Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 432
978-0-7425-1600-7 • Hardback • November 2003 • $160.00 • (£123.00)
978-0-7425-1601-4 • Paperback • October 2003 • $63.00 • (£48.00)
978-1-4616-3863-6 • eBook • October 2003 • $59.50 • (£46.00)
Frank O. Mora, formerly professor of national security strategy at the National War College, National Defense University, is deputy assistant secretary of defense—western hemisphere. Jeanne A. K. Hey is director of international studies and associate professor of political science at Miami University of Ohio.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Theoretical Challenge to Latin American and Caribbean Foreign Policy Studies
Part 2 Middle America and the Caribbean Basin
Chapter 3 Mexico: The Challenges of a Latin American Power in the U.S. Backyard
Chapter 4 Costa Rica: Neither Client nor Defiant
Chapter 5 Nicaragua: Foreign Policy in the Revolutionary and Post-Revolutionary Era
Chapter 6 Panama: The Limits of Sovereignty
Chapter 7 Cuba: Talking Big, Acting Bigger
Chapter 8 The Dominican Republic: From Nationalism to Globalism
Chapter 9 CARICOM: The Pursuit of Economic Security
Part 10 Andean Region
Chapter 11 Venezuela: Petroleum, Democratization, and International Affairs
Chapter 12 Colombia: U.S. Subordinate, Autonomous Actor, or Something in Between?
Chapter 13 Ecuador: Foreign Policy on the Brink
Chapter 14 Peru: Managing Foreign Policy amidst Political and Economic Crisis
Chapter 15 Bolivia: The Struggle for Autonomy
Chapter 16 Chile: The Invisible Hand and Contemporary Foreign Policy
Part 17 Brazil and the Southern Cone
Chapter 18 Brazil: From Dependency to Globalization
Chapter 19 Argentina: Between Confrontation and Alignment
Chapter 20 Paraguay: The Legacy of Authoritarianism
Chapter 21 Uruguay: A Small Country Faces Global Challenges
[This book] is easy to read, and accessible in approach and style, while maintaining a degree of analytical rigor that is impressive for such a wide-ranging work. As a textbook it will undoubtedly be an invaluable resource to students of a number of disciplines.
— International Affairs
The comprehensiveness of treatment and consistent high quality of individual contributions make this work of particular value to students and foreign policy specialists alike. It is an absolutely essential text for courses on Inter-American relations and the foreign affairs of the Third World.
— David Scott Palmer, Boston University
Stimulating. . . . The authors provide a superb contribution by blending conceptual issues and empirical materials. I unreservedly recommend this volume, which will undoubtedly become a standard text for teachers and students of international relations and inter-American affairs.
— Juan Gabriel Tokatlian, Universidad de San Andrés, Argentina
This important book will appeal to a variety of audiences. Highly recommended.
— Choice Reviews
For far too long, Latin America was seen as an object to be explained by U.S. foreign policy. Frank Mora and Jeanne Hey have given the region its voice by describing and explaining the foreign policies of most of the countries. This volume is a very helpful contribution to our understanding of inter-American relations in the post–Cold War era.
— Robert A. Pastor, professor and director of the Center for North American Studies, American University
An impressive lineup. . . . Mora's and Hey's Introduction identifies crucial questions facing Latin American and Caribbean foreign policies, and constructs a useful 'levels of analysis' framework to provide a common point of departure for the . . . empirically rich case studies.
— Handbook of Latin American Studies
Mora and Hey's book raises critical questions about the extent to which Latin American republics might expect to exercise autonomy in their foreign relations in the early twenty-first century, or if the complementary forces of dependency and realism in international politics will continue to limit their room for manoeuvre.
— Journal of Latin American Studies
An extremely useful collection of essays.
— British Bulletin of Publications on Latin America, the Caribbean, Portugal and Spain
Mora and Hey's book raises some critical questions about the extent to which Latin American republics might expect to exercise autonomy in their foreign relations in the early twenty-first century, or if the complementary forces of dependency and realism in international politics will continue to limit their room for maneuver….Such questions will remain at the center of debates on Latin American and Caribbean foreign policy for the foreseeable future.
— Journal of Latin American Studies
-offers the most comprehensive coverage of any book available on the region's foreign policy
-provides a common analytical framework to allow for comparative analysis and conclusions
-brings together authors from the United States and Latin America
-ideal for upper-division undergraduate and graduate courses that focus on Latin American politics, foreign policy analysis, international relations, and US-Latin American relations.