The United States and Latin America: The New Agenda
edited by Victor Bulmer-Thomas and James Dunkerley
Harvard University Press, 1999 Paper: 978-0-674-92596-0 | Cloth: 978-0-674-92595-3 Library of Congress Classification F1418.U55 1999 Dewey Decimal Classification 327.7308
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
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 Domínguez, and Marcelo Suárez-Orozco; European academics such as editors James Dunkerley and Victor Bulmer-Thomas; and Latin American intellectuals such as Eduardo Gamarra and Rodolfo Cerdas-Cruz.
REVIEWS
In some of the best essays, [the book's contributors] provide detailed analyses of the ways in which the counter-narcotics drive of the US generated resentment and undermines nascent democratic institutions in Mexico, Colombia and Bolivia. Elizabeth Joyce's superbly nuanced account of the US drug policy helps us to understand the inconsistencies and apparent irrationality of the annual 'certification' process, in which the US unilaterally grades countries on their cooperation with the drug war and imposes sanctions on those who fail the test.
-- George Vickers Times Literary Supplement
An interesting and provocative discussion of the U.S.-Latin American relations from a largely European perspective. This fine collection of essays brings together senior American scholars, such as John Coatsworth and Jorge Domínguez, with British and Latin American experts. The book's strength lies in its strong contextual approach, underscoring the historical continuities in U.S. behavior toward Latin America.
-- Kenneth Maxwell Foreign Affairs
Without exception, the articles are of high quality and should be of interest to a wide variety of scholars interested in Latin America.
-- J. S. Robey Choice
The United States and Latin America: The New Agenda
edited by Victor Bulmer-Thomas and James Dunkerley
Harvard University Press, 1999 Paper: 978-0-674-92596-0 Cloth: 978-0-674-92595-3
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 Domínguez, and Marcelo Suárez-Orozco; European academics such as editors James Dunkerley and Victor Bulmer-Thomas; and Latin American intellectuals such as Eduardo Gamarra and Rodolfo Cerdas-Cruz.
REVIEWS
In some of the best essays, [the book's contributors] provide detailed analyses of the ways in which the counter-narcotics drive of the US generated resentment and undermines nascent democratic institutions in Mexico, Colombia and Bolivia. Elizabeth Joyce's superbly nuanced account of the US drug policy helps us to understand the inconsistencies and apparent irrationality of the annual 'certification' process, in which the US unilaterally grades countries on their cooperation with the drug war and imposes sanctions on those who fail the test.
-- George Vickers Times Literary Supplement
An interesting and provocative discussion of the U.S.-Latin American relations from a largely European perspective. This fine collection of essays brings together senior American scholars, such as John Coatsworth and Jorge Domínguez, with British and Latin American experts. The book's strength lies in its strong contextual approach, underscoring the historical continuities in U.S. behavior toward Latin America.
-- Kenneth Maxwell Foreign Affairs
Without exception, the articles are of high quality and should be of interest to a wide variety of scholars interested in Latin America.
-- J. S. Robey Choice