On the state of Latin American states: approaching the bicentenary
Ładowanie...
Data wydania
2009
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN
eISSN
Tytuł tomu
ISBN
978-83-7571-014-4
eISBN
Wydawca
Oficyna Wydawnicza AFM
Abstrakt
What is the actual condition of the state in Latin America? Each contributor to
this volume has been invited to answer this question by writing an interpretative
essay from a specifically suggested angle: the origins of the state; government
and society; economic growth; society and economy; nation-building;
the indigenous population; political culture; international relations etc. It was
the contributors’ decision which particular states to focus on in order to best
illuminate the issues involved.
Our main focus in the volume is on outlining some of the processes concerning
the state now, two hundred years since the first declarations of independence.
Along the way, we tackle both theoretical and normative issues. All
the contributors to this volume share a long-cultivated multidisciplinary research
interest in Latin America but the volume also reflects our disagreement
on what we take the state to be as well as on the prevailing situation in Latin
America.
Each chapter reflects the views of its author all the way down to his choice
of British or American English. As a result all chapters reflect the authors’
views on the contemporary state of the State in Latin America, as well as – why
not say it – the authors’ identities.
The book is aimed primarily at academics and students of the humanities
and social sciences.
Opis
Praca recenzowana / Peer-reviewed paper
Tematy
Słowa kluczowe
Latin America, South America, society, government, regionalization, Andean Countries, Mexico, Central America, Caribbean, democracy, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru, Venezuela, Chavez, Hugo, Colombia, Uruguay, life style, political system, social institutions, politics, economic growth, economics, oligarchic state, populist state, economic policy, political economy, national economy, human development, state economy, liberalism socialism, Catholicism, Cuban socialism, structuralism, industrialisation, neoliberalism, US foreign policy, foreign policy, USA, nation-forming processes, national culture, tradition, multiculturalism, globalisation, universalism, Latin Americanisation, international integration, ethnic structure, national awareness, cultural stratification, cultural communities, indigenous people, indigenous organisations, new Indians, political culture, public discourse, democratisation, collective identity