In the Name of Democracy: U.S. Policy Toward Latin America in the Reagan Years

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University of California Press, Jan 1, 1991 - Political Science - 309 pages
00 This is the first comprehensive, even-handed examination of U.S. policy in Latin America during the Reagan era. Drawing on interviews with United States officials and his own perspective as a former State Department lawyer, Carothers sheds new light on the much-discussed U.S. involvements in Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Panama, and turns up varied and often unexpected findings in less-studied countries such as Bolivia, Costa Rica, Paraguay, and Chile. This is the first comprehensive, even-handed examination of U.S. policy in Latin America during the Reagan era. Drawing on interviews with United States officials and his own perspective as a former State Department lawyer, Carothers sheds new light on the much-discussed U.S. involvements in Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Panama, and turns up varied and often unexpected findings in less-studied countries such as Bolivia, Costa Rica, Paraguay, and Chile.
 

Contents

El Salvador
12
Honduras
47
Nicaragua and Grenada
77
South America
117
Panama and Haiti
149
THE REDISCOVERY OF POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
196
CONCLUSIONS
237
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About the author (1991)

Thomas Carothers, an attorney in Washington, D.C., was recently an International Affairs Fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations. He is a contributor to Exporting Democracy: The United States and Latin America (1991).

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