Latin America at the End of Politics
By (Author) Forrest D. Colburn
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
14th May 2002
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Centrist democratic ideologies
320.98
Paperback
160
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
227g
After decades of ideological struggle, much of it in the service of an elusive socialist ideal, Latin America has embraced liberalism - democracy and unfettered markets. But liberalism has triumphed more by default than through exuberance. The region's democracies are fragile and lethargic. Despite social inequality, poverty, and other difficulties, the populace is not involved in deep discussions about state and society. There is an uneasy social indifference. This work explores this period of circumscribed political passions through deft portrails of political, cultural, econmic, social, and cultural issues: governance, entrepreneurs and markets, urban bias, poverty, the struggle for women's equality, consumerism, crime, enviromental degradation, art and migration of the poor. Discussions of these issues are enriched by the narratives of emblematic individuals, many of whom are disorientated by the ideological void of the area.
"The one book on Latin America that is essential reading this year... Skillfully interlacing the big picture with evocative and sympathetic portraits, [Colburn's] book is an elegantly succinct, if depressing, synopsis of the region's condition as it enters a new century."--Kenneth Maxwell, Foreign Affairs
Forrest D. Colburn is the author of, among other works, The Vogue of Revolution in Poor Countries (Princeton).