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9780804728737 Academic Inspection Copy

Demanding Democracy

Reform and Reaction in Costa Rica and Guatemala, 1870s-1950s
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This book examines the origins of democracy and authoritarianism using a novel coalitional approach to examine two questions: What are the conditions under which actors found democracy? What are the conditions conducive to its endurance? The book explores these questions by analyzing the cases of Costa Rica and Guatemala. Costa Rica is the longest-standing and arguably the most stable democracy in Latin America, while Guatemala has among the longest and most brutal records of authoritarian rule in Latin America The author s fresh reinterpretation of these two cases demonstrates that prior to the 1950 s, the two countries followed broadly similar patterns of political change and development, including seven decades of Liberal authoritarian rule beginning in the 1870 s, just under a decade of democratic reforms in the 1940 s, and brief but consequential counterreform movements that overthrew the democratic regimes at mid-twentieth century. Why did Costa Rica emerge with an enduring political democracy and Guatemala with authoritarian rule following these broadly similar historical trajectories? Demanding Democracy argues that the democratizing coalition s success in Costa Rica and its failure in Guatemala rested upon its capacity to redistribute elite property early on and to exercise effective political control of the countryside.
Deborah J. Yashar is Associate Professor of Government and of Social Studies at Harvard University and is a faculty fellow at Harvard's Center for International Affairs.
1. Introduction; Part I. The Liberal Authoritarian Period, 1870s-1940s: 2. Between building states and agricultural export markets; Part II. The Democratic and Social Reform Period, 1940s-1950s: 3. Demanding democracy; 4. Addressing the social question; 5. Organizing labor; Part III. From Reform to Reaction: Democracy Versus Authoritarianism: 6. From opposition to regime-founding coalitions; 7. Enduring regimes; Notes; Bibliography; Index.
'Yashar's emphasis on decision-making is a welcome addition to a literature dominated by class interests and social structure.' Journal of Latin American Studies
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