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After Neoliberalism?
The Left and Economic Reforms in Latin America
Gustavo Flores-Macias
288 pages
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22 charts and 28 tables
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235x156mm
978-0-19-989167-2
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Paperback
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31 May 2012
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- Addresses a very timely topic—the rise of the left in Latin America—about which there is still a lack of research
- Offers a new and compelling analysis of leftist movements and the part system in Latin America
- Written in a clear and accessible style
The political trajectory of Latin America in the last decade has been remarkable. The left, which had been given up for dead across the region, swept into power in numerous countries: Ecuador, Brazil, Venezuela, Nicaragua, Bolivia, and even Chile. Moreover, the Mexican left, which lost an extremely close (and disputed) election a couple of years ago, may yet come to power in 2012. Once these left governments took the reins of power, though, they acted very differently. Some have been truly radical, while others have been moderate. Gusatvo Flores-Macias' After Neoliberalism? offers the first systemic explanation of why left-wing governments across the region have acted in the
way that they have. His theory hinges on party systems. Deeply institutionalized, stable party systems have forestalled radical change regardless of the governing party's philosophy, but states with weakly institutionalized party systems have opened the door for more radical reform. Evo Morales and Hugo Chavez, then, are not simply more radical than Lula and Chile's Michele Bachelet (who left office in March 2010). Rather, weak party systems allowed them to adopt more radical policies. Flores-Macias is careful to add that weak party systems also allow for rightwing radicals to enact policies more easily, but at this historical conjuncture, the left has the upper hand. Utilizing a rich base of empirical evidence drawn from eleven countries, After Neoliberalism? will reshape our
understanding of not simply why the left has had such a far-reaching triumph, but how it actually governs.Readership: Students and scholars of political science, Latin American studies, current events, political parties, and neoliberalism.
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Gustavo Flores-Macias, Assistant Professor of Government, Cornell University Assistant Professor of Government, Cornell University
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List of Tables
List of Figures
I Introduction: The Left and the Challenge to Market Orthodoxy in Latin America
II Economic Reforms: The Dependent Variable
III Party Systems and Leftist Governments' Economic Policies
IV Party System in Disarray: Venezuela's Statist Revisionism
V Progressively Institutionalized Party System: Brazil's Moderate Reforms
VI Highly Institutionalized Party System: Chile's Pro-market Continuity
VII Conclusion
VIII References
Appendix A: Leftist Victories in Presidential Elections in Latin America
Appendix B: Sources and Data for Hypotheses Testing in Chapter 3
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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