics), Fernando L?pez Alves (University of California, Santa
Barbara), David McCreery (Georgia State University), Florencia
Mallon (University of Wisconsin), Seemin Qayum (Goldsmiths College,
University of London), Guy Thomson (University of Warwick), and
Steven Topik (University of California, Irvine). James Dunkerley is
director of the Institute of Latin American Studies, University of
London, and also professor of politics at Queen Mary, University of
London. He is coeditor of the Journal of Latin American Studies.
His most recent books are Americana: The Americas in the World,
around 1850 (or 'Seeing the Elephant' as the Theme for an Imaginary
Western) (2000) and Warriors and Scribes: Essays in the History and
Politics of Latin America (2000). 
	
	
		
			
				
			
	
 This book offers a nuanced and multifaceted collection of essays
covering a wide range of concerns, concepts, presidential
doctrines, and rationalities of government thought to have marked
America's engagement with the world during this period. The
collection is organised chronologically and looks at the work of
intellectuals who have written both in support and critically about
US foreign policy in various geographical and historical contexts.
This includes Andrew Carnegie, Carl Schmitt, Hans Morgenthau,
George Kennan, Samuel Huntington, Paul Wolfowitz and many other
such thinkers and practitioners who have contributed in shaping the
ways in which we have come to think of US foreign policy over the
years. The book will be of significant interest to students and
academics within the fields of US foreign policy analysis,
international relations and intellectual history. -- .
				
		 
	
	
		
			
				
			
	
 
"The Long War" is a serious, radical critique of the poltical
economy and recent history of El Salvador, set in the context of
the troubled history of the entire Central Amercan region and
detailing in full the extent of US intervention and its importancce
as a destabilising factor. With the addition of a postscript, this new edition brings the
narrative fully up to date.
 
	
	
		
			
				
			
	
 "Bolivia is a country with a reputation," writes James Dunkerley.
"Not so long ago it was for Che Guevara, for whose death its
citizens are on occasions held to be collectively responsible. More
recently it has been for cocaine. But in general it is for
political disorder." Rebellion in the Veins demonstrates that
behind the succession of coups lies an exceptional and coherent
record of political struggle. The country's location at the heart
of Latin America has not, however, guaranteed it the attention it
deserves. Dunkerley here redresses the balance in a masterly survey
of Bolivian society since the early 1950s. The revolution of 1952
was, with the Cuban revolution, the most radical attempt in the
western hemisphere since the Second World War to break the cycle of
capitalist underdevelopment. It was channeled into a more familiar
pattern of repression and dictatorship only after bitter struggles,
and Dunkerley analyses the pressures that compromised it, providing
lucid accounts of the country's economy, political history and
class structure, as well as its relations with the United States.
The succession of military dictatorships from 1964 to 1982 are
described, but this period was by no means one of unrelieved
quietude. There was an extraordinarily vital popular resistance,
and the unusual sophistication of working-class politics forms a
stirring narrative. The tragic death of Che, after a doomed rural
guerrilla campaign in eastern Bolivia, had a profound effect on the
country's politics. The fate of his imitators, and the eventual
resurgence of more classical forms of mass struggle, has provided
valuable lessons for what Dunkerley predicts will be a second
Bolivian revolution. The story is carried through to the
restoration of parliamentary democracy in 1982, presided over by
Hernan Siles Zuazo, who first came to power in the revolution
thirty years earlier.
				
		 
	
	
		
			
				
			
	
 Over recent years James Dunkerley has established a reputation as
one of the most thoughtful and eloquent writers on Latin America.
In his latest book he investigates the high incidence of political
suicide in the subcontinent. A sensitive and revealing essay
details a number of case studies: the still disputed death of
Chilean President Salvador Allende during Pinochet's storming of
the Moneda Palace in 1973; the case of the Salvadorean guerrilla
leader Salvador Cayetano Carpio who shot himself in the heart in
April 1983; the death of Brazilian President Getulio Vargas, who
declared in April 1954 that he would only leave the presidential
palace dead - and a few days later did so; Bolivian President
German Busch, who died at his own hand aged thirty-five in 1939;
and the dramatic end of Eduardo Chibas, founder of the Cuban
People's Party, who shot himself live on Havana radio in 1951. in
the pieces which follow, Dunkerley employs his customary acuity to
range over the implications of the Sandinista defeat in Nicaragua,
the plight of El Salvador, the modern history of Bolivia, the
experience of postwar Guatemala and, in a coruscating broadside,
the politics of the Peruvian novelist and the presidential
candidate Mario Vargas Llosa.
				
		 
	
	
		
			
				
			
	
 In this book, the most comprehensive analysis of Central America
ever to be published, James Dunkerley provides a detailed account
of the history of Nicaragua, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and
Costa Rica and a series of authoritative studies of their national
political systems. Written in a fluent and accessible style, the
text is supported by a wealth of charts and statistical data making
Power in the Isthmus an essential work of reference.
				
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