Latin America Faces The Twenty-first Century

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Alfredo Cristiani
alternative economic models for social equity
Brazilian Democratic Movement Party
Category=JP
Civil Society
Classical Liberal Democracy
democratization processes
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feminist political theory
Foreign Debt Crisis
Frente Amplio
Group Insurance
indigenous rights activism
Latin America's economic crisis
Latin American Civil Societies
Latin American Critical Thought
Latin American Feminism
Latin American integration
Mexico's Oil
Mexico’s Oil
NATO Power
neoliberal policies
neoliberalism critique
North American Free Trade Agreement
Nuevo Espacio
Partido Trabalhista Brasileiro
Popular Unity
post-World War II International Order
social justice agenda
Social Security Institutes
Socioeconomic Development
state civil society relations
Union Nacional De Trabajadores
Uruguayan Left
Vice Versa
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367011734
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 23 May 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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What are Latin America’s prospects for the twenty-first century, in the face of rapidly changing international conditions and increasing internal social pressures? In this volume eminent Latin American scholars and activists explore their collective future. They analyze a wide range of issues, including economic alternatives to neoliberal policies, the democratization of state and civil society, new forms of political organizations, and the role of women and indigenous peoples as protagonists of social change. In each case they focus on reconstructing a social justice agenda for debates about Latin America’s future. The discussions illuminate issues that are not only of direct concern to Latin Americanists but also of considerable relevance to progressives who are thinking about new alternatives and new agendas for the United States. This is of particular importance now that changes in the global economy are more explicitly linking the future of the United States to that of Latin America–and by implication, opening up new imperatives and new opportunities for increased intellectual exchange within the hemisphere.