Latin America in the New International System.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Boulder, CO :
Lynne Rienner Publishers,
2000.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Title Page ; Copyright page ; Contents ; Chapter 1- Latin America in the New International System: A Call for Strategic Thinking ; Assessing the New International System; Latin America Since the Cold War: From Isolation to Cooperation; Latin America Today: Foreign Policy Options in an Institutionalized International System; Themes of the Volume: A Call for Strategic Thinking; Policies for National Promotion Abroad; New Concepts and Broader Cooperation with New Actors; Notes; Chapter 2- Strategic Options for Latin America ; The International Context.
- The United States and Latin America:Hegemony RegainedOption One: Trading Around; Option Two: Joining with the North; Option Three: Affirming Self-Reliance; Option Four: Seeking Extrahemispheric Partnerships; Table 2.1 World Trade Flows, 1996; Table 2.2 FDI Flows to Latin America and the Caribbean, by Source,1990-1994 (; Table 2.3 FDI Stock in Selected Latin American Countries, 1990s; Table 2.4 Accumulated Stock of U.S., European, and Japanese Investment, by Destination; Conclusion; Table 2.5 Strategic Options and Preliminary Outcomes: Countries andRegions of Latin America; Notes.
- Chapter 3- Good-bye U.S.A.?From Confrontation to Convergence; Emerging New Horizons; Changing Economic Dependence; A Renewed Regionalism; Conclusions and Some Caveats; Notes; Chapter 4- Strategies for Global Insertion: Brazil and Its Regional Partners; Domestic Politics and the Impact of Globalization; A Strategic Preference for Regional Confidence Building and Integration; Latin America's Role in World Politics; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 5- Political Globalization and Latin America: Toward a New Sovereignty?; External Factors and Democratization.
- International Regimes andDemocratic GovernanceGlobalization and the Relativization of Sovereignty; Concluding Remarks Around a Test Case; Notes; Chapter 6- Foreign Policy Strategies in a Globalized World: The Case of Mexico; In the Middle of the Road; The Emerging Post-Cold War International System:A Better World for Intermediate States?; The Search for a New Grand Strategyin the Face of Globalization; Table 6.1 Mexico's Foreign Trade by Destination, 1980-1997; The Foreign Policy Consequences of Economic Liberalization and Political Opening in Mexico.
- Figure 6.1 Mexico: Voting Coincidence with the United States in the United Nations, 1985-1998The Rise of an Active Economic Diplomacy: Mexico and the International Trade Negotiations; The Logic of Ambivalent Multilateralism: Mexico's Cautious Approach to the New Global Security Agenda; Conclusions: The Tasks Ahead; Notes; Chapter 7- Cuban Foreign Policy and the International System; Born-Again Neorealists; An Institutionalist Strategy; The Response of the International System; Conclusions; Notes; Chapter 8- Between Vision and Reality: Variables in Latin American Foreign Policy.