Historical Dictionary of U.S.-Latin American Relations

Front Cover
Bloomsbury Academic, Sep 30, 2005 - History - 568 pages

This book provides over 260 entries on U.S. presidents, Latin American politicians, covert operations, policies, and major events since the early 1800s that define the contentious relations between the United States and the Latin American and Caribbean region.

From the Monroe Doctrine to NAFTA, the tone of U.S.-Latin America relations has been set by the United States, and largely to its benefit. Dent compiles more than 260 A-to-Z entries that detail the key people, events, treaties, wars, and concepts that have gone into the making of the often contentious relations between the United States and the Latin American and Caribbean region. Entries conclude with suggested readings and are thoroughly cross-referenced. A thematic index guides users to related entries, and an extensive bibliography includes a list of key works central to the study of U.S.-Latin American relations. There is also a separate list of relevant online resources. The entire work is also thoroughly indexed.

Useful for students and researchers of international politics within the Western hemisphere, Dent's historical dictionary covers items ranging from pro-slavery filibusterers adventuring in Central America, Dollar Diplomacy, Anti-Americanism, Banana Wars, the Reagan Doctrine, Sandinistas, friendly Dictators, Che Guevara, to the impact of the events of September 11, 2001 on Latin America, among many others.

Contents

Preface
xv
Timeline of U S Latin American Relations
xxxix
Historical Dictionary of U S Latin American Relations
1
Contents
26
Cabot John Moors 19011981
101
Chapultepec Conference 1945
116
Contras
129
Daniels Josephus 18621948
143
Contents
176
Contents
224
IranContra Scandal
253
Kirkpatrick Jeane Jordan 1926
266
Lodge Corollary 1912
279
MexicanAmerican War 18461848
295
Negroponte John Dimitri 1939
309
Operation Just Cause
322

Dollar Diplomacy
156
Earth Summit Rio de Janeiro 1992
169
Lessons from the Past Toward a More
471
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

David W. Dent is Professor emeritus of political science at Towsen University. He the author of Encyclopedia of Modern Mexico (2002), The Legacy of the Monroe Doctrine: A Reference Guide to U.S. Involvement in Latin America and the Caribbean (Greenwood, 1999), the co-author of Historical Dictionary of Inter-American Organizations (1998), and the editor of U.S.-Latin American Policymaking: A Reference Handbook (1995) and Handbook of Political Science Research on Latin America: Trends from the 1960s to the 1990s (1990). Dent is the author of over 100 articles, essays, and chapters on Latin American and U.S.-Latin American relations. For the past 30 years he has been a contributing editor for the Handbook of Latin American Studies, a biannual reference book published by the Hispanic Division of the Library of Congress.

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