1st Edition

Troubled Neighbors The Story of US-Latin American Relations from FDR to the Present

By Henry Raymont Copyright 2005
    351 Pages
    by Routledge

    351 Pages
    by Routledge

    At one time the US and Latin America defined themselves in common as new and American, in contrast to the old, European order, and they enjoyed a period of friendship and cooperation based on that sustaining sense of commonality. With the advent of the Cold War, however, hemispheric solidarity and alliance faded fast, as the US became preoccupied with other regions of the world it deemed of deeper strategic significance. The United States and Latin America now largely define each other as negative reference points, instead of as neighbors and allies. In Troubled Neighbors, Henry Raymont-journalist for four decades, author, lecturer, teacher, and consultant-presents a journalist's observations on the pendulum swings in US-Latin American relations over the past half-century. The book is organized chronologically, with a chapter devoted to each of the administrations from FDR to Bill Clinton and an epilogue covering the first term of the George W. Bush administration. Straightforward organization: The book is chronologically organized, with a chapter devoted in turn to each administration from FDR to George W. Bush. Experienced author, an expert in the field.

    * 1 Introduction * 2 The Past as Prologue: The Old Worlds Vision of the New * 3 Convergence: The Roosevelt Era * 4 Transition: Harry S. Truman * 5 The Eisenhower Era * 6 John F. Kennedy * 7 Lyndon Baines Johnson * 8 Richard Milhous Nixon * 9 Gerald Ford * 10 Jimmy Carter * 11 The Reagan Era: A Chronicle of an Administration Foretold * 12 George Bush: Return to Pragmatism * 13 Bill Clinton and the Politics of Trade * 14 Epilogue * Index

    Biography

    Henry Raymont