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First published in 1992,
Latin America in the Time of Cholera questions many ideas regarding the advent of a new era of democracy, peace, and north-south cooperation for development in the post-Cold War period by challenging several myths that shape United States policy toward Latin America.
List of contents
Introduction Part 1: The Crisis of Electoral Politics 1. Latin America: Poverty of Democracy and the Democracy of Poverty 2. Aylwin’s Chile: The Nature of Latin American “Democratic” Transitions Part 2: Imperial Policy and Political Change 3. U. S. Policy Toward Latin America: Military Intervention, Client Regimes, and Economic Pillage in the 1990s 4. Washington’s Invasion of Panama: Myths and Realities Part 3. Revolution and Counterrevolution 5. Cuban Socialism: Rectification and the New Moel of Accumulation 6. The Electoral Defeat of the Sandinistas: Critical Reflections 7. The Retreat of the Intellectuals Part 4. Conclusion 8. Democratic Regimes, Terrorist States, and Western Political Amnesia in Latin America 9. Global Transformations and the Future of Socialism in Latin America
About the author
James Petras is a Bartle Professor (Emeritus) of Sociology at Binghamton University, USA. He is the author of more than 62 books published in 29 languages, and over 600 articles in professional journals, including the American Sociological Review, British Journal of Sociology, Social Research, and Journal of Peasant Studies.
Morris Morley joined Macquarie University in 1985 in the old Politics Department (now part of Modern History, Politics and International Relations) and was the longest serving member of the department at the time of his retirement as Honorary Associate Professor in 2017.
Summary
First published in 1992, Latin America in the Time of Cholera questions many ideas regarding the advent of a new era of democracy, peace, and north-south cooperation for development in the post-Cold War period by challenging several myths that shape United States policy toward Latin America.